Can Online Sales Bring Food Co-ops into the Modern Age? | Civil Eats

Can Online Sales Bring Food Co-ops into the Modern Age?

New technology is allowing once-fringe natural food co-ops to reach a new audience.

food front co-op

If the mention of a cooperative grocery store conjures images of barefoot hippies pawing through bins of nuts and grains like squirrels, then we have news for you. Many of today’s co-ops have modernized their business plans to reach a wider audience. This fact is especially evident in the way many co-op groceries, like national supermarket chains, are on their way to offering online ordering, with delivery in one to two hours.

The reason that many brick-and mortar grocery stores are jumping on the online grocery bandwagon is simple—for many people, shopping online is more convenient.

Due to the emergence of delivery services like Instacart and Amazon Fresh, the technology which has made it possible for the chains to get online has also made it easy for co-ops, many of which have only one or two stores. Customers simply go to the store’s website, log into the online ordering section and start shopping.

Instacart currently has 100 retailers nationwide, including several co-ops such as Rainbow Grocery in the Bay Area, Good Grocer in Minneapolis, Central Co-op and Puget Consumers Co-op (PCC) in Seattle, and Harvest Coop in Boston. Andrew Nodes, head of retail accounts at Instacart, says that co-ops particularly benefit from online ordering and delivery services because it allows them to expand beyond their neighborhood membership base by giving them access to new customers.

“[Co-ops] also sell hyper-local and perishable items that don’t have the exposure that national brands backed by multibillion dollar corporations do,” he says. “Instacart is a way for them to increase customer exposure to those items.”

According to Brie Hilliard, marketing director of Food Front Cooperative Grocery in Portland, Oregon, the co-op decided to go forward with an online system two years ago, but put it on the back burner until it had a point-of-sale (POS) system in place. This year, they’ve begun offering sales through Instacart and so far around 130 customers have taken advantage of the service.

The timing was fortuitous, as it coincided with the opening of a popular 17-store grocery chain, New Seasons Market, just a few blocks from the co-op’s flagship location. With online ordering, Hilliard said, Food Front is now able to fill orders from its two locations for most of Portland’s neighborhoods in one to two hours.

A Brief Food Co-op Backgrounder

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Historically, co-ops were formed when a group of people pooled resources in order to meet needs they had in common, whether those were economic, social, or cultural. In 1844 a group of artisans in Rochedale, England, adopted a set of eight principles that formed the foundation on which all modern cooperatives operate. Put simply, these principles defined a cooperative as a jointly-owned and democratically controlled enterprise.

In most co-ops, membership entitles the “member-owner” (as they’re referred to) to one share of the business and one vote in board elections and general decisions about the business. The investment in a membership acts as equity to keep the co-op healthy and growing. Most also offer some kind of patronage refund, with additional discounts available depending on the way the co-op is structured.

Both Food Front and Wheatsville Food Co-op in Austin, Texas, offer the online service to everyone in the community, not just their member-owners.

“We use our online storefront just as we do our brick and mortar [store],” says Raquel Dadomo, brand manager for Wheatsville. While member-owners get a discount when they join the co-op, she says, “Everyone is welcome to shop at the same prices you’ll find in the store. We want people in other cities to be able to buy food gifts for their local friends, for businesses to restock their office kitchen, and for all shoppers to get their favorite locally made items.”

Eamon Molloy, Food Front’s general manager, says one goal is to expose a broader spectrum of people to the high quality products that the co-op offers and, as a result, gain new member-owners, who receive a discount in exchange for their membership, but with the addition of online ordering and home delivery, it no longer matters if people live near the store, which in the past has been a limiting factor for cooperatives.

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Now, member-owners simply enter a 12-digit number through Instacart to receive their discount when shopping online.

Will Online Orders be a Game-Changer for Co-ops?

C.E. Pugh, the chief operating officer for National Co-op Grocers (NCG), a business services cooperative for retail food co-ops, said that about 10 percent of its 150 members are currently experimenting with online ordering and delivery. While hedging on calling online ordering a game-changer for co-ops, Pugh said, “Every little bit—a three to four-percent boost in sales—helps.”

Both Wheatsville and Food Front have found Instacart’s system works well for them and their customers. It helps that the company provides trained “pickers” in each store who collect the orders, then hand them off to drivers. And if the number of orders is too much for the pickers, the co-ops can always fill in with their own employees.

Dadomo said that getting started on Instacart was the biggest challenge but now that everything’s set up, it’s fairly easy to manage.

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As for Food Front, in the first two weeks, without any big announcement or press releases, orders were coming in from as far away as Sellwood on the city’s southern border and St. Johns in the north—a promising start. “We’re really excited to offer this service,” said Molloy.

Apparently shoppers are jazzed, too. One happy customer summed it up this way when she placed her order: “This is a gift to my daughter. Thank you for making it possible for a mother living in Germany to send a hug.”

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Kathleen Bauer is a freelance writer in Portland, Oregon, focusing on agriculture and field-to-plate issues. Her blog, Good Stuff NW, is about her journey to connect the dots between what happening in the field and what she’s putting on her table. Read more >

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  1. I question how much of a value/mission alignment there is when Food Coops outsource grocery deliveries to independent contractors and embedded pickers. At best, the embedded pickers work part-time and are covered through workers compensation if they are injured on the job. The delivery drivers, on the other hand, have no such benefits and are responsible for auto insurance, wear and tear on their vehicles. They do not receive paid time off, health insurance or other benefits many employees receive. It is unclear about what happens if an independent contractor driver gets into an accident, injures someone, or causes damage to a customer’s property.

    My company, Boston Organics......
  2. My company, Boston Organics has been providing home and office delivery of local and organic groceries since 2002. We are also a Certified B Corporation. B Corporations are trying to use business to solve social, environmental and economic issues. When we make business decisions, we consider the impact the decision will have on all of the stakeholders. In addition to the bottom line/profitability, we also ask ourselves “What will the impact of this decision be to the environment, the communities we operate in, and our employees.” At Boston Organics, we are trying to build a truly healthy and sustainable food system. This includes looking at how our food is grown. We also consider how the food is produced and transported....
  3. We also consider how the food is produced and transported from the farms to our customers’ doors.

    It is very tempting to partner with one of these independent contractor/”gig economy” companies. Maybe the co-ops feel they have no other choice, and maybe we will too eventually. Instead of paying what is considered an hourly living wage, subsidized health insurance, paid time off, matching 401K, and various insurances (auto, business, general liability, etc), we could pay by the delivery. Such a partnership would allow us to push many of the risks, liability and costs on to the independent contractor (and customer).

    Outsourcing order picking and deliveries to independent contractors might be a good way .....
  4. Outsourcing order picking and deliveries to independent contractors might be a good way to keep our costs down, but we don’t think there is a strong enough alignment with our mission. We believe a truly healthy and sustainable food system includes paying all of those involved in the supply chain, including the order picker and delivery person, a competitive wage and benefits.
  5. Justine
    I think tis is a great idea! Wonderful idea! Let's get going!

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