Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted

With most supermarkets now offering online ordering & delivery through either honestbee or Happy Fresh I'd like to know from members who've used both whether or not there are any differences between the 2?

 

If they were both active in your area would you choose one over the other & if so, why?

 

We've just moved to a new condo and now I have the luxury of choosing between them.

 

TIA. 

Posted

The main difference I'd say is they both pretty much have entirely different retail stores as their respective delivery suppliers.

 

HonestBee chiefly has Villa markets along with a lot of probably mostly unknown smaller retailers. While Happy Fresh has Tesco, Big C, Sunshine Market for health/natural products, and a variety of others. Of course, Big C and Tesco have their own delivery services as well.

 

I've used HonestBee for delivering Villa products and that seems to work OK, and free delivery for orders 590b and up. I've used Happy Fresh a few times for quality meats from Food Glorious Food. But for Tesco and Big C, if I want anything from them, I'll usually use their own delivery services.  But the one I use the most is Tops/Central, because they tend to have more of the things I'd want to order via delivery.

 

Another very good home delivery supplier with their own stocks of mostly imported grocery products is Delishop . co . th. Their service is first rate and they have quite good products, although sometimes a problem with many often being out of stock.

 

 

 

Posted

Excellent feedback TGJiB - much appreciated. 

 

So essentially it comes down to the products available - they're pretty much the same on most other factors. 

 

I am interested in your comments re going direct to Big C / Tesco websites for online ordering - is that because their prices are better on there? I've been browsing the Happy Fresh site and some of the items I regularly buy do seem more expensive on there which I assumed comes down to HF marking up the product. I see honestbee claim the same price as in store. 

 

They both seem to offer free delivery above a certain amount although it seems that honestbee have both a lower free delivery threshold (THB 590 at the moment) whilst Happy Fresh charge a premium for "peak hour" deliveries. 

Posted

Hi triplegee!

 

Full disclosure upfront: I'm HappyFresh's MD here in Bangkok.

 

I loved reading your question and the thread above. Thanks also to TGJ for the comprehensive answer! Just wanted to clarify a few things about HappyFresh that may not have been mentioned yet:

 

- The key reason for using HappyFresh rather than Tesco's or Big C's own online offering would be assortment, picking quality, and speed of delivery. Our assortment for both partners is larger than their own online offering and includes many fresh and frozen products they don't deliver. We have personal shoppers trained to pick only the best quality products, and we can deliver same-day, as fast as one hour after you place an order. We also have top-notch customer service and you have the ability to modify your order at any time as long as the picking process hasn't started yet. We also offer a full money-back guarantee if any products we deliver are not to your liking. All this adds a lot of convenience and flexibility to the shopping process.

 

- In addition to Tesco and Big C that TGJ already mentioned, we also work with Gourmet Market, a large premium retailer with a great fresh & import assortment. Many of our expat customers love Gourmet, so you should definitely check them out!

 

- Our normal delivery fee is 60 baht. We do charge a slight premium for next-hour delivery, but also offer 20-baht delivery for weekday deliveries between 2-5pm. Additionally, we offer completely free delivery every Thursday.

 

- For Tesco we offer the same prices as you would find in-store. For Big C & Gourmet we include a small service charge (3-5%) in our prices to cover the cost of picking the products in-store.

 

I'd say just give us a try and see how you like it. First order always comes with free delivery, and if you use voucher code HappyBen, you get an additional 10% off your first order.

 

HappyShopping!

 

 

Posted

Glad that HFBen chimed in. Yes, HF having Gourmet Market is another nice feature for them, and the ability to do same-day deliveries is not something you can do with Tesco or Big C directly (they're both next day), though you can do same-day deliveries with Tops/Central directly.

 

As for the money-back guarantee issue, I think that's pretty much the same with most of the local grocery delivery services, and certainly including Tesco, Big C and Tops/Central for sure. With any of them, when the delivery person arrives with your order, if you don't like the look or any other aspect of any item, you can simply decline it, and the price will be deducted off your order.

 

As for Ben's other comment:

 

Quote

Our assortment for both partners is larger than their own online offering and includes many fresh and frozen products they don't deliver.

