Wednesday, December 17, 2025
ADVT 
Life

Canadians Cool To Shopping For Groceries Online, Only 15% Have Tried It: Report

Darpan News Desk, 24 Oct, 2016 01:41 PM
    TORONTO — Canadians are happy buying their books and music on the web but aren't yet embracing online grocery shopping, suggests a recently released report.
     
    According to the results of an online survey of 1,000 Canadians in August, 92 per cent of respondents said they shopped online but only 15 per cent said they had bought groceries on the web.
     
    While almost 40 per cent of online-shopping spending was linked to entertainment purchases, just four per cent was tied to food and groceries.
     
    "With online shopping in general, even in the past with other categories, there had to be an incentive for customers to try it out, to get away from their usual habits, give it a try. And then if there was some benefit they would try it again," said Suthamie Poologasingham of J.C. Williams Group Ltd., which looked at the online grocery market in its Canadian E-tail Report.
     
    "I think we're at that stage with grocery and online."
     
    Canada lags behind the U.S. and U.K. when it comes to online grocery shopping, added Poologasingham.
     
    "Once they understand there is some convenience behind it — if retailers are able to provide those conveniences and the same products they would provide in store — I think we will see more Canadians getting on board."
     
    Some companies without physical grocery stores — like Grocery Gateway, which partners with Longo's in the Toronto area — deliver boxes of groceries, including fresh produce, to the doorsteps of their customers, while IGA, Thrifty Foods and Costco offer some delivery services as well.
     
    Summerhill Market in Toronto teamed up with the delivery service InstaBuggy about six months ago and has seen 30 per cent to 40 per cent growth each month in its online service, said co-owner Christy McMullen.
     
    "I don't know if everyone will do all of their shopping online. I think they still like the experience of coming in the store, but when you have these big bulky items and you're in a rush or you don't have time, then I think online is a really great alternative," McMullen said.
     
    While books and clothes ordered online can linger on a porch, in an apartment lobby or a mailbox, food has to be packaged carefully to keep from spoiling or bruising.
     
    To get around that, some retailers including Loblaw and Walmart Canada have adopted a click-and-collect program. The customer orders online and then swings by the store to fetch the order.
     
    Jeremy Pee, Loblaw senior vice-president of e-commerce, claims about 80 per cent of customers who try it once return for a second visit.
     
    "We are expecting to see online grocery shopping grow," said Poologasingham.
     
    "We are seeing from other studies that it is growing, so people are looking at it and trying it out at least once."
     
    The polling industry's professional body, the Marketing Research and Intelligence Association, says online surveys cannot be assigned a margin of error because they do not randomly sample the population.

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    Virtual body swapping could abolish race biases

    Virtual body swapping could abolish race biases
    With the help of a technique called virtual body swapping, researches have helped people change their attitudes with regard to others....

    Virtual body swapping could abolish race biases

    26/11 Mastermind Lakhvi Gets Bail, Shocked India Asks Pakistan To Act

    26/11 Mastermind Lakhvi Gets Bail, Shocked India Asks Pakistan To Act
    An anti-terrorism court in Islamabad Thursday granted bail to Zakiur Rehman Lakhvi, a key mastermind of the 26/11 Mumbai attacks, triggering shock and indignation in India which asked Pakistan to take steps to reverse the decision.

    26/11 Mastermind Lakhvi Gets Bail, Shocked India Asks Pakistan To Act

    'Most US Children Likely To Live With Unmarried Mothers'

    'Most US Children Likely To Live With Unmarried Mothers'
    More than half of all US children will likely live with unmarried mothers at some point before they reach 18, said a study by researchers from the Princeton University and the Harvard University, the US.

    'Most US Children Likely To Live With Unmarried Mothers'

    Spicy foods boost men's sex drive

    Spicy foods boost men's sex drive
    A French study has found that men who love to consume more spicy food have more testosterone and perform better during sex....

    Spicy foods boost men's sex drive

    How to rekindle romance in army couples

    How to rekindle romance in army couples
    For army families who live in combat zones, giving each other time and space is the first step towards rekindling romance when the spouse returns home...

    How to rekindle romance in army couples

    E-cigarettes exposing rising number of kids to nicotine

    E-cigarettes exposing rising number of kids to nicotine
    A US study has suggested the e-cigarettes have hooked a new generation of children to nicotine who otherwise might not have taken up smoking at all....

    E-cigarettes exposing rising number of kids to nicotine