By Keith Regan E-Commerce Times
03/12/01 10:19 AM PT
Having left three cities behind, Internet grocery delivery service
Peapod is focusing on growth in
seven remaining markets.
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Online grocer Peapod (Nasdaq: PPOD) stopped
servicing the San Francisco market on Sunday, transferring its customer base to
onetime rival Webvan (Nasdaq: WBVN).
Peapod said it will turn its attention to its core markets in the Eastern U.S.,
where its majority owner Royal Ahold has a strong brick-and-mortar grocery store
presence.
The message on Peapod's Web site says that leaving the San Francisco market is "part
of a larger business strategy" the company is pursuing through its
partnership with Ahold, the Dutch grocery giant that
rescued
Peapod from the brink of bankruptcy last year.
Closer to Home
Last month, Ahold provided Peapod with another US$30 million just weeks after
Peapod said it was destined to run out of money by year's end at current
cash burn rates.
Ahold had already purchased a controlling stake in Peapod for $73
million and extended a $20 million line of credit.
Victory for Webvan
The decision by Peapod gives Webvan
a major boost in what is one of its core markets. It also leaves Chicago as the only
major market where Peapod and Webvan compete head-to-head.
Webvan itself has cut back on ambitious expansion plans in the face
of the Nasdaq plunge. Webvan left the Dallas, Texas market in February
as it
cut 220 jobs
in a bid to conserve capital.
Time for TV
But in a sign that it may not be giving up on a larger presence nationwide,
Webvan recently launched a television advertising campaign in all nine
cities that it serves, the majority of which are on the West Coast.
According to Webvan, the campaign will focus on busy parents and is
designed to show them how they can find more time for family by using
the home-replenishment service.
Word of the campaign surprised some analysts, who note that Webvan stock
has plummeted more than 95 percent in the past year and that the company
faces the prospect of being de-listed from the Nasdaq exchange.
"We have an aggressive, integrated marketing plan," said Webvan
vice president for marketing Doug Herrington. "We are focused on
households with kids and communicating how Webvan.com can give them
back their precious time."
Peapod's Markets
As for Peapod, the struggling e-tailer has already quit markets in Texas and Ohio.
The decision to exit San Francisco leaves Peapod with seven markets, most
located along the Eastern seaboard. In addition to Chicago,
Peapod now services
Washington, D.C.; Boston, Massachusetts; Fairfield County, Connecticut;
Montgomery County, Maryland; Fairfax County, Virginia; and Long Island, New York.
Peapod recently acquired some assets of now-defunct Net delivery service
Streamline.com. Additionally, Peapod entered the Chicago market -- where it says it is
reaching profitability -- by purchasing Scotty's Home Delivery.