Showing posts with label new store openings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label new store openings. Show all posts

Thursday, March 19, 2009

Retail Memo: Whole Foods Market Opens New Store in Santa Cruz, California Today ... And There's Plenty of Competition

Pictured above is the famous "Giant Dipper" roller coaster at the Santa Cruz Beach Boardwalk in Santa Cruz, California. Built in 1924 it is one of the oldest roller coasters of its kind in America. With Whole Foods Market opening its first store in Santa Cruz today, we suggest there will be a natural foods retailing competitive roller coaster ride soon hitting the city.

Fresh from reaching its settlement agreement with the U.S. Federal Trade Commission (FTC) on March 6, Whole Foods Market, Inc. today opened a 31,500 square foot natural foods supermarket in the coastal Northern California city of Santa Cruz, home to the famous Santa Cruz Beach Boardwalk, and what's considered one of the most attractive campuses of the University of California, the University of California, Santa Cruz, the campus with the unique mascot -- Sammy the Banana Slug.

The new store is the first for Whole Foods Market in the city of Santa Cruz, which has a very high natural-organic foods shopper demographic. Northern California, which is one of the U.S. regions in which Whole Foods Market has the greatest number of stores, is one of the best market regions for the natural grocery chain in the country.

An interesting aspect of Whole Foods' opening its new natural foods supermarket in Santa Cruz so soon after its March 6 settlement agreement with the FTC regarding the regulatory agency's near 20-month legal battle to overturn the 2007 acquisition by Whole Foods Market, Inc. of Wild Oats Markets, Inc., is that Santa Cruz, a city of about 100,000 residents, is a very competitive natural foods retailing town.

For example, in the natural foods retailing class of trade, locally-based New Leaf Community Markets has long been the leader in Santa Cruz. In fact, New Leaf just opened on March 11 a brand new nearly 18,000 square foot natural foods market on the westside of the city. The New Leaf store is about three miles from the new Whole Foods store, which is located on the city's east side. The new store replaces an older New Leaf market on the westside. There's also a New Leaf store in downtown Santa Cruz. There are six New Leaf units in the region.

Another popular independent natural foods market in Santa Cruz is Staff of Life Natural Foods Market, which has operated in the city for many years and has a loyal following.

There's also a Trader Joe's natural and specialty grocery store in Santa Cruz. With its extensive selection of natural, organic and specialty products, Trader Joe's draws many of the same customers that Whole Foods Market stores do.

Safeway Stores, Inc. has a supermarket in Santa Cruz. The grocery chain, which is based in Northern California's San Francisco Bay Area, is in the process of building one of its brand new "Lifestyle" format supermarkets in the coastal community.

In addition to being filled with conventional food and grocery products, the new Safeway in Santa Cruz will be stocked full with natural, organic and premium food and grocery items, including the chain's popular "O' Organics" organic products brand and its "Eating Right" healthy foods brand. The two Safeway brands combined did about $1 billion in gross sales in Safeway's 1,750 stores in the U.S. and Canada in 2008.

The new Santa Cruz "Lifestyle" format Safeway also will feature a fresh, prepared foods-deli department and in-store special features like a fresh nut bar, which Safeway includes in its new "Lifestyle" stores. The new wave "Lifestyle" format stores often look in many cases very similar in design to a larger, new Whole Foods store.

Sacramento, California-based Raley's (130 stores, $3.5 billion in annual sales) has one of its Nob Hill banner supermarkets in Santa Cruz. Raley's is a major player in natural and organic foods retailing and the Santa Cruz Nob Hill store offers a strong selection of natural and organic products, reflecting Raley's competitiveness in the categories.

Add to this competitive mix Shoppers Corner, a longtime Santa Cruz independent supermarket that offers both conventional groceries and natural, organic and specialty foods. The grocer "stacks product high" and "sells it cheap," often offering natural and organic items for less than all its competitors.

In other words, Santa Cruz is a perfect laboratory to test the FTC's (now historic) antitrust argument that a combined Whole Foods-Wild Oats is monopolistic. As we argued throughout the legal case, in today's natural-organic foods retailing world in the U.S., Whole Foods competes against not only natural foods stores, but also certain supermarket chains (like Safeway) and hybrid format retailers (like Trader Joe's).

