Despite the best efforts of Coles, Woolworths and a growing number of grocery delivery start-ups, Australians have failed to embrace buying their groceries online.
According to research firm Roy Morgan, the number of shoppers who buy groceries online in any given four-week period has plateaued at around 3 per cent for the last two years, after rising from 1.6 per cent in 2012, news.com.au reports.
Still, around 30 per cent of shoppers say they would consider doing so in the next 12 months, according to the same research. So what is causing the disconnect?
A survey of US consumers by investment bank Morgan Stanley, published by Quartz, has found 84 per cent of shoppers said they chose not to order online because they preferred to physically see and choose their groceries.
Cost was a distant third place in the Morgan Stanley survey, with just 26 per cent of people citing more expensive online products as the reason. The number two reason was that the shopper had tried online grocery shopping already and didn't like it.