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View Full Version : Meet the Low-Key, Low-Cost Grocery Chain Being Called ‘Walmart’s Worst Nightmare’



Cebu_4_2
18th August 2013, 01:48 AM
Meet the Low-Key, Low-Cost Grocery Chain Being Called ‘Walmart’s Worst Nightmare’ http://timebusinessblog.files.wordpress.com/2013/08/ap101133471983.jpg?w=360&h=240&crop=1
Joe Jaszewski / The Idaho Statesman / APCustomers bag their own groceries at checkout counters at WinCo Foods on Fairview Avenue in Boise, Idaho, on July 1, 2013




Retail analysts say the world’s biggest retailer has reason to fear a small grocery chain that’s based in Idaho and boasts a business model that allows it to undercut Walmart on prices.


So about that eye-catching Walmart quote. Those are the words of Burt Flickinger III, a widely respected supermarket-retailing-industry expert who works for the Strategic Resource Group (http://www.srginsight.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=page&id=64&cid=83). Flickinger was quoted in a recent Idaho Statesman story (http://www.idahostatesman.com/2013/08/03/2684628/winco-model-setting-new-grocery.html) about WinCo (http://www.wincofoods.com/), a chain of roughly 100 supermarkets in the western U.S., based in Boise, Idaho.


“WinCo arguably may be the best retailer in the western U.S.,” Flickinger says while touring a WinCo store. “WinCo is really unstoppable at this point,” he goes on. “They’re Walmart’s worst nightmare.”


Flickinger isn’t the only industry insider discussing WinCo and Walmart in the same breath. “While many supermarkets strive to keep within a few percentage points of Walmart stores’ prices, WinCo Foods often undersells the massive discount chain,” the industry publication Supermarket News (http://supermarketnews.com/retail-amp-financial/pricing-winco-keeps-costs-down-and-velocity-high) explained last spring.


(MORE: How Two German-Owned Sister Supermarket Brands Became Hot Trendsetters in the U.S. (http://business.time.com/2013/07/29/how-two-german-owned-sister-supermarket-brands-became-hot-trendsetters-in-the-u-s/))
How does WinCo manage to undercut Walmart on prices? And why should the world’s largest retailer have any reason to fear a small regional grocery chain that most Americans have never heard of?


First off, the reason you probably haven’t heard of WinCo is partly that at this point its stores are limited to a handful of states in the West. But WinCo is a little-known player also because the company is a privately held enterprise that seems to take its privacy seriously, preferring a low-key, low-profile approach — which is extremely rare in a world of retailers boisterously begging for shoppers’ attention.


Simply put, WinCo “communicates low prices by delivering low prices,” Jon Hauptman, a partner at Willard Bishop (http://www.willardbishop.com/), a retail-consulting firm, told Supermarket News. “WinCo doesn’t do much to communicate price and value. It convinces shoppers of value based on the shopping experience, rather than relying on smoke and mirrors to convince them.”


As for how WinCo can deliver such low prices, the Statesman story details the company’s history and business model. It all began, interestingly enough, when two Idaho businessmen opened a warehouse-type discount store with a name that could have been pulled from a movie slyly spoofing Walmart. Waremart, it was called. The company became employee-owned in 1985, and changed its name to WinCo (short for Winning Company) in 1999.


(MORE: At Long Last a Bar at the Supermarket — With $1 Bottles During Happy Hour! (http://business.time.com/2013/08/02/at-long-last-a-bar-at-the-supermarket-with-1-bottles-during-happy-hour/))
Prices are kept low through a variety of strategies, the main one being that it often cuts out distributors and other middlemen and buys many goods directly from farms and factories. WinCo also trims costs by not accepting credit cards and by asking customers to bag their own groceries. Similar to warehouse membership stores like Sam’s Club and Costco, and also to successful discount grocers with small stores like Trader Joe’s and Aldi (http://business.time.com/2013/07/29/how-two-german-owned-sister-supermarket-brands-became-hot-trendsetters-in-the-u-s/), WinCo stores are organized and minimalist, without many frills, and without the tremendous variety of merchandise that’s become standard at most supermarkets. “Everything is neat and clean, but basic,” Hauptman told Supermarket News. “Though the stores are very large, with a lot of categories, they lack depth or breadth of variety.”


While all these factors help WinCo compete with Walmart on price, what really might scare the world’s largest retailer is how WinCo treats its employees. In sharp contrast to Walmart, which regularly comes under fire for practices like understaffing stores (http://business.time.com/2013/03/27/hey-walmart-its-hard-to-make-sales-when-store-shelves-are-empty/) to keep costs down and hiring tons of temporary workers (http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/06/13/us-walmart-hires-temps-idUSBRE95C05820130613) as a means to avoid paying full-time workers benefits, WinCo has a reputation for doing right by employees. It provides health benefits to all staffers who work at least 24 hours per week. The company also has a pension, with employees getting an amount equal to 20% of their annual salary put in a plan that’s paid for by WinCo; a company spokesperson told the Idaho Statesman that more than 400 nonexecutive workers (cashiers, produce clerks and such) currently have pensions worth over $1 million apiece.


