Philippine Daily Inquirer

Frustrated foodies gobble up South Korean grocery unicorn

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SEOUL—When Sophie Kim moved home to South Korea after 15 years in the United States, she couldn’t find anywhere to buy kale for her green juice. So she found a farmer, then built an app to help others seek out top-quality produce.

Market Kurly—the next-day grocery delivery service that Kim founded—is now one of South Korea’s most important startup unicorns, last valued at $3 billion and set for an initial public offering by February.

Kim, 38, a self-professed “foodie,” came up with the idea after she got tired of endlessly going from shop to shop to find the high-quality groceries she wanted in Seoul’s supermarke­ts.

But she knew the products were out there and began driving to South Korea’s agricultur­al heartlands to find them, for example visiting the famous meat market in Majang-dong to procure half a cow’s worth of beef, which she would then split with her coworkers.

“While I was trying to figure out why it was so difficult to have access to great quality, fresh food in Korea, I got to know some farmers and fishermen, and they had exactly the same issue of not being able to find customers,” she told AFP.

Korean farmers “are proud

of the fact that they can produce such nice quality products, but it is extremely difficult for them to get to the consumer,” she said.

Lightbulb moment

At first, Kim said she thought about setting up a farmers market, before abandoning the idea as too unwieldy and—more importantl­y—unhelpful for producers, who don’t have the time to travel to Seoul.

It was a lightbulb moment when Kim realized “if we can make this work for both consumers and producers, it would probably be a breakthrou­gh for the entire industry.”

Kurly customers—initially urban working women but now a diverse cross section of society—can order rare beef, hand-made bread, or pick one of more than a dozen varieties of local, hard-to-find apples by 11 p.m. and be guaranteed delivery by 7 a.m. the next morning.

As with companies from Amazon to Uber Eats, the rapid-fast shipments rely largely on gig economy drivers, and Kurly has not been immune to the global industrywi­de complaints of overwork and poor conditions.

But consumer convenienc­e has proved key to the app’s success—even though Kim says she’s most proud of how the complex data-driven logistics network she’s built supports South Korea’s beleaguere­d farmers.

Kim launched Market Kurly with 30 products, including her beloved kale, which was supplied by farmer Hwang Hansoo, who has been growing organic vegetables for 30 years at his farm in Gyeonggi province.

Hwang told AFP that his kale was originally popular only with cancer patients for its perceived health benefits. He sold so little of it he considered switching crops, but the pleas of one of his terminally ill customers in Busan convinced him to keep going.

Farming is tough in South Korea, Hwang said, owing to thin profit margins and a reliance on hard-to-find overseas workers amid dwindling interest in the industry from young South Koreans.

Social costs

But working with Kurly has helped.

“In the early days of Kurly, we sold around 20 to 30 bags each day (but now) our average daily sales is around 800 bags” of kale, he said.

Part of the growth can be attributed to changing consumer trends, with kale now popular with young women who see it as a trendy health food, Hwang said, but Kurly’s next-day cold-chain logistics network also plays a key role.

“It takes less than a day to go from harvesting to the consumer’s doorstep,” he said, adding that before Kurly came along it would take two or three days for his kale to make it to stores.

Next-day delivery services are “very helpful because it is a system that goes directly from the farm to the consumers,” while Kurly also handled all the promotion and marketing, he said.

“I can focus on farming,” he added.

Hwang also said reading reviews of his products on Kurly’s app allowed him to feel more connected to the people who eat what he grows.

South Korea’s next-day delivery apps including Kurly and rival Coupang Fresh have been criticized for the strain they put on delivery drivers, with local media reporting on occasional deaths from extreme overwork, as workers make scores of deliveries each night.

The rise of such services has also sucked gig workers from other crucial sectors including city taxis, where the supply crunch is so severe that the Seoul government recently hiked basic fares in a bid to entice more drivers to provide late-night services.

It is important for South Korea’s unicorns like Market Kurly to take into account the social costs of their business models, said minister for Small and Medium Enterprise­s and Startups Lee Young.

“It’s very possible for these platform companies to contribute to society,” she said.

“Market Kurly is a very good example because it has created a very innovative idea and they have gone through multiple struggles until they achieved current success.”

 ?? —PHOTOS BY AFP ?? GROWN BY AN APP Workers in Icheon, Gyeonggi province, harvest kale leaves at an organic farm that works with next-day grocery delivery service Market Kurly.
—PHOTOS BY AFP GROWN BY AN APP Workers in Icheon, Gyeonggi province, harvest kale leaves at an organic farm that works with next-day grocery delivery service Market Kurly.
 ?? ?? FARM TO TABLE Farmer Hwang Han-soo poses with packages of freshly harvested kale ready for delivery.
FARM TO TABLE Farmer Hwang Han-soo poses with packages of freshly harvested kale ready for delivery.
 ?? ?? FRESH PICK A worker prepares freshly harvested kale leaves before packing them.
FRESH PICK A worker prepares freshly harvested kale leaves before packing them.

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