Skip to main content

It's High Noon on the High Street

The Sun's execellent City page, otherwise known as the "page you can trust", unveiled the High Noon headline this week after some stinking results posted by the Co-op. It quoted Peter Marks, its chief executive, as having said that people were cutting back on food for the first time in his working life.

"Co-op profits dive triggers panic," suggested the Sun. But so too did the resignation of Steve Jobs, Heineken's announcement of sales falls in the first half of its current financial year, and any number of other corporate events. In a sense the Co-op's pain should be welcome as it confirms the story that the Kantar Worldpanel sales estimates have been telling us every month - the Co-op is losing market share. Local shopkeepers collectively are doing better than the Co-op, which means its 3.6 per cent like-for-like fall in sales (at a time when grocery inflation is nearly 5 per cent) should be your bottom end benchmark.

Our village is served by a Co-op that was previously a Somerfield. It is a good shop with a decent range of food. It is well presented. Its staff are polite. Up front it has good promotions. Most independent shops would be pleased to match its standards. Which I guess is where the panic may kick in for an independent convenience store owner. Being OK is no longer good enough to ensure that your business will be successful.

The Co-op is not standing still. It talks a good story. Its management claims that after two years when integrating Somerfield was the top priority, it is now able to spend time focussed on new product development. It says the recent relaunch of its Truly Irresistable range has been a big success, with sales up 30 per cent year on year. It aims to follow this by launching Eat-in and Free-from ranges, a new wholefoods range, and to significantly increase the presence in store of “own grown British products”.


“Work is underway to enhance the range, segment the customer offer and overhaul the ways in which products and produce are replenished in-store,” the Co-op says. In its TV advertisements it says that it is good with food, which leads to the question of what it is for.

Ed Garner of Kantar Worldpanel reckons the Co-op strategy is to retain the same number of shoppers but to increase the amount that they spend with them. Unlike Waitrose, which aims to get more shoppers spending the same as its existing customers. Clearly the Waitrose strategy is working and the Co-op's is not.

In much of Mr Garner's analysis, the Co-op appears to be coming third to Waitrose and Sainsbury in terms of the up-market customer offer - high on organic, locally sourced and so on. While there are many independents who aspire to work in this sement of the market, most are slightly less ambitious, relying to a greater extent on alcohol and CTN sales.

Looked at this way, the Co-op's results may suggest that you do not need to panic so much as be careful about positioning your store so it appeals to the same shoppers that Waitrose and Sainsbury, to a lesser extent, already own.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Three secrets of great merchandising

Look at the ceiling and top wall of this McDonalds restaurant. There is a picture of two good looking healthy people having fun and some bright primary colours. Ask yourself what is the purpose of this picture? In the latest issue of Retail Newsagent in a feature on merchandising, Andrew Knight of RI tells its independent readers that they need to think about using sharp pictures of non-packaged products linked to people consuming goods. Perhaps this has been taken to the next level by the fast food chain - that is selling the feeling of being happy and healthy rather than the products. A second, related tip from the same feature is made by most contributors - it is vital to keep windows clean and clear of clutter. "I believe that less is more," says Roli Ranger, a retailer from Ascot, Berkshire. He has posters for promotions in between the windows that are regularly updated and discreet signs in the windows. Third, a highly visible well-stocked promotion at the entranc...

Busy street, empty shop, missed profits

True in part to my New Year resolution, I held a business meeting in an independent coffee shop today just next door to a Starbucks. The cafe was presented well and four staff were busy preparing for the lunchtime rush, at 11am. As my guests were late, I had a half hour overview of footfall on the street outside and in the restaurant. Six customers. Barely enough to form the queue in Starbucks or Pret-a-Manger just down the road. Plus one Italian girl who dropped off her CV. Some people stopped to look at the posters in the window and moved on. The owners seemed quite happy. When I left just after 1215, they were doing brisk trade. However, I have the impression that the business is not working hard enough. It could easily have managed 120 customers between 11 and 12, instead of 12. This is lost profit as the fixed overheads and staff costs are already in place. The owners are clearly busy - perhaps too busy to take time to look at the potential that their cafe has. What shou...

Sticks and stones do hurt

My 17 year-old son returned from a rock festival this week wearing a wristband proudly declaring him 0ver 18. He explained how easy it had been to use someone else's ID to get the identification and said it was ironic that he had not needed to show the over 18 band when buying alcohol. Today, Scottish retailer Abdul Qadar is complaining that public authorities are asking people to lie about their age when making test purchases. What trading standards officers may be forgetting is that the fact that retailers invest in a business premises and trade consistently from it make their job much, much easier. The alternative, a world of markets and itinerant traders, will be far harder to police. Mr Qadar's sense of injustice is fair. Those retailers, like Mr Qadar, who value their investment will seek to trade legally and will not sell alcohol to people under the age of 18. Asking children to lie about their age to local traders is a slander on all retailers.