Brands have every right to feel hamstrung when it comes to achieving meaningful results on Instacart. Due to the complex nature of this innovative marketplace, there are many barriers to success.
One big problem is figuring out how to assemble your internal team. In today’s article, Instacart For CMOs authors Kiri Masters and Stefan Jordev have shared their expert insights on this very topic.
Read on!
Instacart is a grocery delivery and pick-up service. Customers order groceries from participating retailers, and orders are assembled by personal shoppers. Inventory only comes from retailers, never from brands directly.
Instacart is very different to the standard two-sided marketplaces that have come before it. This is because there are four sides to the Instacart marketplace:
Although there is an enormous opportunity for brands to win new customers and solidify their market positioning by harnessing the power of Instacart, the complex nature of the marketplace makes it tricky to manage.
Instacart became a go-to platform for thousands of ‘quarantined consumers’ in 2020, resulting in staggering amounts of growth. According to data from analytics provider Second Measure, Instacart is the biggest player in the online grocery space – it’s estimated that they own 56% of all online grocery orders and 71% of all online grocery delivery orders.
“Shoppers are browsing and cross-referencing items across multiple channels. A shopper could discover an item on Amazon but purchase it on Instacart, or vice versa. Therefore, if you’re neglecting the huge numbers of shoppers on Instacart, this could be hurting many different parts of your business.”
Finally, Instacart sits somewhere between sales and marketing on the P&L for most brands. In many instances there is no designated internal team managing Instacart, and this creates accountability and performance tracking issues.
Grocery and CPG brands were the primary beneficiaries of Instacart’s astronomical growth in 2020. However, in the future, Instacart will be a pivotal channel for brands across many other categories. Instacart recently expanded their reach into Beauty, Baby and Pet Supplies through partnerships with Best Buy, Walmart, Staples, Bed Bath & Beyond, Buy Buy Baby, Sephora, and 7-11 among others.
Therefore, any brands that have existing relationships with retailers selling on Instacart should be paying very close attention to the channel.
“We spoke to over a dozen leading executives during the research for Instacart For CMOs, and the vast majority explained that brands typically assign Instacart to their Sales or Ecommerce internal teams, and this often creates a disconnect,” explains Kiri Masters.
At the same time, because Instacart is an online channel, merchandising and advertising is typically allocated to the ecommerce team, meaning budget has to be pulled from another channel if a brand wants to advertise on Instacart.This creates confusion in respect to accountability and attribution.”
Disclaimer; there is no ‘correct’ answer in terms of internal Instacart team structure as each brand will be presented with a unique set of circumstances. But here are some options you may want to consider: