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PepsiCo Looks To Instacart Investment To Fuel Direct-Store-Delivery Growth

Liz Dominguez
gatorade

Late summer, a public IPO filing from Instacart revealed an investment from consumer goods company PepsiCo. Now the company shared details about how it hopes to reap the rewards of its $175 million-dollar backing

In a recent call with investors, PepsiCo’s chairman and CEO, Ramon Laguarta, shared details about the company’s relationship with Instacart, which is helping drive a “continuous focus” in Pepsi’s direct-store-delivery (DSD) system. 

“I think DSD continues to be a competitive advantage. And I think we can enhance that capability with supporting activities from the Instacart shoppers,” said Laguarta, adding that the “very minor investment” in Instacart will help reinforce the commitment to this strategy, emphasizing there’s nothing beyond the relationship in terms of “strategic, long-term intentionality.” 

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  • Instacart’s IPO Goals

    In Instacart’s filing, the company stated it would bring value to brands in several ways, including high ROI, high-intent customers, actionability and immediacy, self-service management, first-party data, measurability, impactful insights, broad solution set, and national retailer scale.

    “Every decision we make as a company stems from a fundamental belief that, in order to succeed, we need to work together across the entire grocery industry — supporting retailers and brand partners, giving consumers an affordable, accessible and personalized experience they can’t find anywhere else, and creating flexible earnings opportunities for shoppers,” Instacart said

    “We are in the business of growing our partners’ businesses, which is reflected in one of our company’s core values: ‘Grow the pie.’ In a world where success too often comes at the expense of someone else, we believe that there is more than enough to go around — and that, by working together with our retail partners, we can create more opportunities for the entire industry.

PepsiCo moved its Gatorade brand from a warehouse system to DSD this past summer, and is seeing “sequential improvement” as a result. Earlier in the year during an earnings report, PepsiCo stated that Gatorade’s DSD initiative would be a structural move that would provide better execution and capacity in order to respond to weather changes and opportunity in the marketplace. 

The company previously said its DSD machine in the U.S. is “very powerful,” increasing distribution and the quality of execution, specifically in U.S. beverages. Now the company is optimistic that its new DSD business infrastructure will help showcase innovation across other brands like GFit, Gatorade, G Zero, and its powders and tablets. 

[Read more: Gatorade Previews High-Tech R&D Center]

Digitalization across these efforts, and overall across the enterprise, have been key, providing the company with more precise decision-making via automation, elevated routing, and streamlining of end-to-end operations. 

“That still is the priority of the company to make the company more precise on intelligence and empower our front line to make better decisions all the time with the best information possible, in real-time,” said Laguarta. “That is a continuous investment.”

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