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“The American supermarket has represented a revolutionary step in history of commerce, making a full range of goods available to the mass audience. Chapter.

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Presentation on theme: "“The American supermarket has represented a revolutionary step in history of commerce, making a full range of goods available to the mass audience. Chapter."— Presentation transcript:

1 “The American supermarket has represented a revolutionary step in history of commerce, making a full range of goods available to the mass audience. Chapter 6 - Food Wholesaling and Retailing

2 Wholesaling: Added value services  Approximately 10% of food dollar in 1993  Wholesalers add place, time, and possession utility to food Assembly, dis-aggregating, delivery Transactions and risk-bearing functions

3 Leading Wholesalers, 2001 FirmSales $B SuperValue20.9 Fleming15.6 C&S Wholesale Grocers8.5 Wakefern Food Corp5.9 Giant Eagle4.5

4 Wholesaling trends  Concentration Driven by competitive pressures  Integration: Forward and backward Retailers and processors doing their own wholesaling  Technological advancements Information flow and management

5 Types of food wholesalers  Merchant wholesaler Largest, but declining Buy, store, sell and other marketing functions Important for small independent stores  Manufacturers’ sales division Fastest growing Extension of processor  Agents and brokers Smallest share and declining Do not take title, work on commission

6 Retail Grocery Wholesalers  Value-added service to smaller retailers Assembly, disaggregate, reassemble  Integration Larger stores can deal direct Retailers into wholesaling  Walmart, Kroger Wholesalers into retailing  SuperValu, Flemming

7 Food Service Wholesalers  Value-added service Assembly, disaggregate, reassemble Menu planning R&D Quality control (branded products)  Largest players Sysco $22.6 Billion (Leopold, IBQSN) US Food Service $17.7 Billion Performance Food Group $3.2 Billion

8 Food retailing  Largest retail sector in US Grocery and food service Food accounts for 25% of retail sales Employs 80% of food system workers  Trend to concentration and integration Inflation-adjusted sales are flat Growth by market share  Economies of scale  Information  Bargaining power

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10 US Supermarkets, 2000 Sales $B 1 The Kroger Company/Fred Meyer 49.0 2 Albertson's, Inc./American Stores, Inc 31.5 3 Safeway Stores, Inc 28.5 4 Wal-Mart Supercenters 22.9 5 Ahold, USA 21.8 6 Publix Supermarkets 14.7 7 Winn-Dixie Stores 13.7 8 Delhaize America 12.7

11 Club Stores Grocery Sales $Billion 19952000 Costco17.931.9 Sam's19.826.4 Total39.963.2

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14 Concentration concerns  Growing national market share Moderate increases in average combined shares in cities indicating no substantial lessening of competition for consumers Increased market power concerns by sellers Slotting fees paid to get market access

15 Growth of Foodservice  46% of total food sales  Growth of fast food 1996 first time that more that half restaurant meals eaten off premise.  Home meal replacement: HMR Supermarket response to food service

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18 Top U.S. Resturants 2000 SalesChg 99-00 MillionPercent 1McDonald's20,4156.5 2Tricon14,5000.0 3Diageo8,620-1.2 4Wendy's5,8377.4 5Darden3,8269.7 1) McDonalds, Boston Market, Donatos Pizza, Chipotles Mexican Grill 2) Taco Bell, Pizza Hut, KFC 3) Burger King, Haagen-Dazs 4) Wendy's, Tim Horton 5) Bahama Breeze, Olive Garden, Red Lobster, Smokey Bones

19 Food Service Trends  Pushing growth Rising incomes Demand for convenience Smaller households  Limiting growth Aging population

20 Food Service Strategies  Nontraditional locations McDonalds at Walmart Fast food at gas stations  More variety Choice of bread at Subway McDonalds is largest US beef retailer, but less than half of McDonalds menu is beef items

21 New Products  Supermarket carries 30,000  Over 16,000 introduced in 2000  Seller pay “slotting allowance”  Buyers reject 60%  Information technology allows better targeting

