INSIDE TRADER JOE’S FORTUNE MAGAZINE Caitlan Fetzer, Julia Hale, Ashley Warney.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
PRACTICE EXAM PERFORMANCE INDICATOR Sandy opened a small business that carries a very wide variety of products of varying qualities at many different.
Advertisements

Retail Industry: An opportunity..
Understand Merchandise Planning in Retailing. The Merchandise Plan A budgeting tool that helps retailer or buyer to meet department goals ▫Planned sales.
Principles of Marketing Lecture-30 Summary of Lecture-29.
Learning Objectives What are the issues manufacturers consider when choosing retail partners? What types of retailers are available for distributing.
S teal T his D esign stand out with a unique destination, products and simplicity.
1 Understand the role of marketing in business.. 2 Understand buying behaviors.
Retail Institutions by Store-Based Strategy Mix
Chapter retailing and multichannel marketing sixteen Copyright © 2015 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without.
Category Management.
 Downtown (City/Urban) Areas  Neighborhood Shopping Centers  Community Shopping Centers  Regional Shopping Centers  Super Regional Shopping Centers.
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 15–1 Retailing Transactions in which ultimate consumers are the buyers Retailers –Organizations.
THE PLACE. MARKETING MIX PROMO- TION PRODUCT PRICE PLACE MARKETING MIX How the goods get from the producer to the customer.
MERCHANDISING Merchandising means the activities involved in acquiring particular goods and/or services and making them available at the places, times,
TEMPO CONSULTING Tuan Ngo | Edward Guzman | Minh Tam Tran | Phong Vuong | Oscar Montecino.
Retail Travel Services (TM 334) Lecture 4 OPERATIONS
Making Consumer Decisions pp
Ch 15 Consumers in the Global Economy
MGT301 Principles of Marketing Lecture-30. Summary of Lecture-29.
Logistics Information Management, 14, 1/2, 2001, Nabisco: A Case Study Nabiskua Company Founded in 1991, is a supermarket for all the requirements.
Managing Purchasing & Inventory
Back to Table of Contents pp Chapter 22 Making Consumer Decisions.
Understand the role of marketing in business.
MANAGING MARKETING CHANNELS AND SUPPLY CHAINS C HAPTER.
Back to Table of Contents pp Chapter 22 Making Consumer Decisions.
Distribution Where do products come from?. Channels of Distribution The path from manufacturer to the final user Business – industrial user Person - consumer.
© 2003 McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., McGraw-Hill/Irwin RETAILING 17 C HAPTER.
Channels of Distribution
AS CONSUMERS EVOLVE, RETAIL ANALYTICS ADVANCE. Copyright ©2013 The Nielsen Company. Confidential and proprietary. 2 TODAY’S PANEL Jon Quinn Vice President,
Innovations in U.S. Food Retailing Trader Joe’s s Founded by a Stanford MBA who owned a number of convenience stores. s Repositioned stores to appeal to.
Marketing Mix ProductPromotionPricePlace. PLACE This is also called ‘Distribution’. A business must get the product to the right place, at the right time.
MGT-519 STRATEGIC MARKETING AAMER SIDDIQI 1. LECTURE 22 2.
Locate and Set Up Your Business.  RETAIL  1. Downtown Areas  2. Neighborhood Shopping Centers  3. Community Shopping Centers  4. Regional Shopping.
Chapter 13 Global Marketing Channels and Physical Distribution
MARKETING CHANNELS An Introduction. Distribution  Products must be available to consumers who want to purchase them conveniently, quickly, and with a.
Distribution: Customer Service
2-1 Environmental Analysis  Managers must understand how the environment affects their organization  It is difficult to predict how certain events will.
S ERVICE COMPETITION. by enhancing or adding services companies can be more competitive businesses that add services to support a product or another service.
Product/Service Management Objectives 4.03 and 4.04.
Locate and Set Up Your Business.  RETAIL  1. Downtown Areas  2. Neighborhood Shopping Centers  3. Community Shopping Centers  4. Regional Shopping.
© 2011 Trade Intelligence Jwayelani Butchery & Supermarket Jwayelani which means “welcome and be happy” in isiZulu was established.
Where do products come from?
P LACE Unit 3 Topic 3.1. T HE MARKETING MIX : PLACE What is place?: Where the product is sold How it gets to the customer – otherwise known as distribution.
Aspects of the placement decision
Entrepreneurship Unit 2.2 Analyzing a business’s competitors and industry.
OWN-LABEL V BRANDED IP AND THE BOTTOM LINE TUESDAY 2 ND JUNE 2015 THE LONDON STOCK EXCHANGE CHRISTIAN FINN.
Marketing II Chapter 7: Products, Services, and Brands: Building Customer Value.
Framework for Marketing Management International Edition 14 Managing Retailing, Wholesaling, and Logistics 1.
Food Purchasing for Child Care National Food Service Management Institute The University of Mississippi
Essential Standard 3.00 Understand the role of marketing in business. 1.
Essential Standard 3.00 Understand the role of marketing in business. 1.
1 PROMOTIONAL MIX PROMOTION LAP 1. 2 PROMOTION u Communication activities that inform potential consumers about the existence of goods, services, or ideas.
Distribution Where do products come from?. Channels of Distribution The path from manufacturer to the final user Business – industrial user Person - consumer.
Industry Analysis You must identify:  Sales potential of your product  Your competition.
Retail Pricing. Strategies EDLP vs HIGH/LOW Everyday Low Pricing (EDLP) Prices are set between regular non-sale price and deep discount sale prices May.
MGT211 Introduction to Business Lecture 30. Agent A person who brings buyers and sellers together. People who are technically sound. Work for both parties.
Retailing and Wholesaling
Food Wholesaling and Retailing
Purchasing Chapter 23.
Developing Merchandise Plans
Understand the role of marketing in business.
Buying Motives & Comparison Shopping
MARKETING MANAGEMENT 12th edition
Principles of Marketing
Retailing and Wholesaling
ALDI Foods.
Retailing and Wholesaling
Retailing and Wholesaling
ALDI Foods.
Retailing and Wholesaling
Presentation transcript:

