The news struck Susan Evans like a thunderbolt.
"I called out to the office, 'Oh, my God, SimonDelivers is shutting down!'" said Evans, a local website publisher and longtime customer of the grocery delivery service.
It's true: The cheery yellow trucks of SimonDelivers.com will roll to a stop at the end of the month. After nine years, during which it survived the dot-com bust and competition from traditional grocers, SimonDelivers fell victim to rising food and fuel costs, its CEO announced Tuesday.
Sales were mostly flat at $55 million for the past few years at the New Hope-based company. Its 300 employees serve about 19,000 customers around the Twin Cities.
The epitaph may well be that while SimonDelivers won the hearts of a fiercely loyal core of trendsetting consumers, it never lived up to its promise of changing the way the masses buy groceries.
"I'm quite sure the original investors were never satisfied with the results," said George John, a professor of marketing at the Carlson School of Management.
"My guess is that they were reasonably profitable, but they were never growing as fast as the original storyline. And the storyline is that this would be transformative."
Tears and apologies