Unlock stock picks and a broker-level newsfeed that powers Wall Street.
How Blue Apron Is Trying to Cook Up Success as More Americans Eat at Home

In This Article:

Americans are eating about 80% of their meals at home, up from 75% 10 years ago, according to global information company The NPD Group. More eating is happening on the home front and how people prepare meals is also changing. Shortcuts, like buying the already cooked rotisserie chicken or the premade side of potatoes from the deli and adding a homemade fresh tossed salad are creating blended, time-saving meals.

Blue Apron's (NYSE: APRN) meal kits, with pre-measured ingredients and step-by-step recipes, should be a go-to solution for people not crazy about from-scratch cooking but interested in convenient, healthy meals. But despite offering kits that line up with consumers' needs, Blue Apron is struggling to connect with people who now have many more meal-prep options. Year-to-date, the company's stock is down 53% and Q2 revenue decreased 25% year over year as the customer count dropped 24%.

Woman standing near a kitchen counter preparing a fresh salad while a toddler sitting on the counter smiles and puts a spoon in the woman's mouth
Woman standing near a kitchen counter preparing a fresh salad while a toddler sitting on the counter smiles and puts a spoon in the woman's mouth

Image SOURCE: GETTY IMAGES.

Americans' shopping habits make it tough for Blue Apron to get to the dinner table

When it comes to buying for in-home eating, most Americans still head to the grocery store to choose ingredients or prepared foods.

Online grocery sales aren't big, currently estimated to be less than 5% of the $683 billion the Food Marketing Institute says people spent on groceries in 2017. Meal kit subscription revenues are small, too, estimated to be between $2 billion and $4.6 billion, less than 1% of grocery dollars. Although the popularity of online shopping and meal kits is growing, consumer habits are slow to change. The Food Marketing Institute predicts about 80% of food sales in 2025 will still come from Americans who prefer trekking through the grocery store aisles.

Blue Apron has worked to become part of the grocery shopping trip, offering two meal kits in roughly 80 Costco stores across the U.S. The four-serving meals rotate monthly and retail for $24.99, about 30% cheaper than the subscription price. The program that started in May has gone well, according to CEO Brad Dickerson, who commented during the August earnings call that, "The past three months have further validated to us the power of Costco's retail platform." The company plans to continue expanding within Costco and is exploring options to get into more brick-and-mortar stores.

Other meal kits are getting into grocery stores in a big way

Although Blue Apron has had early success in Costco, its program is small compared to competitors. Other meal kits are now available in hundreds of grocery stores with more varieties than Blue Apron offers.