 

I'm curious about that comment. Recently, I was looking to have some ice cream home delivered (something better than the ubiquitous Walls brand), and so I went online and was shopping the delivery sites for Tesco, and Happy Fresh for Tesco and Big C, and I think one other site, and I didn't find any meaningful variation between the ice cream items that Tesco was offering via its own online shop vs. what HappyFresh was offering via Tesco. It would have been great if HF did have a larger selection, but in that search, I didn't find that to be the case.

Posted

Thanks for your contribution @HFBen - I wasn't aware of your various delivery choices & their associated fees so that is good to know. 

 

Quote

esco we offer the same prices as you would find in-store. For Big C & Gourmet we include a small service charge (3-5%) in our prices to cover the cost of picking the products in-store.

A question about your Tesco service - based on your comment above, does that mean that the Tesco staff are picking the products for you? If so, do they have the same level of training as your own pickers when it comes to fresh food quality?

 

 

Posted

I have used Tesco online for well over 2 years and have been very happy with their Service - especially for "heavy" items such as Bottled Water, crates of Chang Soda etc.. Book a delivery "Slot" and you can be  99%  sure that what you Order will arrive within that timeframe.

 

Also, fairly recently, I have begun using Honest Bee for purchases from Villa in particular, and again absolutely no complaints; their "Shopper" will call if an item is out of stock and suggest an alternative. Delivery is invariably the same day, usually within 2 -3 hours. Great service.

 

By far my favourite however used to be Passion Delivery: One could Order online from a range of different, excellent merchants, - Steaks, Sausages, Seafood, Cheese, Wine etc. and the Order would be consolidated by Passion Delivery and all would be delivered at the same time, in one shipment. Unfortunately Passion Delivery have recently announced a new "system" whereby all these individual suppliers will now process and deliver their Produce independently, meaning not only increased Delivery Costs to me, the Customer (because each individual provider has to charge a separate delivery fee) but also of course delivery from these now uncoordinated Suppliers could well be be spread over several days with little or no advance notice  to me - so I am totally unable to plan when to be home to accept delivery: Not at all convenient!

 

Back to Tesco and Honest Bee I think!

 

Patrick

Posted

I agree that's one of the negatives about most/all of these multi-shop delivery services -- that each order has to be limited to only the products from one shop. And if you want products from a different store that the same service also offers, you've got to place an entirely separate order.

 

I understand, I guess, the logistical challenges in one service getting different products from different stores. But, if someone could work that out, that would really be a differentiating factor. Fact is, a lot of these various online grocery ordering services have limited selections, both online and in the physical stores. In my case, I'm probably regularly ordering from a half dozen different local stores because each one has something I want that the others don't offer.

 

---------------------------

 

As for Tesco, I've had a different experience with them in Bangkok, in two very bad ways:

 

--At least in my area, their drivers totally are NOT honoring their scheduled appointment windows far too often, and often show up hours ahead of a scheduled evening/night appointment window -- with no advance notice or warning.

 

--Unlike Tops, Tesco seems to make no effort to alert their online customers if an item is out of stock, or offer the ability to select a substitute item. I've had instances where fully half of the items I've ordered from Tesco Online are missing from my delivery, and don't find out until the driver shows up at my doorstep.  No one from Tesco bothers to call or email to alert me to that, or offer me the ability to amend my order, ahead of the delivery.

 

For those reasons, I've basically stopped ordering from Tesco Online direct except when absolutely necessary.

Posted
8 hours ago, triplegee said:

Thanks for your contribution @HFBen - I wasn't aware of your various delivery choices & their associated fees so that is good to know. 

 

A question about your Tesco service - based on your comment above, does that mean that the Tesco staff are picking the products for you? If so, do they have the same level of training as your own pickers when it comes to fresh food quality?

 

 

Hi triplegee! Sorry for the slight delay in my answer. Busy day today! :)

 

No, the fact that we don't charge any service fee has nothing to do with who does the picking. Even at Tesco, our trained personal shoppers still do the picking for you, same as at every other store. The only difference with Tesco is that they support us a bit more financially, so we can cover the cost of our shoppers without having to pass any of it along to our customers. The more support we get from our partners, the more savings we can pass onto our customers. We're striving to do the same for Big C and Gourmet eventually, so that hopefully soon the prices will be the same as in-store everywhere.