Therefore, since Santa Cruz has three high volume and competitive natural foods markets -- the two New Leaf units and Staff of Life -- along with Safeway and Trader Joe's, plus Shoppers Corner, it's our analysis that Whole Foods will have its competition cut out for it in the coastal city. It won't be a cakewalk on the boardwalk for Whole Foods Market in Santa Cruz.

By the same token, Whole Foods will inject a massive dose of competition into the food and grocery retailing business in Santa Cruz. The natural foods supermarket chain is going after the city's consumers aggressively with discount pricing, hot promotional deals, special events and other merchandising and marketing schemes designed to fill the store's aisles.

But the local guys will fight back. That's why the market was right, and why the FTC ultimately gave Whole Foods a sweet settlement deal. The competition abounds and is always changing and growing.

[Suggested reading: Jondi Gumz, a staff writer for the Santa Cruz Sentinel newspaper, has a comprehensive and insightful piece published in the paper today about Whole Foods' opening of its new store in Santa Cruz, and the competitive aspects having the new big league player in town might have on the city's existing retailers. Read the story here. There's also a color slideshow of photogrpahs of the new store at the link.]

Thursday, November 6, 2008

Retail Memo: Henry's Farmers Market to Open New Store in Santee, CA On November 12; More New Store's and Remodels On the Way


Retail Rebirth: A New Henry's chain is Being Born

Natural foods retailing chain Henry's Farmers Market, which was bought from Whole Foods Markets, Inc. by Southern California-based Smart & Final, Inc. last year, will open the doors of its newest store, a new, larger and upgraded location on Mission Gorge Road in Santee, California, on Wednesday, November 12. Santee is in San Diego County.

The new Henry's, which replaces an older, smaller store nearby, has been in the works for over one year and will be the first tenant of The Marketplace at Santee, a new shopping center on Mission Gorge Road in the city, according to the retailer, which operates 36 natural foods stores in Southern California and Texas under the Henry Farmers Market and Sun Harvest banners.

There are 28 Henry's stores, located in San Diego, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino and Los Angeles Counties in Southern California. The eight Sun Harvest natural foods stores are located in Texas.

The Henry's and Sun Harvest natural foods stores were acquired in June, 2007 by Whole Foods when it merged with rival Wild Oats. Shortly after the deal went through, Whole Foods Market, Inc. sold the Henry's and Sun Harvest stores to the investment group which owns Southern California-headquartered Smart & Final.

Smart is Final is a chain of 235 non-membership food and grocery-focused club format-style stores. It has stores located in California, Oregon, Washington State, Nevada, Arizona, Idaho and in the northern region of the country of Mexico.

Smart & Final also recently introduced a new format called Smart & Final Extra. The first store opened in Southern California.

The Extra stores are about 30,000 -to- 35,000 square feet and are sort of a hybrid discount and food-focused store. They carry a larger selection of fresh produce, including some organics, for example than the Smart & Final club-style stores, along with offering a larger variety of single pack food and grocery items than those stores do. The club-style Smart & Final stores carry some single-items but focus on multi-packs and larger sized products.

The larger, modernized Henry's Farmers Market store opening next week in Santee, California will feature expanded product selections in all departments as well as an increased organic produce selection, according to the natural grocer.

The new and larger Henry's store is approximately 25,000 square feet.

"We believe our customers will respond quite favorably to this beautiful new site," says Santee Henry’s Store Director Mark Montejano. "With the added square footage, we are able to offer expanded selections of the fresh and healthy foods Henry's shoppers count on. Plus, the bright, airy space makes the entire shopping experience more enjoyable," he adds.

The previous store was about 15,000 square feet or so.

The re-opening of the Santee Henry's Farmers Market (it's a new store though) is the first of a series of Henry’s new and remodeled store openings throughout Southern California over the next few months.

The Escondido (also in San Diego County), California Henry's Farmers Market store remodel and expansion project is slated to be complete this December and a new Henry’s Farmers Market store in Woodland Hills, California is scheduled to open in early spring of 2009, for example.

