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Uber CEO: We're Going After Groceries Next (yahoo.com) 119

Uber is digging deeper into the business of food. From a report: Uber's restaurant delivery business "Eats" hit $6 billion in bookings earlier this year, growing over 200%, quickly becoming a crown jewel for the ride-sharing company. Uber CEO Dara Khosrowshahi said given the success in the delivery of food, the next logical step is to enter the grocery space. "We will move into grocery. That's fundamental. A lot more people will be eating at home. Right now we are busy with Eats, but you can see grocery as an adjacent business. We're thinking about Uber much more as a platform," he said at Vanity Fair's New Establishment Summit 2018 on Tuesday.
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Uber CEO: We're Going After Groceries Next

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  • by SuperKendall ( 25149 ) on Tuesday October 09, 2018 @04:59PM (#57452822)

    I enjoy talking to Uber drivers and have liked quite a few of them (compared to liking about 0.0001% of taxi drivers I have ever met).

    But there is not one Uber driver I've ever seen that I would want picking out groceries for me nor would even eat anything they hand me (you drink those free bottles of water in Uber cars? Good luck with that).

    • Re:Hard No (Score:4, Interesting)

      by dysmal ( 3361085 ) on Tuesday October 09, 2018 @05:25PM (#57452914)

      They'll partner with grocery stores who have employees shopping for you. The Uber drivers will get the employee picked groceries to your home. The employees shopping for customers is already a growing trend in grocery stores and so it's a natural progression for Uber to be the last mile carrier.

      All so you don't have to go out in public and associate with real PEOPLE!!!

      • They'll partner with grocery stores who have employees shopping for you. The Uber drivers will get the employee picked groceries to your home. The employees shopping for customers is already a growing trend in grocery stores and so it's a natural progression for Uber to be the last mile carrier.

        The trouble with that is, the store employees will likely pick out your stuff for you in rotation of stock that is best for the STORE, not YOU....

        When I go in, I pick to see what looks freshest and best to ME.

        • There are a lot of people who don't eat any fresh produce (which is probably not great from a health perspective, but that's another matter entirely) for whom it makes no difference whether they pick out their items or someone else does it. I suppose a few of them might be worried that the store employees will give them the dented cans, but my guess is that the kind of people who leave eating from them all the time probably wouldn't mind since it means not having to go to the store.

          Humanity never ceases
          • by mentil ( 1748130 )

            The go-getters with boundless energy who are hyperactive and constantly burning through huge amounts of energy are the first to starve to death when the next famine rolls around. Whereas the fat and lazy survive. [slashdot.org]

          • by dryeo ( 100693 )

            People spent 10s of thousands of years as hunter gathers who only needed to work 4 hours a day on average.

        • by dysmal ( 3361085 )

          The trouble with that is, the store employees will likely pick out your stuff for you in rotation of stock that is best for the STORE, not YOU....

          When I go in, I pick to see what looks freshest and best to ME.

          You and I both!

          The sad reality is that a growing segment of the population is "too busy" or can't be bothered to go grocery shopping. They'd rather have someone else go do that for them. The trend of personal shoppers for grocery stores is growing for a reason. People have voted with their dollars and would rather drive up to a special lane and pick up everything and drive away.

          Remember that Uber Eats delivers Mc Donald's food for a reason... because the drive through isn't convenient enough!

          • by MrL0G1C ( 867445 )

            In the UK some supermarkets pick from stores and some pick from dedicated delivery warehouses. Getting your shopping from a dedicated warehouse is obviously preferable and the fresh food quality is noticeably better because a) it hasn't had a bunch of people prodding at it to see if it's ripe b) has been stored optimally and c) staff don't care, they will simply grab an item which will be queued in a methodical first in first out system (assuming the supermarkets aren't complete idiots) .