Posted
9 hours ago, TallGuyJohninBKK said:

As for Ben's other comment:

 

I'm curious about that comment. Recently, I was looking to have some ice cream home delivered (something better than the ubiquitous Walls brand), and so I went online and was shopping the delivery sites for Tesco, and Happy Fresh for Tesco and Big C, and I think one other site, and I didn't find any meaningful variation between the ice cream items that Tesco was offering via its own online shop vs. what HappyFresh was offering via Tesco. It would have been great if HF did have a larger selection, but in that search, I didn't find that to be the case.

Hi John,

 

I'll have to check the ice cream section specifically and will see if we can improve that. My statement above was based on the fact that Tesco Online lists, I believe, around 6,000-7,000 grocery items, while HappyFresh lists over 15,000 products for Tesco (basically the full in-store assortment). That doesn't necessarily mean a large difference in every category, but overall should result in you being able to find more of the products you need on HappyFresh. 

 

I'll have a look at our ice cream section tomorrow and see if we can add some more products. What brands were you looking for?

Posted
3 hours ago, HFBen said:

Hi John,

 

I'll have a look at our ice cream section tomorrow and see if we can add some more products. What brands were you looking for?

Ideally, something mid-range between the cheap Thai local brands like Walls and the highest end imports like Haagen Dazs that run $10+ U.S. per 392g container.

 

Just FWIW, I did my own specific comparison tonight, looking at the ice cream section under Tesco Shopping Online vs the Happy Fresh Tesco Rama IV online selection. Tesco's own online shopping has 62 items in its ice cream section, while the HF Online listing for Tesco Rama IV had by my count 72 items in the ice cream section. A bit of an edge for HF, but not the double the selection ratio you spoke of above in discussing overall stock.  I have no idea how those two online ice cream selections compare with the range of ice cream products physically available in Tesco's stores.

 

But basically, after you set aside the many small ice cream bars offered via both sites, you're left a much, much smaller range of actual ice cream containers -- a ton of Walls, a few Nestle, a few Haagen Dazs and that's about it. They used to have at least a few Tesco's Finest imported ice cream varieties at reasonable prices via the online channel, but those seem to have disappeared lately.

 

At least Top's/Central have some offerings from Bud's Ice Cream of San Francisco, which actually is produced locally in Bangkok under license from the U.S. company that founded the brand. It's supposed to be a premium ice cream, but at least has the advantage of not having a crazy import price like Haagen Dazs because of being produced here locally.

 

http://www.afcthailand.com/

 

And actually, in looking further, I guess Tesco is just the wrong place to shop for ice cream. In looking at HF's online listing for Big C Rama IV, their ice cream section lists 120+ items and does include quite a few selections from Bud''s, along with several other brands that simply aren't listed at all at Tesco, either direct from their online site or via HF's online site for them.

 

That is, by the way, one of the really nice facets of online shopping -- the ability to relatively quickly and easily compare the selections and prices of products from store to store, and also to see when particular products are being offered on sale -- without having to travel all over town and spend hours roaming up and down grocery store aisles.

 

 

 

 

 

Posted
10 hours ago, HFBen said:

Hi triplegee! Sorry for the slight delay in my answer. Busy day today! :)

 

No, the fact that we don't charge any service fee has nothing to do with who does the picking. Even at Tesco, our trained personal shoppers still do the picking for you, same as at every other store. The only difference with Tesco is that they support us a bit more financially, so we can cover the cost of our shoppers without having to pass any of it along to our customers. The more support we get from our partners, the more savings we can pass onto our customers. We're striving to do the same for Big C and Gourmet eventually, so that hopefully soon the prices will be the same as in-store everywhere.

Thanks for the clarification HFBen. I know I'd rather have your staff picking the products.... ;)

 

Same price as in store would be nice across all your retailers - when you add in delivery fees & markup you're looking at somewhere in the vicinity of a 10% premium. 

Posted
7 hours ago, TallGuyJohninBKK said:

But basically, after you set aside the many small ice cream bars offered via both sites, you're left a much, much smaller range of actual ice cream containers -- a ton of Walls, a few Nestle, a few Haagen Dazs and that's about it. They used to have at least a few Tesco's Finest imported ice cream varieties at reasonable prices via the online channel, but those seem to have disappeared lately.

 

At least Top's/Central have some offerings from Bud's Ice Cream of San Francisco, which actually is produced locally in Bangkok under license from the U.S. company that founded the brand. It's supposed to be a premium ice cream, but at least has the advantage of not having a crazy import price like Haagen Dazs because of being produced here locally.