Henry's Farmers Market is holding a grand opening celebration at the new Santee replacement store, called "Henry’s Barn Stormin’ Bash," on Wednesday, November 12. The event will offer numerous special festivities at the store from 7 a.m. to 3 p.m. on opening day, according to a company spokesperson.

Among the free to the public activities on Wednesday will be food sampling throughout the store, a pumpkin pie recipe contest and live entertainment, including local bands and dance performances. There will be face painting and balloons for children (of all ages) as well.

The first 100 shoppers on Wednesday will receive a free Henry's reusable canvas bag full of healthy snacks., according to the retailer.

The mayor of Santee will appear at the store for a ribbon cutting ceremony, and there will be a community pancake breakfast held there, with the proceeds to be donated to Connor's Cause for Children, a local charity.

Additionally, Henry’s Farmers Market will match pre-tax sales from its "Grab & Give Food Drive" at the new Santee store on Wednesday (part of the grand opening) to donate to its annual holiday partnership with Father Joe's Villages, which provides meals for needy families in Southern California.

The old Henry’s store in Santee will be closing its doors at 6 p.m. on Tuesday, Nov. 11 to prepare for the new store’s grand opening event the following morning.

We're rather impressed with the extent, variety and comprehensive nature of the Santee store grand opening. Most retailers do about half the amount and variety of activities Henry's is doing for the grand opening next week. We call it good marketing. We particularly like the various tie-ins with the local community and charity groups. Doing good for community while doing good for sales is a winning combination in our analysis and opinion.

As we wrote in this this June 2, 2008 piece, "Retail Memo: Analysis: Free of Wild Oats Markets, Inc.'s Ownership, Henry's Farmers Markets Seems to Be Starting to Get its Groove On," since Henry's has become a part of the Smart & Final ownership group, the existing stores have been dramatically improved, as has the overall operation.

In particular have been the improvements from Wild Oats' ownership of the store produce and meat departments and selections, which were looking rather sad during the last couple years of Wild Oats' ownership. (Whole Foods Market, Inc. didn't own the Henry's and Sun Harvest stores for long; they basically sold them as soon as acquiring them as part of the deal. Therefore they neither had the time or desire to do anything with them, except sell the stores.

We've also written about the fact Henry's new ownership and expanded management, merchandising and operations team plans to grow the natural foods chain considerably in Southern California, and perhaps outside of the region.

Henry's Farmers Market also has a few other upcoming changes and surprises in store.

With nearly 30 stores, the natural grocer already is a player in the parts of Southern California it has stores located in. As it adds new stores, and continues to improve the existing stores like it has been doing, Henry's could become a major player in the natural, organic and specialty foods retailing categories throughout the huge Southern California market region.

Thursday, February 28, 2008

Retail Memo: News & Analysis: Tesco Confirms 19 Fresh & Easy Grocery Markets for the Sacramento Metro and Suburban Region in Northern California

