sa国际传媒

Skip to content
Join our Newsletter

Social distancing will boost online shopping, expert says

A sa国际传媒 retail consultant expects people to increasingly buy groceries online, eat at home more often, and postpone non-essential shopping now that health officials are encouraging 鈥渟ocial distancing鈥 to combat COVID-19.
CPT50111121.jpg
A shopper leaves a grocery store carrying his groceries in plastic bags in Brossard, Que on August 30, 2016. Shoppers at Sobeys Inc. grocery stores will soon need to bring their own totes to pack their purchases or lug them home in paper bags as the chain moves to phase out plastic bags by February 2020. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Paul Chiasson

A sa国际传媒 retail consultant expects people to increasingly buy groceries online, eat at home more often, and postpone non-essential shopping now that health officials are encouraging 鈥渟ocial distancing鈥 to combat COVID-19.

鈥淚 think, right now, everyone is trying to sort out 鈥榳hat鈥檚 our footing?鈥 鈥 said David Ian Gray, of DIG360 Consulting Ltd.

If citizens move to a self-isolation model, more people will stay at home and cook for themselves, which will affect restaurants and bars, Gray said from Vancouver.

Those people will want to stock up, he said.

In terms of getting food and frozen and canned goods, people who regularly shop online will continue to do that, Gray said from Vancouver.

鈥淲hat鈥檚 going to be different is that people who have only dabbled in it or have been kind of reluctant to try it, this might push them into placing their first orders.鈥

Greater Victoria shoppers are quickly turning to online shopping, which can see them pick up groceries at stores or receive deliveries at home.

Save-On-Foods said in an email that online shopping requests have picked up.

On Friday, its website said, it is experiencing 鈥渆xtremely high web traffic and demand for online shopping at this time.鈥

Thrifty Foods鈥 website also said it was seeing a 鈥渉igher volume of transaction鈥 for online sales.

Dr. Bonnie Henry, sa国际传媒鈥檚 provincial health officer, expects to see more deliveries to homes of food and of medical products.

sa国际传媒 health officials are urging citizens to practice social distancing by taking steps such as avoiding crowds, working at home if possible, and holding outdoor or virtual meetings at work.

Henry said the situation will not last forever, but it could take weeks or even months to resolve.

Gray said if tourist numbers decline that will have ripple effects on shops.

鈥淲e certainly are not going to be as enthused to go to the big malls in a self-isolation model.鈥

Necessary items such as over-the-counter medications and prescriptions will keep pharmacies in demand, he said.

He expects that personal services, such as spas and manicures and pedicures, where people are close to each other will see a drop in business.

Holding back on some expenditures will likely result in a surge of business once the matter is resolved, Gray said.

鈥淚f we kind of play it out and it goes a few weeks and then at the end of that, there will be pent-up shopping needs,鈥 he said.

鈥淭hen the question becomes: 鈥楢re retailers stocked in items that people are looking for?鈥 鈥

That鈥檚 the next challenge, Gray said.

Most retailers are stocked for spring and the factories in China are starting to get people back to work.

But there was basically a shut-down of factories and distribution centres in China for several weeks as the country dealt with COVID-19.

鈥淭hat will then have a knock-on effect into our system, where there will be delays in replacement of goods in the supply chain.鈥

When the supply chain dries up, both online and offline outlets are affected, he said.

[email protected]