Emily Maher
Analyst · MoffettNathanson.
Yes. On the small basket unit economics, I think first and foremost, I would just say, before thinking about the unit economics, really, what we're trying to do is create a platform that is there for our customers for all of their shopping needs. And we know that the majority of shopping happens in large baskets, large weekly shops, but we also know that customers have use cases when they need to do a fill-in shop midweek or forget something or have a sick kid and need something from the pharmacy. And we want to be able to make sure that we're there for them. And so that's really a big part of the focus on lowering the minimum basket size and really lowering the threshold at which customers think of Instacart as a provider for all of their needs. So that's sort of the starting point. I think how is Instacart able to create a price point that is sort of best-in-class from a minimum basket size. And that starts with the fact that we have already an existing large network with density of orders at all of these stores. So when you reduce the minimum basket size, you layer on what are incremental orders to an existing dense network, that means we're able to serve these orders out of the gate at economics that are already much better than you would be if you're starting from scratch. So our starting point when we did this back in the earlier part of the year was, hey, we can do this out of the gate at economics we like. That doesn't mean that's where we're satisfied with. And you've seen that in some of our commentary around strategies like batching, right? So we've continued to drive up batch rate. We've increased orders per batch meaningfully over the last couple of years. And you've seen us talk about now batching 25% of priority orders, which we think is, again, really incredible because we're still getting these orders to customers in under -- median 50 minutes, in many cases, under 30 minutes. And that is really a key part of our success to driving the unit economics here. So we're seeing the engagement we like to see from consumers. We're seeing those incremental orders. We're not seeing trade down to these orders, which I think is really, really important when you think about the economics because as long as we can do these orders at economics we like, and we're not hurting our existing base of business, then we think of this as truly additive to the overall ecosystem. And we know that if we engage you more regularly throughout the week, ultimately, what we hope is that, that drives you back to Instacart for your weekly shop more regularly. So really focused on the overall use case, making sure that we're there for customers regardless, and we're very happy with being able to serve those use cases for customers.