Ocado
Below are the available bulk discount rates for each individual item when you purchase a certain amount
Register as a Premium Educator at hbsp.harvard.edu, plan a course, and save your students up to 50% with your academic discount.
Publication Date:
December 11, 2015
Industry:
Retail & Consumer Goods
Industry:
Food & Beverage
Source:
Harvard Business School
In 2015, U.K.-based Ocado was the world’s largest pure player in the online home-delivery grocery business and was gaining a growing share of the highly competitive U.K. grocery market. Ocado had made heavy investments in technology, including a highly automated warehouse operation, intelligent software for efficient order delivery, and a customer-friendly online interface. Ocado’s customer base had expanded beyond the wealthy to include middle-income consumers; even with a delivery charge, grocery shopping through Ocado was, in many cases, as affordable as shopping in a retail stores. In 2015 the company was developing a strategy for its Smart Platform, a model in which Ocado would lease its software, hardware, and integration services to brick-and-mortar grocery retailers seeking to build online businesses. Ocado’s management believed the Smart Platform, which they planned to market internationally, had the potential to disrupt the global grocery retail market.
If you’d like to share this PDF, you can purchase copyright permissions by increasing the quantity.
Copyright © 2021 Harvard Business School Publishing. All rights reserved. Harvard Business Publishing is an affiliate of Harvard Business School.
Ocado
Research & References of Ocado|A&C Accounting And Tax Services
Source