          • Honestly? Yes, I am too busy to do grocery shopping. I mean, I could do it, but it would mean having 2 hours less to do something else. Not sure if this is typical but there's always something to do:

            1. Finish up my basement reno. Working solo mostly. Hard to get into a rhythm but once I get going, I can spend a good 10 hours.
            2. Cleaning the cars. Whether it's inside or outside, keeping them rust and damage free is a frequent chore
            3. Cleaning the house. Vacuuming, dusting, wiping down cabinets,
        • It's pretty good for one use case I can think of: heavy nonperishables. Otherwise, yeah, I just don't see most of the appeal, and they're definitely competing against Amazon in that space. Good luck with that, because Amazon already owns a grocery store.
        • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

          You know the way to build your business is to piss off your customers because they could never ever possibly tell that you are selling them old stock. I had a store do this, I did not order off them again, some time latter they stopped deliveries, not enough people buying to make it worthwhile. Online ordering is competition hell for supermarkets, you are no longer bound by distance, competition is real, you can do a shopping cart comparison straight up and only complete the cheapest order or you can simply

        • by Uberbah ( 647458 )

          The trouble with that is, the store employees will likely pick out your stuff for you in rotation of stock that is best for the STORE, not YOU....

          The grocery business is ferociously competitive, unless you're in a small town with a single store. So if the manager is doing the picking, she probably won't stick you with a filet of fish that expires the day of your order, because they want you as a return customer. But if it's a regular employee they probably won't give a shit either way.

          My crotchety old gra

        • It's tempting to think that's the case but it hasn't been my experience. I shop at Zehrs and they offer a service called 'Click and Collect'. You go on-line, order your groceries and when it's ready, they give you a call to pick it up.

          You park in a designated spot near the front the store and an employee comes out and loads it up in your car. Easy peasy.

          The fruit and veggies are exactly the same as the ones I would have picked, I've yet to get home and realize I've got something old, mouldy, damage
      • I've tried some of those services and while I might trust them to handle food more (since they are representing the store more than just a delivery service), they do an invariably poor job of picking out things.

        Even for dead simple things, like canned cat food - an employee at one place picked out a can that was dented with the paper label completely missing from the can so it was unidentifiable. How could they think it was a good idea to unload that on a paying customer?

        Not to mention a lot of fruit veggi

      • "All so you don't have to go out in public and associate with real PEOPLE!!!"

        I don't know about you, but I find the less "real people" I interact with, the happier I am. It's a rare occurrence when a stranger strikes up a meaningful conversation.
    • Re:Hard No (Score:4, Insightful)

      by cayenne8 ( 626475 ) on Tuesday October 09, 2018 @05:27PM (#57452922) Homepage Journal

      But there is not one Uber driver I've ever seen that I would want picking out groceries for me nor would even eat anything they hand me (you drink those free bottles of water in Uber cars? Good luck with that).

      It isn't just Uber drivers...

      I can't imagine sending anyone out to pick my food for me....

      I'd not trust them to spend he time to pick the best produce for me, nor look over the meats, and look for the best marbling in beef, etc.

      Not to mention, I usually choose my meals based on a couple things:

      1. What's on sale in weekly ads

      2. What happens to really look good.

      I usually do most of my menus based on seeing what's on sale that week, and going maybe on Friday or Sat to the various stores to get the best deals on things.

      Sometimes there's a Costco trip in there too.

      But often I get in the store and see something that either looks good, or I didn't realize was in season, etc....and quickly in my head some up with something to cook with that.

      Not sure how an Uber driver or shopping service could make me as happy cooking and eating as I do myself shopping for food.

      • Yeah, I'm way too fussy about the food I eat to let some minimum-wage worker choose it for me. Since I eat almost entirely fresh food, I want to look at the produce, fish, meat myself. I like to talk to the grocer and the butcher and the hot girl with tattoos at the checkout counter.

        I will occasionally order spices and coffee and things like that online. But avocados? Swiss chard? Fresh fish? No.

        • Since I eat almost entirely fresh food, I want to look at the produce, fish, meat myself. I like to talk to the grocer and the butcher and the hot girl with tattoos at the checkout counter.

          Oh, come on . . . tell the truth . . .

          Since I eat almost entirely fresh food, I want to look at the produce, fish, meat myself. I like to talk to the grocer and the butcher and eat the hot girl with tattoos at the checkout counter.

          So on the Uber Groceries App, please check the "no tattoos" box under driver preferences. For your own . . . and the driver's . . . safety.

          Back to the subject of who touches your food . . . food workers are subject to public heath standards inspections.

