The Palm Beach Post

Amazon Prime Day will test groceries’ waters

- By Spencer Soper and Craig Giammona

Amazon.com proved it can use bargain buzz to sell a lot of gadgets on a random day in July. This year, it’s hoping excitement around Prime Day gets shoppers to change how they buy groceries.

Amazon’s fourth annual Prime Day — 36 hours of sales beginning July 16 — will be its first since closing the $13.7 billion purchase of Whole Foods Market. It is offering discounted strawberri­es, chicken breasts and cod fillets to lure people into its brick-and-mortar stores, as well as enticement­s to get them to try grocery delivery for the first time.

Success for Amazon will be measured by how many people switch up their routines in response to the promotion and develop new habits. The $800 billion grocery market has been hard for Amazon to crack since so many shoppers already make weekly trips to supermarke­ts and big-box stores run by the likes of Kroger and Walmart. Retailers have also stepped up their own digital offerings, including a buy online-pick-up-in-store option that combines the ease of online shopping with the instant gratificat­ion of a quick run to the nearby market.

“They’re unlikely to lure a customer away, but maybe they can take a bit of the spending,” said Jennifer Bartashus, a retail analyst at Bloomberg Intelligen­ce. “Your average Kroger shopper isn’t going to meaningful­ly change their shopping pattern based on being a Prime member. It takes a long time to change those habits.”

Amazon had grocery sales of $2 billion in 2017, representi­ng 18 percent of the online market in the U.S., according to One Click Retail estimates. That’s a tiny fraction of overall grocery spending, but Amazon proved with books and electronic­s how habits can change. Online grocery sales will grow to $100 billion as soon as 2022, with 70 percent of households ordering groceries online, according to the Food Marketing Institute and Nielsen.

That’s why Amazon is promoting so many grocery offerings on Prime Day, trying to extend the loyalty of 100 million global Prime members to the food aisle. Prime members, Amazon’s most active shoppers, pay monthly or annual fees for shipping discounts, movie streaming and other services.

After a decade of trying to sell fresh food online, Amazon found that most discerning foodies want to inspect fresh veggies and meat in the flesh before buying. So it’s offering Prime members $10 to spend online during Prime Day if buy at least $10 of groceries at a Whole Foods store starting today until July 17. Shoppers using Prime Pantry, a subscripti­on service for bulk grocery orders, can get a free box of Honey Nut Cheerios through a joint Prime Day offer from Amazon and General Mills Inc.

Amazon has had success using promotions to entice people to try its devices, including the Echo speaker line. Amazon’s mini Echo Dot was its top-selling product on Prime Day last year, for less than $40. This year, the company is offering its Echo Show, which displays videos and images, for $129, a $100 discount.

It could be tough to generate the same excitement with coupons and free cereal, enticement­s the grocery industry has been using for decades.

“It hasn’t had the apocalypti­c effect everyone thought,” said Kevin Kelley, co-founder of retail-design firm Shook Kelley. “A lot of my clients hunkered down, thinking they’d have to lower the price of eggs. But it really hasn’t affected them.”

 ?? DANIA MAXWELL / BLOOMBERG ?? A sign alerts Amazon.com Prime members of a special deal on shrimp during the grand opening of a Whole Foods Market location in Burbank, Calif., last month.
DANIA MAXWELL / BLOOMBERG A sign alerts Amazon.com Prime members of a special deal on shrimp during the grand opening of a Whole Foods Market location in Burbank, Calif., last month.

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