 

And actually, in looking further, I guess Tesco is just the wrong place to shop for ice cream. In looking at HF's online listing for Big C Rama IV, their ice cream section lists 120+ items and does include quite a few selections from Bud''s, along with several other brands that simply aren't listed at all at Tesco, either direct from their online site or via HF's online site for them.

 

3

All this talk of ice-cream is making me hungry......

 

I just took a look at Villa Market on honestbee and they've got some interesting brands amongst their 120+ products - including Ben & Jerry's, New Zealand Natural, Haagen-Dazs, Ete, etc...

 

https://honestbee.co.th/en/stores/villa-market/departments/3309/categories/18863

 

You're right about e-commerce making it easy to compare product & price across different retailers - now all we need is someone to put all the info into 1 platform! 

Posted
3 hours ago, triplegee said:

All this talk of ice-cream is making me hungry......

 

I just took a look at Villa Market on honestbee and they've got some interesting brands amongst their 120+ products - including Ben & Jerry's, New Zealand Natural, Haagen-Dazs, Ete, etc...

 

 

Yes, it would be nice if Tesco and Big C would branch out a bit in terms of their imported ice cream offerings. No B&J or NZN at either Tesco or Big C. And in recent months, Tesco did have a couple varieties of reasonably priced Tesco's Finest flavors from the UK listed on their online site, but every time I ordered them, the driver arrived empty handed to tell me, no have (no advance warning, of course). Now, TF ice cream isn't listed at all on their own online site.

 

Another option, now that I think of it, is I think Swensen's has some kind of delivery service for their pints of ice cream -- though I can't recall ever seeing any variety of Swenson's ice cream sold in retail stores here. It seems to me they're missing on a decent market with that. But maybe the locals running the operation here don't want to have retail sales compete with their own ice cream shop sales.

 

I'd really like to buy some ice cream that does NOT have palm oil as an ingredient, yet that seems to be an almost universal ingredient in Thai made ice creams, including Bud's, as best as I recall.

 

 

Posted

But back to the main point of HonestBee vs Happy Fresh (and I hope you're still reading, Ben!!!)

 

Since I was in an ice cream mood, last night, I placed an online order with Happy Fresh for the Big C Rama IV store to deliver a couple of containers of imported ice cream to my home at 2 pm today. Just now at 1:30 p.m., the HappyFresh staff called my mobile to say that neither of the items I ordered were actually available in the store, and I wasn't interested in the poorer quality options they offered as substitutes, so we ended up canceling the entire order.

 

On the phone, I pointed out to the CSR that this wasn't the first time this kind of thing had happened with my HappyFresh orders, and in fact, it seems to happen pretty regularly whenever I'm ordering from Tesco or Big C via HappyFresh. And I asked the CSR, why are you showing the products as available on your HF website for that particular store, when they're not actually available at that store.

 

And not surprisingly, the CSR replied (paraphrasing here), because our HF website isn't tied into the stock availability for the various stores. So, to translate that, the store can totally run out of something, but it's still going to be listed on the HF website, I presume, until and unless the product is actually discontinued entirely. 

 

That's one of the downsides of trying to use their online ordering facility, not that it's any better, necessarily, if one was ordering directly thru Tesco's or Big C's online ordering systems. Similar to Happy Fresh, I've had MANY times where the Tesco website has shown a product as being available and then the driver shows up empty handed. You ask Tesco customer service why they can't keep their online system updated to reflect actual store stock, and there's just long silence on the other end of the phone....  They don't even try to answer that one.

 

I just wonder, in my life, I've probably placed 100+ online orders with Amazon.com from the U.S., and I can't think of one instance where once my order was accepted, they've ever had to email or call back to tell me something's out of stock. Never!!!!  Somehow, they manage to have their online store reflect what's actually in stock.  But here in Thailand, achieving that seems too high a mountain to climb.

 

Posted
18 minutes ago, TallGuyJohninBKK said:

But back to the main point of HonestBee vs Happy Fresh (and I hope you're still reading, Ben!!!)

 

Since I was in an ice cream mood, last night, I placed an online order with Happy Fresh for the Big C Rama IV store to deliver a couple of containers of imported ice cream to my home at 2 pm today. Just now at 1:30 p.m., the HappyFresh staff called my mobile to say that neither of the items I ordered were actually available in the store, and I wasn't interested in the poorer quality options they offered as substitutes, so we ended up canceling the entire order.