          But, of course, Uber is a software company, and its drivers aren't food workers, so they will not need to meet any standards.

      • Looks like you're not the target audience.

    • I enjoy talking to Uber drivers and have liked quite a few of them (compared to liking about 0.0001% of taxi drivers I have ever met).

      Maybe it depends on where you live. In Chicago, cab drivers are much more interesting and engaging than Uber drivers. Much more fun to talk to and more likely to have interesting personal stories. In Houston, Uber drivers were better company, but cab drivers would offer to hook you up with a weed connection or prostitutes, so that's a wash. In California, the cab drivers a

      • cab drivers would offer to hook you up with a weed connection or prostitutes

        What could possibly go wrong with taking up the offer of illegal services by a stranger in a strange town?

  • It's the bubble all over again. Watch out for the burst, like in 2001.

    • No, no, no... Yoü are getting it allll wrong my friend. Teh Wörld has changeyd sööö much that no dotcom bubbles can burst anymore. This is because Öbama made teh economy very strong! Yes! No bubbly-bursts anymore! Now, would yoü like to iiinvest in my nüw dotcom? We have an app that lets üs deliver many different type of tampöns to your door. Also för men! Yes! =) Löng liiive Scandiniavia's new Dötcöm scene!!!
    • Await the burst. Buy low. Profit. Don't watch out, rather, enjoy the show.
    • It's the bubble all over again. Watch out for the burst, like in 2001.

      What you don't realise is while the silliest ones like webvan have gone in some countries (e.g. the UK) supermarkets started grocery deliveries in the late 1990s and are still doing it today. The competition is stiffer than ever which is why Amazon got a whole pile of nowhere when it tried to enter the market.

      Grocery delivery works if you do it right.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday October 09, 2018 @05:03PM (#57452840)

    Good luck with that! Groceries are a low-margin business. The low margin depends on the customer traversing the "last mile" shifting the last mile problem from supplier to consumer.

    Sure some wealthy people probably will be interested, but they don't need Uber for that and that demographic would expect and demand a high degree of accountability and Uber is not in that kind of marketspace.

    • well when your stock boys are 1099'er making under min wage there is profit.

    • by dysmal ( 3361085 )

      The natural partnership is with Amazon after their recent acquisition of Whole Foods. Uber will go pick up groceries for the Amazon Prime customers.

      This'll work nicely during the holiday season when Uber drivers will also get tapped to pick up packages from stores. If a Prime customer wants that last minute gift on 12/24 THAT badly, they'll pay for it and both Amazon and Uber will be more than happy to take their money.

    • The low margin depends on the customer traversing the "last mile" shifting the last mile problem from supplier to consumer.

      At this point, it's been optimized to the point where the grocery store is obsolete. "Milk Men" are going to come back, which is more or less what this is.

      Right now the current method by Shipt is unbelievably worse. You're paying someone to go shop in a store for you, to pay a store to pay people to put stuff on shelves and make them straight, etc.

      Look at how much 'dead weight' is sitting around a grocery store. Not to mention all of the overhead of a parking lot, power, prime real estate taxes, a CD and

    • by q_e_t ( 5104099 )

      Good luck with that!

      It works perfectly well in the UK, and major cities in the USA are also pretty dense. Delivery services already exist in the USA, though. My primary way to shop for groceries is either delivery or order and pick up a pre-picked order. In terms of interaction, I have more interaction with the delivery or collection staff (I've known one for several years) than in store.

    • by mjwx ( 966435 )

      Good luck with that! Groceries are a low-margin business. The low margin depends on the customer traversing the "last mile" shifting the last mile problem from supplier to consumer.

      Sure some wealthy people probably will be interested, but they don't need Uber for that and that demographic would expect and demand a high degree of accountability and Uber is not in that kind of marketspace.

      The UK already has delivery for most supermarkets in many areas. Cost is between £0 and 10 for delivery depending on location, order size and so on. Larger orders are usually free or at a lower cost. We even have online only supermarkets like Ocado and Amazon Fresh.