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23 Product Proliferation  Strategy to control shelf space  Movement away from this strategy Still control space Reduce the number of items  Issue for industry: how to meet consumer demand for varied products (organics, labeled non-GMO, animal friendly, etc.) Ex. UK retailers

24 Emerging Retailing Developments  Efficiency of supply chain  Walmart  Growth of foodservice  Expansion of private labels  New consumer issues

25 Information Technology  Trading partners work closely together to eliminate excess costs from the supply chain and efficiently serve the consumer.  A system based on time-phased replenishment of products based on consumer demand that allows the manufacturer to be proactive and more directly respond to consumer purchase behavior. Efficient Consumer Response (ECR) Efficient Foodservice Response (EFR) Collaborative Planning, Forecasting and Replenishment

26 Adoption of UPC Bar Code  Started in 1972  Now used to track inventory, order products automatically, and report purchases by time  Beginning to use data collected 50% of all retailers offer frequent shopper programs Ways to reduce costs and increase sales  Walmart going to RFID

27 RFID  Radio Frequency IDentification (RFID) is an automatic identification method, relying on storing and remotely retrieving data using devices called RFID tags. An RFID tag is an object that can be attached to or incorporated into a product, for the purpose of identificationautomatic identification

28 Rise of Wal-Mart  Has built business on knowing what consumers buy when and asking vendors to replenish shelves in a timely manner  Largest retailer in the world Largest food retailer in the US 90 million customers per week  EDLP ( Every Day Low Prices ) strategy in food sales Low fixed margin Nearly infinite growth

29 Efficient Consumer Response  Wal-Mart model  Retailer & vendor share information  Electronic Data Interchange  Collaborative planning, forecasting and replenishment  Scan-based trading, vendor is paid for what is sold when it is sold

30 Expansion of Private Labels  Previously a cheaper product  Battle for “brand equity” House brand Wholesale brand Packer brand Farmer brand  New premium quality Wal-mart, KMart  16% of sales, 20% of volume

31 Merril Lynch, The Food Industry, 2000

32 Private Label Users American Heavy Users: Income: $20-40,000 Age:35-44 Household Size: +5 Education: High School European: In U.K. Over 50% Private Label Merrill Lynch: The Food Industry, 2000

33 New Consumer Issues  Natural Laura’s Lean http://www.laurasleanbeef.com/?source=gotohttp://www.laurasleanbeef.com/?source=goto Coleman’s Natural Meats http://www.colemanmeats.com/http://www.colemanmeats.com/  Organic foods http://www.ers.usda.gov/publications/agoutlook/apr2000/ao270d.pdf  Welfare friendly Niman Ranch http://www.nimanranch.com/http://www.nimanranch.com/  Farmer-friendly Good Natured Family Farms http://www.goodnatured.net/http://www.goodnatured.net/  Environmentally-friendly

34 Business Responses  Consumer database analysis  GIS technology  Increased branding of meats and produce Food safety Quality control Consumer loyalty

35 Business Responses  Virtual supermarkets  Shopping services

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37 Components of Bill for Marketing Farm Foods, 1993 Labor 47% Energy 5% Taxes 8% Int, Repair 6% Corp. Profits 4% Packaging 10% Transportation 6% Advertising 5% Depreciation 5% Rent 4%

38 Profit Margins  Historically lowest for: Meat, sugar, edible oils, milk, grain processing Homogenous, non-differentiated  Historically highest for: Frozen foods, bakery goods, breakfast cereals, dairy products, beverages Differentiated products

39 Average profit ratios of food and nonfood firms, Retailing Percent return on equity after taxes Food All 1975-198011.816.4 1981-198614.013.8 1987-199212.6 NA

40 Impacting farmer’s share  Degree of processing  Perishability  Seasonality  Transportation cost  Bulkiness in relation to value

41 Farmer’s Share by Commodity Eggs58%Potatoes 23% Beef56Margarine24 Chicken54Lettuce18 Milk42Frozen dinner12 Pork37Canned tomato 9 Cheese34 Bread 6 Flour28 Corn Flakes 6

42 Minicase 6 – Page 113 George’s Store


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