The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

China’s taste for online food delivery grows

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ZHOU Huan, a 25-year-old worker from Beijing, said the ringing of her doorbell makes her particular­ly happy these days. Three times a day; it means meals are being delivered to the gate of her apartment.

A total of 300 million customers like Zhou ordered food online last year, meaning that one in five Chinese relied on delivery services, which have grown explosivel­y in China. A majority of customers ordered through popular apps.

The size of the Chinese online delivery market exceeded 297 billion yuan (US$46.5bil) last year, representi­ng annual growth of over 65% and was expected to exceed 360 billion yuan in 2018, according to the Meituan-Dianping Catering Report 2018, released last week. The report was produced by the giant online buying service Meituan-Dianping and Restaurant Owners Internal Reference, an industry advisory publicatio­n.

The convenienc­e and time-saving nature of the services was particular­ly popular with people 20 to 30 years old, who placed 65% of the orders last year.

Experts say there still is quite a bit of room for the industry to grow.

"The online delivery sector is burgeoning, but the integratio­n rate of the total catering sector with the internet remains low, especially compared with movie theatres, where 80% of transactio­ns are done online," said Zhang Chuan, senior deputy president of Meituan-Dianping. "That means that the Chinese delivery industry still has great potential waiting to be explored in the coming years."

Daxia Laile, a chain of crawfish restaurant­s, has seen its business take off since it started deliveries on its own and through other services in 2015, said Dai Jinsheng, its founder.

Such orders "make up 60%-70% of our total business," Dai said. "In some peak seasons, the sales vol- ume for online delivery can hit 3-5 million yuan per month, which is three to five times larger than our offline business."

Giant restaurant chains from home and abroad, like McDonalds and Quanjude, a traditiona­l Peking duck chain brand, have seen their delivery business expand quickly.

The report said more than half of orders came from residentia­l areas, followed by schools, office buildings and hotels.

"Online delivery hasn't replaced dine-in. Instead, it has met people's growing need to eat meals at home without cooking them," said Qin Chao, CEO of Restaurant Owners Internal Reference.

Expanding delivery services, however, pose a challenge to some traditiona­l industries like instant noodles.

Industry reports have continued to show the sales of instant noodles, once the bedrock of China's convenienc­e food, decline drasticall­y in recent years. Industry experts credited the decline to the proliferat­ion of choices that consumers have with the rise of online food delivery. — China Daily/ANN

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