      That being said I still drive down there to see what offers are on this week and if they've got any new ales in but I get why some people hate supermarkets.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Economy and jobs going really good, but wait for all the bubble bursting when a hot economy goes South. All good things must come to a end. After all your paying for a service you used to do yourself, and those services tend to be first in the chopping block for budgets. We have seen this with mail order dinners already, where people finally figure out, hey this get's expensive.

  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Tuesday October 09, 2018 @05:09PM (#57452870)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • That's expensive. I pay no more than $13NZD, which is about $8.50USD. We're a relatively small country with a spread out population. Our entire country is less than half the population of Pennsylvania.

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • That's the problem with Uber, even $15 isn't going to be enough for someone to make money without being able to use the profit margin of the goods sold to offset it.

          The supermarket knows approximately how much stock is on the shelf. They know exactly where everything is, they can have pickers dedicated to each section then combine all the bags in to the correct orders. They can absorb losses when more expensive substitutes get picked or the extra half an apple that put the bag over the 1kg that was paid for

          • I've seen the people who pick the orders in one of the stores here in Canada. They have a cart that holds six large shopping baskets and one person goes around the store for however many orders they are shopping for. I'm not assuming that every basket is an order as some orders could be large.

            This is for the pick-up service some stores offer. You order online and some time later you park your car in one of a few spaces near the entrance. (Usually just past the handicapped spots.) Someone brings out your ord

            • I still don't see the benefit outsourcing the delivery to someone else.
              I wouldn't order cold food perishable from a place they doesn't deliver it in something that keeps it cold.

              We have also have the service that deliver a weeks worth of groceries and recipes. They're usually delivered with ice packs and insulation in the box by courier vans. Probably a good extra source of business for the courier drivers to do a round of deliveries in the suburbs after hours. But again, that only makes sense because they'

            • I've seen the people who pick the orders in one of the stores here in Canada. They have a cart that holds six large shopping baskets and one person goes around the store for however many orders they are shopping for. I'm not assuming that every basket is an order as some orders could be large.

              This is for the pick-up service some stores offer. You order online and some time later you park your car in one of a few spaces near the entrance. (Usually just past the handicapped spots.) Someone brings out your order to the car and you don't have to go into the store.

              All you would have to do is forward the order confirmation to Uber and Uber would tell the store which car would be picking up the order. It's already paid for so the driver doesn't have to worry about anything. They bring it to you and everything is done.

              The only deliveries that happen here are for people that come into the store and pay for the delivery. The groceries go into cardboard boxes which are usually put at the front of the store until the delivery person picks them up. They go into a non-refrigerated vehicle while on deliveries. It could be hours before you get your food but then you need time to get back home anyways.

              I still don't see what the advantage of using Uber over the supermarket delivery services is. Currently, if you pick it up yourself, you're saving the delivery charge at the cost of your time. If you pay Uber to pick it up for you, you're just paying them instead of the supermarket, and I can't imagine Uber will be any cheaper than the five or six quid the supermarket charges.

  • We're thinking about Uber much more as a platform

    BINGO!

    Sad thing: yesterday I saw a uber eats twat cut a corner (nearly hitting a man on a crosswalk), ride about twenty yards the wrong way on the wrong side down a one-way street while looking at his phone, do a sudden u-turn, ride back the right way still looking at his pone, ignore a yield sign and nearly hit a rootard.

    The sad bit is the last "nearly".

    • So just like some other people then. I've seen a woman drive through a stop sign because she was looking at her phone. The only reason she didn't hit anyone is because everyone else was paying attention. I've seen a pedestrian walk out, at a crosswalk, in front of a fire engine with it's lights and siren on. It had been honking it's horn to get everyone to stop at the intersection and was halfway across the intersection when this idiot just started to cross. He had his earphones in and was looking at his ph

  • Uber's restaurant delivery business "Eats" hit $6 billion in bookings earlier this year, growing over 200%, quickly becoming a crown jewel for the unlicensed taxi company.

    fixed

    • Delivering food is not unlicensed taxiing.

      • by mentil ( 1748130 )

        If the food is Organ Meats, then clearly they are in the Livery business.

      • by Uberbah ( 647458 )

        Pedant, did you read the summary, or know what the company's primary business is?

