London's newest online grocery delivery app comes from Russia with love
Russia's biggest internet company dispatched its yellow-shirted moped riders to deliver groceries across London on Thursday, the latest newcomer to launch in a crowded sector that is forcing Britain's traditional groceries to revamp their business models. Yango Deli, run by the Russian tech giant Yandex, is opening four London "dark stores" - shops closed to customers, where workers prepare orders for delivery - putting 1.4 million potential customers in range.
Russia's biggest internet company dispatched its yellow-shirted moped riders to deliver groceries across London on Thursday, the latest newcomer to launch in a crowded sector that is forcing Britain's traditional groceries to revamp their business models.
Yango Deli, run by the Russian tech giant Yandex, is opening four London "dark stores" - shops closed to customers, where workers prepare orders for delivery - putting 1.4 million potential customers in range. At one of its new stores, in an arch under a brick railway viaduct in Battersea, South London, a fleet of bright yellow mopeds and bikes was parked outside for couriers.
Nasdaq-listed Yandex is Russia's most popular independent internet search engine and largest ride-hailing provider. The "Russian Google" is comparatively little known outside its home market but says its experience delivering groceries from around 400 dark stores at home and new ventures in Israel and France will give it a technological advantage. "We are not a new company - we have already done it before," said Evgeny Chernikov, General Manager of Yango Deli UK. "(We have a) massive bank of tech talent which means we can do many things much better and on a much larger scale than others."
It launched food delivery services in Paris in August and Israel last year. But London is particularly competitive. Yango's couriers will have to jostle for road space with those from other newcomers with names like Weezy, Getir, Dija, and Gorillas, to say nothing of Uber, Amazon, and the vans of the traditional grocers. The Russian formula will need a bit of tinkering in Britain, Chernikov said: it costs more to hire workers, but British customers tend to have more money to spend.
"So it's all about adjusting the business model to the economic conditions."
(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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