Tesco's Fresh & Easy Neighborhood Market confirmed today it plans to open 19 stores in the Sacramento Metropolitan region of Northern California, as well as in nearby Vacaville and Galt.
Seven of the small-format grocery stores, which average 10,000 square feet -to- 13,000 square feet, will be in the city of Sacramento. Nine of the markets will be in the nearby suburbs. (See the graphic below.) Two of the Fresh & Easy stores will be in Vacaville, which is about 25 minutes from Sacramento, and one store will be in Galt, which is less than 15 miles from Sacramento, and is about midway between the capital city and Stockton, where Tesco plans to locate its Northern/Central California distribution center.
On Monday, January 28 we reported that Tesco had applied for liquor licenses for four Fresh & Easy grocery stores in the city of Sacramento (2 stores) and two stores in the nearby suburb of Folsom. We discovered this fact via liquor license applications, which are public data. As a result, we were one of the first publications to report that Tesco would enter the Sacramento region in Northern California, along with signing leases for 18 stores to date in the nearby San Francisco
Tesco's confirmation of the 19 Sacramento/Vacaville-area grocery markets, along with the confirmation it will begin opening the first of its initial 18 Fresh & Easy stores in the San Francisco Bay Area at the end of this year or in early 2009, brings to a total of 35 the number of Fresh & Easy Neighborhood Market small-format grocery stores the retailer has thus far confirmed for Northern California.
Vacaville is located about 20 miles from Sacramento, off Interstate I-80, which is the primary route from Sacramento to the San Francisco Bay Area. Vacaville is about an hour drive from San Francisco and a little over 30 minutes to the East Bay Area cities of Berkeley and Oakland. Interstate 80 rings the Bay from the Bay Bridge east, out to Fairfield (where Fresh & Easy is locating a store), then on to Vacaville, the University city of Davis, and into Sacramento.
Locating a critical mass of stores in the Sacramento Metropolitan region, then out to Vacaville and Farfield, then into the Bay Area, is the same strategy Tesco is using in Southern California. This "critical mass" strategy emulates retailers like Starbucks and Walgreen's Drugs, small format retailers which locate a critical mass of stores in city's and neighborhoods so as to position their stores as a "neighborhood" retailer.
Additionally, we can report that Tesco is looking for additional new store locations in both the Sacramento and Bay Area regions. In fact, the British grocer already has a number of other location leases locked-up (in addition to those announced) and is in negotiations for more store sites in both the Sacramento and Bay Area regions. We hope to be able to report some of those locations soon here.
As we reported first in December and again in the January 28 piece, Tesco also plans to open a new distribution center in Stockton, California to serve its Bay Area and Sacramento region Fresh & Easy stores. Stockton is located in the Northern San Joaquin Valley, about 30 miles from Sacramento, and about 60 miles from San Francisco. The location is generally no more than one hour's drive-and in many cases less--to all of the 35 confirmed Northern and Central California store locations to date. Tesco's Fresh & Easy Neighborhood Market has not yet confirmed the Stockton distribution center. Additionally, Stockton is about a 15 minute drive from Galt, where one of the 19 Sacramento-area stores will be opened.
Sacramento's Mayor joins F&E CEO Mason for AM presser
Tesco's Fresh & Easy Neighborhood Market CEO Tim Mason made the Sacramento region new store announcement with a splash this morning. He was joined by Sacramento Mayor Heather Fargo and City Councilman Ray Tretheway in front of an empty commercial building located at Northgate Blvd. and San Juan Blvd. in the city of Sacramento. The grocer will remodel the empty building into a Fresh & Easy grocery market.
By having the city's mayor at his side, Mason signaled Fresh & Easy wasn't just another grocery retailer opening a new store in town, but rather is a grocer that's making a major commitment to the city and region by opening an initial 19 stores in the region next year, with more to come.
Having Mason at her side also was good for the Mayor. Sacramento, like all of California is being battered by the sub-prime housing crisis, increasing unemployment and a host of other economic ills. Being able to announce a new business venture like Fresh & Easy moving into her city at this time will score her some major political points with voters.
The retailer also made another smart move by choosing the empty Tower Records building on Watt Avenue in Sacramento as one of its future Fresh & Easy grocery store locations. Tower Records, which later grew into a national chain, which went bankrupted in 2006, was founded in Sacramento in the 1960's--and the Watt Avenue location was its flagship store.
When the Watt Avenue Tower store closed, there literally was a period of mourning in Sacramento for the local independent record store that went on to be a huge mega-chain, then fell on hard times and was shut down.
Tesco's Fresh & Easy should gain considerable goodwill from the community for leasing, remodeling and opening one of its grocery markets in the Tower building, which is what it's called. The building has been empty for over two years.
[Note to Fresh & Easy Management]: It would be wise, and good business, to preserve aspects of the former Tower Records building when you remodel it into a Fresh & Easy market. Perhaps you should call it "Tower Fresh & Easy," or some version of that. Remember, everything is local in America, especially in Sacramento. And, in the case of an iconic building like the Tower Records' site, retaining some aspects of the building's history and culture (a plaque on the front of the new Fresh & Easy store with the history of the building would be a nice touch) will not only go a long way towards creating excellent community relations--but customers as well.]