        • I'm just tired of the "unlicensed taxi" whining - taxi licenses are a scam.

          • by Uberbah ( 647458 )

            Because Uber isn't a scam??? Their entire business model is predicated on the notion that they can drive other taxi companies out of business, in time for their self-driving technology to take flight before running out of the venture capital allowing them to lose billions every year. At which point they promptly let all of their human drivers go while jacking up rates. This is so obvious that Ray Charles could see it. And Ray Charles is blind.

            And dead. What's your excuse for this venture capitalist bootl

  • But there is not one Uber driver I've ever seen that I would want picking out groceries for me nor would even eat anything they hand me...

    Someone at your chosen grocery store will ppack the groceries into a "tamper proof" bag.

    All the Uber fella will have to do is DELIVER.

    In any case, UBER gets their cut with virtually no effort expended; smart!

  • Fail (Score:5, Interesting)

    by viperidaenz ( 2515578 ) on Tuesday October 09, 2018 @05:27PM (#57452926)

    Supermarkets are big enough to run their own delivery operations.
    It's common in New Zealand. They have people in the different sections of the supermarket picking the items for multiple orders.
    You shop online and get told then that is likely in stock. If it isn't in stock when your order gets picked, they'll substitute it. If the substitute costs more, they don't charge you more, if it costs less, they'll refund you the difference. They're very generous on their weight based pricing for produce too. It's cheaper for them to give you more than fuss around trying to hit the exact value you paid for.

    Your groceries then get delivered in a little refrigerated truck. No way in hell I'm having some random guy in their car deliver me frozen goods.

    To top it all off, this only costs $13 for delivery. $9 if it's over $200. $118 for unlimited deliveries for 6 months - works out to only $4.5 a week.
    How is Uber going to compete with that price? They'd need to provide trucks or coolers too, since they can't realistically offer delivery for anything that requires refrigeration

    • You're not wrong about supermarkets in New Zealand, but in my view their biggest advantage is that they are a duopoly and can completely shut Uber out if they choose to (which they might).
    • Presumably this is a market that hasn't been exploited much in the US?

      Similar to NZ, here in the UK there's no way Uber will be able to undercut the supermarkets' own delivery charges. The only thing I can think of that they could offer would be a faster service (rather than booking a two hour slot tomorrow with the supermarket or whatever), but in that case the driver would also have to do the shopping for you.

      • Yeah, so you can get bruised fruit and warm milk delivered by a random guy who never washes his hands.
        Maybe it could work if they deliver alcohol to people who run out and are too drunk to drive to get more. Uber wouldn't care about the laws that prohibit selling alcohol to intoxicated people. Laws are for the competition to follow.

  • by crgrace ( 220738 ) on Tuesday October 09, 2018 @05:33PM (#57452960)

    But make it up in volume.

    I wonder what Uber is playing at. I get that they're trying to "get big fast" because it did work for Amazon, but Amazon lost far, far less money than Uber is losing and they are in markets with much greater barriers to entry.

    off topic: uber drivers are always hanging out parked across my driveway (taxis NEVER do this)... usually they move when I honk but on Saturday this guy kept trying to inch forward think I could get into my garage if he just moved six inches forward. I had to honk and make all these gestures... pissed me off.

  • Officer, we're not technically shoplifting, we are just Lifting the Shopping to the clients.
    That is why we didn't pay at the cashier you see....
  • It's the new cafeteria plan for the drivers. It'll supplement their low income and high hours by making food available.
  • Combine the grocery delivery with their self-driving cars. When the delivery arrives, I disable the computer and steal the car. Now I get a free car for the price of a few food items! It's foolproof!
  • I don't want a supermarket employee picking my groceries for me, and I sure as FUCK don't want some Uber asshole touching anything I'm going to eat either. Who the hell comes up with this shit? Who the hell uses this shit?
    • Who the hell comes up with this shit?

      It's a very obvious idea.

      Who the hell uses this shit?

      In the UK it's hit nearly 50% market penetration (that's like 30million people) for occasional use, with about 12 million using it for every single shop.

      So... lots of people.

