Antonius wrote:I didn't say anything about it was evil
Forgive me. I may have been extrapolating a bit.
Antonius wrote:... what I did say is a fairly accurate reflexion of what they intend to do and, if I remember correctly, the Jewel official being interviewed said pretty much that, which struck me at the time as surprising and refreshingly honest. Maybe, though, I was just translating on the fly from corporatese to Chicagoese.
I don't remember anything like that at all. I do remember the corporate office saying how they realized that some of their customers are doing a good portion of their shopping at other stores, and how they wanted to "compete". When translated, this does equal your original description.
Antonius wrote:With regard to the degree to which the major groceries have been doing this all along, I think the point was that the new initiative is fundamentally different than just stocking a few more La Preferida and Goya products in one neighbourhood and more frozen pierogis in another. I had the impression that they were going to be trying to compete in offering fresh products as well. Anyway, that's what I thought they were saying...
You're right about this. What I think is going on is just a retooling of their exisiting strategy. Many years ago, the big grocers realized that they could increase revenues by stocking specific to the neighborhood. What's probably happening now is that some MBA at the Albertson's office has done a study and realized that people STILL shop at more than one store. So, they probably did a study and discovered the types of products that people don't buy at Jewel. Next comes the internal memo, the project plan, then the press release (which CLTV jumped on).
Antonius wrote:I don't much care what Jewel and Dominick's do on that or any other score. I love going to ethnic groceries as much for the experience of interacting with the people as for the actual purchasing of food and use the chains for little more than toilet paper and drano.
I couldn't agree with you more.
Best,
EC