 

On the phone, I pointed out to the CSR that this wasn't the first time this kind of thing had happened with my HappyFresh orders, and in fact, it seems to happen pretty regularly whenever I'm ordering from Tesco or Big C via HappyFresh. And I asked the CSR, why are you showing the products as available on your HF website for that particular store, when they're not actually available at that store.

 

And not surprisingly, the CSR replied (paraphrasing here), because our HF website isn't tied into the stock availability for the various stores. So, to translate that, the store can totally run out of something, but it's still going to be listed on the HF website, I presume, until and unless the product is actually discontinued entirely. 

 

That's one of the downsides of trying to use their online ordering facility, not that it's any better, necessarily, if one was ordering directly thru Tesco's or Big C's online ordering systems. Similar to Happy Fresh, I've had MANY times where the Tesco website has shown a product as being available and then the driver shows up empty handed. You ask Tesco customer service why they can't keep their online system updated to reflect actual store stock, and there's just long silence on the other end of the phone....  They don't even try to answer that one.

 

I just wonder, in my life, I've probably placed 100+ online orders with Amazon.com from the U.S., and I can't think of one instance where once my order was accepted, they've ever had to email or call back to tell me something's out of stock. Never!!!!  Somehow, they manage to have their online store reflect what's actually in stock.  But here in Thailand, achieving that seems too high a mountain to climb.

 

Hi John,

 

Apologies for this bad experience. I agree this is very annoying and happens far too often. It's one of the key problems we work on every day, but it's a but we haven't fully cracked yet.

 

What our CS staff told you is actually incorrect (and I will have to follow up with them about this). We do actually receive price & stock information from our partners on a daily basis (for Tesco even multiple times per day), and our system reflects what they send us. The problem is another one, and it's actually two-fold:

 

1. The information they send us is often inaccurate and does not actually reflect what is currently available in the store. Since we rely on their data, there's very little we can do if the data they send us is wrong (apart from suggesting the best possible replacements).

 

2. Even if the information were perfect, it is not real-time. That means the ice cream you ordered may have been available at the time we received their last stock update, but by the time you ordered (and we went to pick it), it may have already sold out in the store. We try to tackle this problem by getting frequent stock updates, but most retailers in this region actually only update their own systems once a day. We are still far away from having real-time stock data in this region, unfortunately.

 

The example you gave from Amazon is relatively easy to explain. Before HappyFresh, I used to be the COO of Lazada in Indonesia, and our in-stock ration was also very close to 100%. That's because a large part of the products sold by Amazon or Lazada come straight out of their own fulfillment centers, so they have 100% accurate, real-time information about stock levels. Even for marketplace sellers, inventory is very tightly controlled and Lazada/Amazon receive real-time information about stock levels at their suppliers.

 

We're working hard with our partners to get to similar levels of sophistication, but it's still a long way and for now we have to accept a certain out-of-stock percentage and deal with it in the best possible way (good replacement procedures).

 

I hope this info helps. Fully agree with you that it's a problem, and we will continue to work hard to improve/solve it.

 

PS: If you PM me your HappyFresh order number I can dig into our data to see what the real issue here was. Always good to run a root cause analysis based on actual orders.

Posted

Thanks for the clarification on how your system actually works, Ben. I do understand the issues you're facing on product availability.

 

In my case, it's probably exacerbated because I'm typically wanting to order imported items as opposed to local Thai stock stuff where (hopefully) the local stores might do a better job of actually maintaining stock.

 

But frankly, after living here for years, the inventory management/supply chain practices of EVERY supermarket I've dealt with in Thailand appear to be woefully poor, even for those that supposedly cater to an expat customer base. So it's hardly surprising to hear that you've got a problem with getting inaccurate stock info from your partners, even when they're reporting to you on a daily basis. I suspect a lot of what they're reporting is simply C**P.

 

BTW, I know the problems I've encountered with your service and its market suppliers are NOT cases of something going out of stock between the time of placing the order and the time of delivery. I know this pretty much to a certainty because with both Tesco and Big C over time, I've seen and targeted particular imported items that are regularly shown on their (and your) websites that I'd really like to order/try/receive. And EVERY time I try to order them -- repeatedly -- they're always out of stock. And yet, the products are never taken down from the respective websites. One or two times I might get unlucky by having someone take the item in the hours between my order and my delivery. But up to a half dozen tries in some cases doesn't account for last minute purchases.

