June 3, 1999
For New Online Grocer, High-Tech Warehouse is Key
By MATT RICHTEL
AKLAND, Calif. -- A massive high-tech distribution center that opened here Wednesday is the centerpiece of an ambitious effort by Louis Borders, former chairman of the Borders bookselling chain, to perfect the art of selling groceries online.
Borders's new company, WebVan Group Inc., runs an Internet-based grocery store that promises same-day delivery of food, including produce, meat and frozen goods. It enters a field of fledgling virtual grocers, including Peapod, NetGrocer and Homegrocer.com, all fighting consumers' apparent reluctance to order food online.
But the soft-spoken Borders, 51, insisted that the grocery business, with $450 billion in annual sales, is ripe for the picking.
"Shopping will never be the same," said Borders, flanked by Jerry Brown, Oakland's mayor, before an audience of about a hundred listeners, mostly employees.
Borders might as well have said that selling will never be the same, thanks to Webvan's sophisticated distribution center. Food's perishability makes the online grocery business more complex than, say, selling books, so WebVan processes orders on a same-day basis in its highly automated $20 million warehouse. Industry analysts say the system is filled with promise but is also unproven and vulnerable to technological glitches.
Inside the 330,000-square-foot warehouse, a maze of four miles of conveyor belts carries yellow, blue and green bins filled with dry goods, frozen food and chilled goods respectively. When a customer places an order over the Web, a computer launches a new batch of bins that will be filled by employees in different sections of the warehouse, including a deli, a produce area and a butcher where meat is cut to order.
The idea is to cut time and labor costs to a minimum, as demonstrated in the area where employees pack the yellow bins with dry goods from cereal to soap. Rather than have the employees fill each order by pulling products from shelves, the shelves come to the employees.
Fifteen-foot-high rotating racks bearing hundreds of crates packed with various goods stretch from one end of the warehouse to the other. Employees standing at one end pick products from the racks and place them in customer bins. A network of computers and scanners coordinate the movements of the racks of food and the conveyor belts.
Employees know which products to take, whether pasta sauce, peanut butter or vinegar, because electronic displays point to the proper rack and tell them to add an item to a particular customer bin. Industry analysts call the system "automated pick and pack."
"No one has figured out how to deliver (grocery) products cost-effectively," said Evie Black Dykema, an analyst with the market research firm Forrester Research in Cambridge, Mass. "Webvan's delivery model could be the solution and the means of cracking that nut."
But along with some other analysts, Dykema, who calls online grocery shopping a "laggard" among e-commerce businesses, remains cautious. Forrester, for example, projects that by the year 2003, Web-based groceries will have $10.8 billion in annual sales, just 2 percent of sales at traditional grocers. She said consumers have been wary of grocery services, partly because they do not want to set aside a two-hour window of time during which their groceries may be delivered.
Webvan promises to deliver groceries within five hours of an order placement and within a 30-minute window. Dykema said she wonders whether they will be able to keep those promises, given the technological and human elements at work.
"They have a great story," she said. "Now we'll see whether or not they can do it."
Borders himself concedes that there are a lot of challenges involved in getting every order right, noting that the single biggest hurdle is that the business "has a million moving parts." He said that months of tests have gone smoothly. More generally, he said he thinks the business will work because studies have consistently shown that a majority of people "don't like to shop for groceries."
Borders said Webvan will offer prices that match or are up to 5 percent lower than typical grocery chain stores, and that ultimately it will have twice the selection.
He has already convinced one key audience: investors. Borders and his venture-capital backers have anted up $120 million in seed capital already, a substantial investment for a company that had yet to open its doors for business.
For now, Webvan's service is available only in the San Francisco Bay area. By the end of next year, the company hopes to expand its fleet of delivery vans -- refrigerated trucks painted tan and bearing the Webvan logo -- from 70 to 220. Deliveries cost $4.95, but orders totaling more than $50 are delivered free.
The company has said it is building a similar distribution center in Atlanta, and says it will be up and running in 10 major markets by the end of next year. The company chose San Francisco as its first market because of the high concentration of Internet users, said Mark Zaleski, the company's chief operating officer. |