Generally speaking, shoppers tolerate Walmart’s empty shelves (http://business.time.com/2013/03/27/hey-walmart-its-hard-to-make-sales-when-store-shelves-are-empty/) and subpar customer service (http://www.usatoday.com/story/money/business/2013/03/16/9-retailers-worst-customer-service/1991519/) because the prices are so good. The fact that another retailer — even a small regional one — is able to compete and sometimes beat Walmart on prices, while also operating well-organized stores staffed by workers who enjoy their jobs, like their employer and genuinely want the company to be successful? Well, that’s got to alarm the world’s biggest retailer, if not keep executives up at night.


(MORE: A Disloyalty Movement? Supermarkets and Customers Drop Loyalty-Card Programs (http://business.time.com/2013/07/11/a-disloyalty-movement-supermarkets-and-customers-drop-loyalty-card-programs/))
While WinCo does keep its business quiet, we do know one thing: the company is in the process of expanding to new states, with two locations opening in north Texas (http://www.dallasnews.com/business/retail/20130801-north-carolina-grocer-to-open-dallas-stores-in-turtle-creek-village-and-near-the-arboretum.ece) next year, for example. Flickinger anticipates rapid growth in the near future, with WinCo doubling in size every five to seven years going forward.



Read more: http://business.time.com/2013/08/07/meet-the-low-key-low-cost-grocery-chain-being-called-wal-marts-worst-nightmare/#ixzz2cIxHE87n

Shami-Amourae
18th August 2013, 02:03 AM
Hey Cebu, do you live in Idaho too? I'm noticing you're posting a lot of Idaho news stories.

Cebu_4_2
18th August 2013, 03:35 AM
Hey Cebu, do you live in Idaho too? I'm noticing you're posting a lot of Idaho news stories.

I didn't really notice that, I wonder why Idaho is in the spotlight?
No not in Idaho.

JohnQPublic
18th August 2013, 08:18 AM
I know there are Wincos here in kali. Heard good things about them.

BrewTech
18th August 2013, 09:17 AM
Washington Idaho Nevada California Oregon... at least that's what I thought it stood for...

It's actually Winning Company.

Great store...there are 4 I know of in Riverside county, always shopped there. There are none in San Diego that I know of, but I still stop at Winco if I can when I am up there. They have a lot of quality products that are hard to find elsewhere, and you don't feel like you got raped after shopping there.

If they built one in SD I wouldn't likely shop anywhere else.

JohnQPublic
18th August 2013, 01:04 PM
Washington Idaho Nevada California Oregon... at least that's what I thought it stood for...

It's actually Winning Company.

Great store...there are 4 I know of in Riverside county, always shopped there. There are none in San Diego that I know of, but I still stop at Winco if I can when I am up there. They have a lot of quality products that are hard to find elsewhere, and you don't feel like you got raped after shopping there.

If they built one in SD I wouldn't likely shop anywhere else.

I thought there was one in Escondido, but maybe that was another alternate grocer (Bonies or something like that).

gunDriller
18th August 2013, 01:13 PM
do they have greeters ? (just kidding ! :) )


for a pound of decent coffee - or the 11 or 12 ounce package some brewers use - how much do they charge ?


Question #3 ~

why don't supermarkets sell hops ?

i know it's a specialty item, but heck, a lot of people are home-brewing.

Cebu_4_2
18th August 2013, 01:18 PM
Question #3 ~

why don't supermarkets sell hops ?

i know it's a specialty item, but heck, a lot of people are home-brewing.

Isn't home brewing and wine making illegal without permits and stuff? Kinda like growing Tobacco or Weed.

Edit: I guess it's not legal in Mississippi and Alabama, but they were supposed to legalize it, any amount as long as you don't sell it.

BrewTech
18th August 2013, 03:25 PM
Isn't home brewing and wine making illegal without permits and stuff? Kinda like growing Tobacco or Weed.

Edit: I guess it's not legal in Mississippi and Alabama, but they were supposed to legalize it, any amount as long as you don't sell it.
Homebrewing and winemaking are perfectly legal for personal consumption. Jimmy Carter legalized it back in the 70's. In CA one can make up to 200 gallons per year, but selling is strictly verboten.

I've seen bulk coffee there (specialty) for as low as 6.99/lb recently.

Hillbilly
18th August 2013, 04:03 PM
Winco is great. Better prices than wallmart and over all less creepy feeling.

Cebu_4_2
18th August 2013, 04:17 PM
I wonder what the laws are on Moonshine... "Clear Mountain Dew"

Libertytree
18th August 2013, 04:25 PM
I wonder what the laws are on Moonshine... "Clear Mountain Dew"

What they don't know can't hurt you.

gunDriller
18th August 2013, 06:42 PM
Winco Out-Walmarting Walmart.

BUMMER ! :)

Cebu_4_2
18th August 2013, 06:57 PM
3 month chart looks interesting for WMT

http://www.marketwatch.com/investing/stock/wmt

Hatha Sunahara
19th August 2013, 01:25 AM
I've been shopping for groceries at Winco at least once a week for almost 15 years. They have the best price/value ratio, they don't advertise, and they don't play games--like no customer loyalty cards or spying on customers. If you need service, what they provide is excellent. The two Winco stores I shop at are both employee owned. Maybe the whole company is. Wal Mart can't compete with them on groceries.

Winco is going to get some stiff competition from Asian supermarkets that are starting to show up where I live. I have only bought seasonings and spices like curry and fish sauce at these stores, but I've noticed that their fruits and veggies are really fresh and high quality and there are a lot of interesting ones I've never tried before, also huge mangoes and exotic melons. Mostly Asians shopping there, but the number of American faces keeps growing at these stores.

Hatha