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A delivery app that can deliver products from a traditional market like a large-scale mart has been released. The idea came from startups, and the Ward Office and the county office joined forces at some cost and space.

Reporter Jung Joon-ho has been to this market.

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[Come on, mayor. The order of the boss plays.] When the

order notification sounds on the tablet PC, the vegetable shop owner is busy putting the items in the envelope.

A few minutes later, a young man who pulled a shopping cart loaded an item in an envelope and

[collected employee: B36F number one Kankan village. One Cheongyang pepper, one buttercup.]

[(Hello.) I came from the playground.]

It takes less than two hours after receiving the order.

The traditional market, where people went to taste, bargain, and buy goods, introduced the delivery app service.

Compared to department stores and hypermarkets, traditional market products are inferior in price and quality.

However, while refraining from going out in the corona situation, it is suffering much more serious damage than department stores and hypermarkets that already have an online ordering system.

Eventually, it expanded to an online arena to survive.

[Hwang Seong-ja / Gwangmyeong Traditional Market Merchant: When entering a lot, 20 cases per day (in a day) and 15 cases when there are few. It's good for us.] It's

been about two months since we introduced it, but it's good.

[Shin Hye-Jung / Delivery App User: Employees are doing a lot of orders for snacks. It's very convenient.] With

word of mouth, there are an average of 150 delivery orders per day in this market.

Local governments are actively supporting young people by connecting them to delivery articles and providing parking spaces, so the traditional market introducing online delivery is expected to continue to increase.

(Video coverage: Youngchun Chun, Video editing: Minkyu Jeon)