INSIDE TRADER JOE’S FORTUNE MAGAZINE Caitlan Fetzer, Julia Hale, Ashley Warney

Health Food Store?

Private labels  80% of Trader Joe’s SKU’s are private labels  Some resemble familiar brands (Joe’s O’s)  Some well known manufacturers will make a variation of their product specifically for the Joe’s label Example: Trader Joe’s pita chips are made by Stacy’s, a division of Pepsi-Co’s Frito Lay

Their Secrets to Success?  Limited Selection-High Turnover Model  Example: Joe’s sells 10 varieties of peanut butter while the average grocery store sells 40 varieties  Sells about 4,000 SKU’s vs. average 50,000 SKU’s  “With greater turnover on smaller number of items, Trader Joe’s can buy large quantities and get deep discounts”  Smaller number of items makes stocking shelves and checking out customers much simpler  Sells estimated $1,750 in merchandise per sq. ft  More than double what Whole Foods sells

Their Secrets to Success?  They’re trendy  “Trader Joe’s doesn’t pick up on trends – it sets them”  High list celebs are consistently seen at its stores  Mom & Pop feel (neighborhood stores)neighborhood  While being a national chain, it maintains the small town feel  Smaller selection = happier customers  “A wide selection can lead to shopping paralysis”  Specialty Items  “Exotic affordable luxuries”

Too Secretive?  They keep their image by keeping things “hush hush”  Declined many requests to speak to Fortune about business operations  Few customers know they are actually owned by the Albrecht family (ultra private supermarket empire)  Famous in Germany for not talking to press  This article was obtained over a 2 month period by speaking with former executives, competitors, industry analysts, and all involved asked not to be named.

Relation to Class?  Trader Joe’s supply chain (minimize length of channel)  Purchase directly from manufacturers  Product then shipped directly to Trader Joe’s distribution centers  Keeps costs low and supplier relations strong

Sources  Kowitt, Beth. "Inside Trader Joe's." Fortune Magazine 6 Sept. 2010:   es/inside_trader_joes_full_version.fortune/index.ht m es/inside_trader_joes_full_version.fortune/index.ht m