The timing and style of the announcement was particulary good for Fresh & Easy since analysts like us and others have been writing about how the retailer's current 55 stores in Southern California, Arizona and Nevada are not performing up to expectations. [You can read our most recent analysis on Fresh & Easy store performance in posts made on Tuesday and yesterday on the blog.]
Of course, marketing an PR are only part of being a successful grocer. As we've suggested in our pieces this week, Tesco's Fresh & Easy has major operations challenges to solve and improve in addition to opening dozens of new stores and creating good PR events.
The retailer shouldn't be counted out though. Doing doing so is foolish. Tesco is the world's number three retailer, and it's track record at home in the UK and elsewhere in the world is impressive.
Tesco also has lots of cash. That's helpful to any start up. What we believe Tesco hasn't learned yet though is: it can't do retailing in the U.S. in the same way it does retailing in the UK and Europe.
Fresh & Easy is missing a key American element: localism. This missing element can't be fixed as easily as the operational problems we've pointed out in our analysis. However, its just as important--maybe even more so. And, it's essential.
Competitive environment: Welcome to Sacramento
Nowhere does Tesco need to grasp the importance of tailoring its Fresh & Easy stores better to the local environment and neighborhoods than in Sacramento and its metropolitan and surrounding region.
Sacramento has been one of the fastest-growing cities in California throughout the last decade. The Sacramento Metropolitan region has a population of nearly 2 million people. The city of Sacramento has a current population of about 600,000. In addition to being California's capital city--which means lots of well-educated state government workers--Sacramento has a mixed economy. Agriculture and agribusiness remain huge in the region, as does light manufacturing, warehousing and transportation.
The fastest growing sector in the Sacramento region's economy is in the service sector, both in state government, associated non-profit organizations like law and lobbying firms, and in the private sector. This includes the health professions, law, finance and retail. In the last 15 years the city has been transformed from being a central city in a primarily agricultural region (with the exception of state government), to the urban city center of a booming metropolitan and somewhat cosmopolitan area.
Grocery retailing in Sacramento and the surrounding region has a decidedly local flair. The region's number one (in market share and store count) grocer is Raley's, which is based in the nearby city of West Sacramento. Raley's is a prvately-held, family-owned supermarket chain that's been in business in the Sacramento region for 73 years. The locally headquartered grocery chain has 120 stores and does about $3 billion a year in sales.
The Sacramento-based food retailer operates four store banners: Raley's, Bel-Air Markets, Nob Hill Foods and Food Source. Raley's stores are 55,000 square foot -to- 80,000 square foot superstores. The stores are fairly upscale and offer lots of prepared and other fresh foods, along with tons of grocery products (including lots of organics) and a huge selection of non-foods. Most of the new Raley's banner stores are closer to the 80,000 square foot size. The Raley's banner is the chain's original retail brand.
The Bel-Air banner is an upscale supermarket format. The stores average 40,000 square feet (older stores) -to- 60,000 square feet (newer stores). They're similar to the Raley's stores--lots of upscale fresh foods, but fewer nonfoods do to their size (but still plenty). Bel-Air was an acquisition for Raley's. The Bel-Air chain at one time was Raley's chief competitior in the region. In the 1980's, Raley's acquired the grocery chain from the Wong family, who founded and operated the chain for over 50 years.
Nob Hill Foods also is an acquisition for Raley's. Like Bel-Air, Nob Hill was a long-time family-owned chain. It was based in the South Bay Area city of Gilroy, where two generations of the Bonfonte family operated it for about 60 years. Raley's acquired Nob Hill Foods in the 1990's and consolidated its headquarters in its West Sacramento facility.
Food Source is Raley's discount warehouse-type store format. The grocer created the banner in the 1980's as a way to get into the growing no frills, discount warehouse store category in the region at the time. It's the grocer's smallest banner in terms of the number of stores, but does significant sales volume in its niche.
Citizen Raley's
Raley's also is a leading corporate citizen in the Sacramento region. Sacramento's semi-pro baseball team, the River Cats--which in a big city like Sacramento without a professional baseball team serves as a very popular popular equivalent--plays it games at Raley Field, a state of the art baseball stadium in the city built in large part by the grocer.
The grocer is the number one donor to programs that feed the hungry and homeless in the region. Last year it gave over $15 million dollars to food pantry's and other programs which provide food assistance to families and individuals in need.
In fact, Raley's has its hand in nearly every charitable venture in the region--from Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts, to educational scholarship assistance, environmental causes and literally many dozens more. Additionally, the Raley-Teel family, majority-owners of the Raley's grocery chain, also has its own charitable foundation, which gives additional millions each year to local non-profit groups and supports other charitable causes locally.
