The eating habits of urban Chinese have changed dramatically since the proliferation of takeaway food delivery apps has brought restaurant-quality meals to almost everyone's front door.
Engineer Zhao Baijun, 29, now eats in more often than he eats out. "Before these apps, most restaurants did not offer deliveries. I had very few choices, mostly fast food chains," he says.
Besides the matter of convenience for busy people like Zhang, online to offline (O2O) means extra sales for traditional food suppliers and beyond.
A MATCH MADE IN CYBERSPACE
Connecting online to offline is the new Holy Grail for the biggest players in China's Internet shopping explosion, whether they be domestic or overseas operators.
On Monday, China's largest e-commerce company Alibaba and electronics retailer Suning agreed a multi-billion dollar deal on platforms, logistics and payments. Alibaba will pay about 28 billion yuan (4.5 billion U.S. dollars) for 19.99 percent of Suning, becoming its second-largest shareholder, while Suning will buy no less than 28 million new shares in Alibaba for 14 billion yuan.
Suning owns more than 1,600 stores and 3,000 aftersales service centers which will now be "seamlessly connected" with Alibaba's online network. A Suning online sales center on Tmall.com, part of Alibaba's retail operation, completes the new setup. The arrangement was described as a "wedding" by Alibaba chairman Ma Yun on Monday.
"If we do not integrate with offline, we will not have a future," he said. The deal is set to reshuffle China's e-commerce deck and help Alibaba in its battle against archrival JD.com.
EVOLVE OR PERISH
There is nothing anomalous about this deal; e-commerce companies are queueing up to find bricks-and-mortar stores to align themselves with.