      • So you're claiming you have 12 million people that are okay with a stranger at a store picking out their meat and produce for them? I don't believe you.
        • So you're claiming you have 12 million people that are okay with a stranger at a store picking out their meat and produce for them? I don't believe you

          It doesn't matter how many brits tell you what life is like in the UK you simply cannot accept it's different from your life in a different country. And all because you personally can't imagine you it can be made to work. Your arrogance is astounding. Smarter people did in fact manage to figure it out.

          It's true. Get over it.

          http://www.mintel.com/press-ce... [mintel.com]

          ht [statista.com]

  • But everyone knows that grocery services are where the bread is.

  • These places like Albertsons and Safeway are dying a slow death. At the low end, WalMart can sell things cheaper. At the high end, you have Whole Foods and Trader Joes, etc. and Albertsons simply doesn't have the cachet to match them on the high end.

    For commodity items like paper towels, canned goods, diapers, etc. you can get that from Amazon. And they deliver it.

    That leaves traditional grocers with low margin items like bread, and that has a very short shelf life. Same with produce and produce is worse be

    • There are plenty of people like me who are way too poor for Whole Foods or Nugget, and who like to shop for our own food in a pleasant atmosphere, but do not wish to endure the agony of the Walmart atmosphere. That's why I go to Safeway. The middle ground may not be trendy like the extremes are, but it's what most people actually want.

      • "The middle ground may not be trendy like the extremes are, but it's what most people actually want." - Perhaps but their earnings don't reflect that. They are closing stores left and right. Their recent merger attempt with Rite Aid fell through. They are deeply in debt. That limits their ability to innovate. It's turning into a real estate play, a la Sears.

  • Uber is infamous for disrupting, or actually breaking established social systems. I'm not sure that disrupting the food supply-- even if it to make money-- is a laudable social goal.

  • by shilly ( 142940 ) on Wednesday October 10, 2018 @03:13AM (#57454586)

    It is hilarious how parochial most Slashdot posters are.

    Online grocery shopping has been a major business in the UK, the world's most competitive grocery market (competitive, not lucrative or largest), for more than a decade.

    Perhaps Uber would like to study up about Ocado (and Sainsburys.com and Tesco.com and Waitrose.com etc etc) before they jump into this market. Perhaps Slashdotters might want to learn a little bit about them as well, before confidently declaring that online grocery shopping can never be a thing.

    Ocado's story, in particular, has many lessons to teach about platform vs exclusivity, the role of automation, the importance of new brands for online (eg Natoora), the cognitive differences in shopping decisions online vs in-store (smart lists etc).

    A few articles here:
    http://www.cityam.com/264588/d... [cityam.com]

    https://www.thegrocer.co.uk/ch... [thegrocer.co.uk]

    • Gosh, arrogant looking down the nose at Americans - from a European. Never seen that before! Especially on Slashdot! Tell me, did you get that idea to do this yourself or did you read it somewhere?

      Hey, I've got an idea. Why don't you start your own UK Slashdot? Then it can be so cosmopolitan and international, and you can ban people from using customary units. Ah, we all know that's not going to happen. All you're going to do is just continue being a little bitch and write mean little spiteful comment

      • by shilly ( 142940 )

        Go back and re-read my comment, and you'll see I didn't mention Americans. That's your projection right there, oh muppety one.

        And I don't need to start my own Slashdot, because it's on this special thing called the World Wide Web which enables us to learn about things from all around the world including the US, the UK and lots of other countries too, oh muppettier one.

        And why don't you engage with the actual substance of my critique, instead of just replying with a dumbfuck ad hominem? You could, for exampl

        • The Muppets: also American. Are you even able to express yourself without reference to that culture you hate so much? Survey says: no.
  • Uber isn't making a profit, as far as anyone outside the firm can tell. Naturally they are seeking new lines of business.

  • UBER first order business success came from the UX marriage of software gamification and JIT order efficiency. A sub-3% margin distribution business model and HUGELY expensive brick and mortar UI is exactly the target rich problem that UBER knows how to disrupt.

    Interesting will be Amazon/WholeFoods PRIME subscription model .vs. UBER/grocery.app delivery model

    • Their business success came by running huge losses, subsidising their services paid for by investors. How often can they repeat that trick before investors start asking where their money is?

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