The other two major grocers in the Sacramento region--Safeway Stores, Inc. (number two market share) and Save Mart, Inc. (number three market share) are fairly local guys as well. Safeway, which has about 21% of the region's grocery sales market share, has its corporate headquarters in the East Bay Area city of Pleasanton, which is only about 70 miles from Sacramento. Save Mart, which entered the Sacramento region market for the first time last year when it bought Albertsons' Northern California Division from an investment banking firm, is headquartered just 60 miles away in the Central Valley City of Modesto.
Between the three grocery chains--Raley's, Safeway and Save Mart--they control about 85% of the total grocery sales market share in the Sacramento market region. The remaining 15% share is split between Food-4-Less, a multi-store deep-disount warehouse format grocer, numerous independents, Longs Drugs, a couple Trader Joe's stores, and the one Whole Foods Market, Inc. store in the region, which is located in Sacramento. (Note: Whole Foods' is looking to add at least one, and maybe two stores in the region in the next two years.)
Union supermarket chains vs. non-union Fresh & Easy
Raleys, Safeway Stores and Save Mart also are union supermarket chains. On average, the three chains pay their full-time store-level retail clerks about $21.00 hour. Full-time means the clerks' have one full year of full-time hourly experience as a union grocery clerk. Part-timer pay ranges from about $12.00 hour -to- the $21.00 hour amount. The $12.00 hour is an entry-level wage for some positions, and it goes up in increments about every three months per the agreed upon contract between the grocery chains and the union. Nearly all store level workers with six months' to a year's experience make between $15.00 and $21.00 hour.
The union contract also provides store workers with one of the best medical insurance plans in the U.S. It is comprehensive, has lower than average employee contributions, doctors office co-pays and prescription drug out-of-pocket costs for the workers. The plan also offers very affordable dental, vision and mental health plans for reasonable employee contributions.
The union supermarkets also provide a career path for workers who choose to make a career out of the retail grocery industry and work at store-level for 25 -to- 30 years and then retire. The joint employer-union pension plan pays out about $3,500 -to- $4,000 month to union clerks who retire after 25 -to- 30 years in the industry. This is in addition to collecting monthly Social Security pension payments.
Employers make the largest contribution to the worker pension plan. Employees contribute a small percentage out of their paychecks every two weeks as well. Additionally, all three of these union grocery chains--Safeway, Raley's and Save Mart--offer some form of additional retirement plans on their own to workers. Safeway offers a discount stock-purchase plan, while Raley's and Save Mart offer profit-sharing-type programs, since both are privately-held companies. Save Mart has 255 stores throughout Northern and Central Califronia, and annual sales of about $6.5 billion.
Tesco's Fresh & Easy Neighborhood Market currently pays store-level workers $10.00 hour. There currently is no established higher hourly wage for current workers when they achieve one year's experience like at the union supermarket chains.
The 10,000 square foot -to- 13,000 square foot grocery stores employee about 20 workers per-store, according to the company. All of the store employees, with the exception of a couple managers, work part time. Those part-timers who want to can work up to 20 hours a week, which qualifies them for a health insurance plan.
However, we've compared a Fresh & Easy store employee's health plan to the union food retail chains' plan, and the union plan wins across the board: it's more comprehensive, has less of an employee contribution, provides for lower employee co-payments, and offers a number of other benefits.
According to a Tesco Fresh & Easy spokesman, the retailer also offers bonuses of up to 10% to store-level workers if they meet certain performance criteria. The bonus is once a year. Fresh & Easy doesn't currently offer store-level employees a retirement plan. They also don't get discounts at present on Tesco plc. stock, like Safeway employees do with Safeway stock.
Trader Joe's, which has only a couple stores in the region, Whole Foods (it has one store), and Wal-Mart, which only has a handful of Supercenters in the Sacramento area, also are non-union shops like Tesco's Fresh & Easy Neighborhood Market.
Sacramento shoppers are historically 'local-loyal'
Sacramento region shoppers have long been super-loyal to Raley's. Just ask Safeway Stores, Inc. Despite the fact that its a chain based nearby, has more than 10 times the number of stores and does at least $40 billion more in annual sales than Raley's, its never been able to overtake the local grocer in market share in the region, despite trying hard to do so for at least four decades.
Tesco's Fresh & Easy Neighborhood Market would be wise to learn as much as it can about the "local nature" of grocery retailing in the Sacramento region. Over the last 40 years, Safeway left the market twice, under two different ownership structures, because of Raley's domination. It was only again in the 1980's--and particularly in the 1990's with its Lifestyle format stores--that Safeway began to make some inroads in the market.
Fresh & Easy senior management can expect a strong response by Raley's, Safeway and Save Mart when it enters the Sacramento market next year. For example, in terms of retail pricing, all three--but especially Raley's and Save Mart--won't hesitate to lower prices if Fresh & Easy comes in with its discount pricing structure on basic grocery items like it has in Southern California, Arizona and Nevada, which it will do in Sacramento because doing so is key to its format and positioning. As the ancient Chinese saying states: 'May you live in interesting times
Related Stories From Our Archives:

