EasyGrocer: two-to-four weeks of groceries, one calm delivery.
A cyclic grocery service that bundles weeks of shopping into a single, scheduled drop — curated packages, preferences saved once, and the full price shown before anyone commits.
The facts.
- Client
- EasyGrocer — cyclic grocery delivery service
- Sector
- Grocery delivery
- Services
- Product strategy · Web platform · Brand & UX system
- Model
- Cyclic ordering — one drop covers two to four weeks
- Audience
- Families, students, and shared households
- Pricing
- Package + service + delivery fee, shown in full before commit
- Status
- Live — shipped and publicly accessible
- Stack
- Custom ordering flow · saved household profiles · live order tracking
- Surfaces
- Customer ordering, package catalogue, and a driver application portal
Weekly grocery runs are a standing tax on time — and the apps that promised to fix it just moved the chaos online.
Weekly grocery runs are a standing tax on time — and the apps that promised to fix it just moved the chaos online.
Decision fatigue, fees that only appeared at checkout, and time lost every single week. For families, students, and shared homes running on a fixed budget, an unpredictable total is the difference between a plan that holds and one that quietly falls apart.
EasyGrocer replaces the weekly scramble with a predictable cycle: curated packages sized to the household, a setup saved once, and a single drop that covers two to four weeks.
- Curated packages right-sized by household, grouped by neighbourhood to unlock bulk economics.
- A five-minute setup — address, household size, and dietary preferences — saved and reused every cycle.
- Transparent pricing: package, service, and delivery fees shown in full before the order is placed.
- Clear cutoffs and customer-chosen delivery windows, with live tracking from packing to the door.
- A driver portal for grouped-route delivery, applications, and proof of delivery on one drop.
One scheduled drop instead of four scattered ones means less packaging, fewer trips, and a route that actually makes economic sense. Predictability isn't a feature bolted on at the end — it is the product. The cadence is what makes the savings, the planning, and the calm possible at all.
What the build ships.
EasyGrocer is shipped and running in production at geteasygrocer.com. The figures above describe what the platform does, not outcome claims — usage and savings numbers get published when the data verifies them, not before. That's what the label system is for.
Deeper availability across more neighbourhoods, a richer package catalogue, and cycle analytics that turn saved preferences into smarter, lower-waste baskets — each measured before any of it is claimed.
“We were buried in weekly grocery runs and tools that never quite fit. Slavēt turned the whole thing into one calm cycle — choose a package, save your details once, and the delivery just shows up. Best of all, people see the full price before they ever commit.”
Have a product that needs to feel inevitable?
EasyGrocer turned a weekly chore into one calm cycle. A strategy sprint will tell you what your product actually needs to ship.