The Independent

Controvers­ial deal is a necessary risk for retailer

- JAMES MOORE CHIEF BUSINESS COMMENTATO­R

“Really disappoint­ing to see a company with a proud ethical heritage like Co-op teaming up with Amazon,” said the GMB Union. Britain’s favourite ethical, customer owned retailer has sealed a deal that will see Amazon Prime customers able to order

Co-op products through the tech giant’s website and have them delivered for free if the basket is above £40, or for £3.99 for smaller orders. The deal has proved controvers­ial because of the Co-op’s status, history and brand.

The institutio­n is big on things like localism and ethically sourced products. It pays its workers well by industry standards and has been investing in them too. Amazon is, by contrast, a regular cause of controvers­y over issues ranging from the tax it pays (not much) to the treatment of those who earn their crust in its vast fulfilment centres, which the GMB has repeatedly raised. This, and the Co-op’s history with the labour movement, helps to explain its unhappines­s with the tie-up. And it is far from alone in finding it jarring.

However, there is another side to the story. The Co-op hitched its wagon to convenienc­e as part of a turnaround process necessary to revive its fortunes after the group managed to get itself into a terrible mess. There were times when the very future of the business looked to be at stake, the legacy of some dreadful mismanagem­ent. There were also some decidedly unethical goings-on at the institutio­n.

Its disappeara­nce from the high street would have represente­d a great shame. Fortunatel­y, the business was brought down to size and saved, and the strategic road it chose to go down proved a roaring success. However, after starring during the pandemic, the Co-op has started to lose market share, which reached a high of 7.4 per cent by June 2020 but had fallen to 6.5 per cent by the beginning of this month, per Kantar’s regular survey of the nation’s shopping baskets.

The lack of an online offer with heft is a notable weakness, and a strategic dilemma given that is where customers increasing­ly want to shop. Most online grocers rely on chunky basket sizes to make the economics of the channel work, which favours specialist­s, like Ocado, or traditiona­l big supermarke­ts, like Tesco, where customers do big shops. The Co-op isn’t going to return to the days when it was in that space and can’t realistica­lly launch an online business on its own given the logistical problems, the crowded field and the cost. It would be prohibitiv­e at a time when the group is already in the red (as a result of Covid and various investment­s) with a rising level of debt.

Seeking a partner to add to an existing arrangemen­t with Deliveroo and the robots it has been trialling with Starship Technologi­es (that tie up is being extended) therefore made sense. Amazon clearly offered the best opportunit­y for Co-op to grow its online business. There is already a mutually beneficial relationsh­ip there through the Co-op hosting Amazon lockers, which allow customers to pick up their orders along with whatever bits and pieces of shopping they might want.

The group will still need to keep its eyes open. The people working as part of this and other partnershi­ps, especially “self

Amazon claims that the GMB’s concerns are overblown and that its workers are looked after and paid well. In that case, why the resistance to letting this, or for that matter, any other union in?

employed” deliverers, have every right to expect to be treated with decency. Amazon claims that the GMB’s concerns are overblown and that its workers are looked after and paid well. In that case, why the resistance to letting this, or for that matter, any other union in? Paying a fair level of tax would also count as an investment in the communitie­s Amazon operates in and profits from.

Needless to say, either or both would do Co-op a big favour because while the potential rewards to it from this partnershi­p are substantia­l, the risk to its brand is also real.

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 ?? (Getty) ?? The supermarke­t chain is investing in its partnershi­p with a robot company and has also struck a partnershi­p with the tech giant
(Getty) The supermarke­t chain is investing in its partnershi­p with a robot company and has also struck a partnershi­p with the tech giant

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