>Retail Memo: "Tesco's Fresh & Easy Neighborhood Market @ 50 (Stores): Analysis, Observation and A Few Suggestions for Some Ways Forward. >Retail Memo: "New Details and Analysis About Safeway's Small Format Summer Bay Area Surprise for Tesco's Fresh & Easy Neighborhood Market." >Retail Memo: "Wal-Mart Heating-Up the Competition Against Tesco in the UK (As Well as At Home in the USA).
>Retail Memo: "Wal-Mart's New Small-Format 'Marketside' Grocery Store Logo Unveiled." >Retail Memo: "Tesco Fresh & Easy Insight: A New Store Blooms in Compton, CA; F&E's Chicagoland March; A Sacramento Neighborhood and F&E Get Hiched." >Retail Memo: "Raley's Attempts to Come Full-Circle With New Private-Label Natural and Organics Products' Brand." >Tesco Fresh & Easy Neighborhood Market Update: "New Nielson Study Analyzes the Chain's Affect on Competitors."
>Breaking News: "Tesco's Fresh & Easy Confirms it Will Open 18 Stores in San Francisco Bay Area." >Retail Memo: "Designing the 'Perfect' Small-Format Grocery Store in A 'Near-Perfect' Place." >Retail Memo: "Wal-Mart and Safeway Stores Could 'Box' Tesco in With New Small-Format Stores." >Tesco Fresh & Easy Neighborhood Market Update: "Fresh & Easy and the UFCW Union." >Retail Memo: "The Small-Format Revolution Continues to Heat Up."
>Mid-Week Marketing Memo: "Three Reasons Why Tesco's Fresh & Easy Neighborhood Market's Venture Could be a Huge Success--and Three Reasons it Could be A Historic Food Retailing Failure." >Monday Morning Java: "Safeway Small-Format Stores on the Way." >Tesco Fresh & Easy Update-Northern California: "Tesco Inks Deals for Three New Fresh & Easy Store Locations in Northern California's San Francisco Bay Area, Distribution Center in Stockton."

>Tuesday Talking Points Memo: "Eastward Bound for Fresh & Easy." >Tesco Fresh & Easy Update: Oakland: "Oakland May be the Central Front in Tesco's Fresh & Easy Neighborhood Market's Northern California Invasion in 2008." >Breaking News: "First Fresh & Easy Market Opens A Week Early." [Click here to read one or more of these pieces from our archives.]