Posted: 2023-02-19 00:09:29

Once-feted grocery delivery start-up Milkrun was spending $57 a head to sign up new customers while losing about $10 an order at its oldest hub, internal figures show in a sign of how the ambitious company was struggling.

This masthead visited six Milkrun hubs on Thursday and Friday after the company announced on Wednesday it was shutting an unspecified number of its delivery hubs and making 20 per cent of its staff redundant. The hub in Sydney’s Newtown appeared shuttered, with a delivery of fresh bread left in the sun outside the inner-west hub, along with one in North Melbourne.

The shuttered Milkrun outlet in  North Melbourne.

The shuttered Milkrun outlet in North Melbourne.Credit:Eddie Jim

A company document intended to encourage potential investors to put cash into the Sydney-based business and seen by this masthead shows that in some months last year, Milkrun was spending almost $60 in marketing to get a customer to sign up and then losing more than $10 per order at its longest established store.

The document is dated June 2022 and shows scant improvement in the company’s losses over a previous April document revealed by this masthead last year. The South Bondi hub, for example, was losing $13.36 per order in March 2022 and $12.88 in June. Other hubs show similar losses. In Surry Hills, it was losing $10.37. Orders at the South Yarra Milkrun hub in Melbourne lost the company an average of $13.39 each that month.

A senior food delivery source who declined to be named for fear of damaging industry relationships said the figures showed it would be hard for Milkrun to be profitable as an overall business and helped explain why investors had steered clear.

“[It’s] for that exact reason,” the source said. “In order to make that business break even, you have to heroically reduce cost or heroically increase basket size and both will be an enormous challenge.”

Milkrun  had ambitions to become a “super app”.

Milkrun had ambitions to become a “super app”.Credit:Louie Douvis

Founded and led by Koala mattresses co-founder Dany Milham in 2021, when interest rates were near zero, Milkrun was feted as an “overnight success”. It raised $86 million within months of its founding from backers including the private investment offices of Atlassian founders Mike Cannon-Brookes and Scott Farquhar, along with top-tier Australian venture capital firm AirTree. None responded to a request for comment.

Milkrun’s hopes were lofty: it intended to eventually become a “super app” taking on some of the largest companies in the country, from Woolworths and Coles to Afterpay and Amazon. Its marketing matched its ambitions, with Milkrun spending monthly averages of between $27 and $57 to get each customer to sign up to its store, according to the Milkrun capital raising document.

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