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Wales Online
Wales Online
National
Simon Neville, PA & Brett Gibbons

Iceland employs 3,000 new staff to cope with demand following Covid-19 shopping changes

Frozen food giant Iceland has created 3,000 new jobs to cope with the huge extra demand for online groceries since the lockdown in March, it has emerged.

Bosses revealed online orders surged by more than 300 per cent since April as shoppers snapped up delivery slots and all non-essential retailers shut their doors.

The new roles include extra delivery drivers and more staff in stores for picking online orders, Iceland added.

A trial with food delivery platform Uber Eats has also been launched in London, with plans for a larger rollout, if successful.

Before lockdown the grocer had a minor online operation, compared with some of its competitors, but since then orders soared four-fold.

It now has the ability to handle 750,000 orders every week.

David Devany, chief customer and digital officer at Iceland, said: “We’ve been blown away by the demand for deliveries over the past six months with a four-fold increase in online orders since the beginning of lockdown.

“We see no sign of a slowdown in the demand for deliveries in the run up to Christmas, so a recruitment drive for more permanent staff was essential.

“Our store and delivery colleagues have gone above and beyond during lockdown introducing incredible measures to help their local communities, and I’m proud that our business has been able to adapt to the changing needs of our customer.”

The move comes after Morrisons said it would hire thousands more staff to increase its own online capabilities. Bosses revealed they took on 45,000 extra staff when coronavirus hit the UK, with 25,000 still in posts.

Around 6,000 have been given permanent contracts and further announcements expected this week.

Elsewhere, Tesco has announced 16,000 permanent extra positions, Amazon 7,000 roles and delivery firms DPD and Hermes have also hired new recruits.

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