 

Posted

Speaking of honestbee , I think they're opening in Central Pattaya soon. Saw their staff walking around Villa Market the other day. For those who live in Bangkok, they're having a stupidly good promotion. How stupid? Use the code ' FREE300 ' to get 300 baht off 400 baht. That's 75% off, guys.

 

 

:partytime2::partytime2::partytime2:

 

 

 

Posted
2 hours ago, TheLab said:

Speaking of honestbee , I think they're opening in Central Pattaya soon. Saw their staff walking around Villa Market the other day. For those who live in Bangkok, they're having a stupidly good promotion. How stupid? Use the code ' FREE300 ' to get 300 baht off 400 baht. That's 75% off, guys.

 

 

:partytime2::partytime2::partytime2:

 

 

 

Thanks for the heads up TheLab. That's a bloody good deal - I think I'll take advantage of it before they take it down!

  • 2 weeks later...
Posted

Hi guys!

 

Me again... ;)

 

Thought I'd let you know about a crazy promo we're running until the end of the month.

 

Use code THEXPAT at checkout to get:

 

200 baht off 1000+ purchase
500 baht off 2000+ purchase
1000 baht off 4000+ purchase

 

(code is valid until June 30, one-time use per account)

 

A great way to stock up on some booze, if that's your kind of thing! 1f609.png

 

Here's the link to download our app: https://w54n.app.link/joy

 

Enjoy!

  • 3 weeks later...
Posted

Guess I'm fortunate enough to live just a minute or two by bike away from Big C, Rama IV and the Villa that's just down the road from it a little way.  What with the delivery charges, sifting through the various sites, items not being in stock etc.  I'd rather hop on the bike and go check myself plus you get to select the freshest (not necessarily as fresh as I'd like) fruit and veg to at least have a hope that it might last beyond 3 days in the fridge. Find I'm generally around town enough to make popping in to the more specialist stores for the odd things I can't find elsewhere.  Guess it helps that I don't need to buy in such quantities that make transporting it in a big carrier on the bike problematic.  Water, probably the heaviest and most awkward item I order direct from Singha.  Guess it depends on how convenient you need things to be and how much you prefer that over getting out and getting around.  Mostly I prefer the latter.

  • 4 weeks later...
Posted
On 6/8/2017 at 11:14 AM, HFBen said:

Hi triplegee!

 

Full disclosure upfront: I'm HappyFresh's MD here in Bangkok.

 

Hi Ben,

I sent you a pm, can you check you messages. 

Thanks 

Nepal 

 

 

 

Posted

Do any of these stores deliver to other provinces ?
I live in Udon. way up North. I currently am very happy with Delishop. but variety and competition is always a good thing.
Very interesting topic by the way.


Sent from my iPhone using Thaivisa Connect

Posted
On June 8, 2017 at 11:32 PM, TallGuyJohninBKK said:

 

I just wonder, in my life, I've probably placed 100+ online orders with Amazon.com from the U.S., and I can't think of one instance where once my order was accepted, they've ever had to email or call back to tell me something's out of stock. Never!!!!  Somehow, they manage to have their online store reflect what's actually in stock.  But here in Thailand, achieving that seems too high a mountain to climb.

 

I have had orders from Amazon never come (because the item was not in stock) and they returned the payment to me eventually. 

Posted
7 hours ago, BazTheFraz said:

Do any of these stores deliver to other provinces ?
I live in Udon. way up North. I currently am very happy with Delishop. but variety and competition is always a good thing.
Very interesting topic by the way.


Sent from my iPhone using Thaivisa Connect

Paleo Robbie does.  Delivery fee is 550 baht on orders less than 8000 baht.

 

Passion Delivery used to but they have changed their business model and now depend on the suppliers to do the shipping and most fresh/frozen food suppliers won't deliver upcountry and their selections have gone to pot because some of the old vendors won't enroll in their new plan.  I see that some of the products that used to be available through them, especially seafood, are now available with Delishop.  I do use them to order bagels from Feedpoint now that there is no minimum 3000 baht order required.

Posted

Thanks Wayne.
Nice of you to take the time to reply.
I will try to find these stores you mentioned ad compare them with each other.
If enough people pardoned Delishop they might open a pick up point here in Udon.


Sent from my iPhone using Thaivisa Connect

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.



×
×
  • Create New...