Grocery Retail Archives - Page 31 of 72 - I Hate Working In Retail

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Six Reasons Why Supermarket Giant Tesco May Be ‘Finished’

 

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Tesco shopping  bags (AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth) | ASSOCIATED PRESS

Tesco has been left reeling after suffering a 3.7% drop in like-for-like sales over the last three months, marking the “worst trading in their history”, according to analysts.

Internationally, the supermarket giant recorded a 2.2% fall in like-for-like sales, including VAT and excluding petrol. Within those figures, sales fell 1% across Tesco’s European operations and 3.2% in Asia.

This comes after Tesco, which accounts for 29% of Britain’s supermarket trade, revealed in April that its profits had fallen for the second year in a row.

The supermarket giant’s chief executive Philip Clarke is under mounting pressure to improve the situation. With Tesco’s share price down 20% in a year, Clarke will have to battle to keep shareholders’ confidence. Meanwhile, experts have pronounced gloomy verdicts about the trading performance of the UK’s biggest retailer.

Clive Black, head of research at Shore Capital, said that Tesco’s strategy in Britain “simply does not seem to be working”, while Bernstein Research’s Bruno Monteyne told Radio 4 this morning: “We thought three months ago that the figures couldn’t get any worse. And here we are three months later.”

“Big supermarkets are finished,” he concluded.

As Clarke rushes to turn around Tesco’s flagging fortunes, HuffPost UK found six reasons why the task may be rather difficult.

  • 1
    Tesco can’t shrug off its poor performance
    Clarke blamed the dip in sales on cutting prices, moving away from vouchers and the disruption from refurbishing a large number of stores. However, Bernstein Research’s Bruno Monteyne estimates that if you took out such costs, their like-for-like sales would still have dipped by 2%.
  • 2
    Tesco is trying too hard to appeal to everyone
    Discount retailers like Asda specialise in offering good deals, while fancy supermarkets like Waitrose are without equal at providing luxury. So Tesco is trying to be a mix of everything, other customers are lured away by more specialised rivals.
  • 3
    Others are doing what Tesco is trying, but better
    Tesco “has been increasing prices way too fast over the last few years to keep up earnings growth,” Monteyne points out. As a result, compared to discount retailers like Asda, Tesco is at least 4% more expensive for shoppers.
  • 4
    1 million fewer customers are visiting a week
    The proof that Tesco is having some issues comes in the footfall, as the chain seems to have lost more than 1 million customer visits a week, worth £25 million in sales.
  • 5
    Tesco has never done this badly
    Clarke, who has worked for 40 years at Tesco, admitted: “I have never seen a quarter’s like-for-like sales like this before, that I can remember.” Monteyne told Radio 5 Live the results were “the worst in their history.”
  • 6
    Even Tesco’s boss isn’t confident
    “I see every day the improvements that are coming in the business, but I’m not making any promises about sales improving in the next few quarters,” Clarke warned today.  Meanwhile, other analysts like Julie Palmer at Begbies Traynor think Clarke “doesn’t seem to have a clear turnaround strategy”. He’ll have to work hard to prove them wrong.

 

Sourced from thehuffingtonpost.com

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Almost Everything You Buy At The Grocery Store Is Made By One Of These 6 Companies

The array of products and packaging at the grocery store can be dizzying.

But when you follow the money, there aren’t as many choices as you might think.

A 2013 report by consumer rights group Food and Water Watch found that no matter how many brands appear on the shelves, your dollars are going to the same few parent companies.

Monoliths including Kraft, PepsiCo, ConAgra Foods, Nestle, General Mills, and Campbell Soup Co. control more than their share of the market: Among 100 grocery categories, Food and Water Watch found that a handful of the largest companies control an average of 63.3% of the sales. In 32 of those categories, 75% of the sales were controlled by four or fewer companies.

The report concludes that the average consumer is powerless against the companies controlling the grocery market, and that since the beginning of the Great Recession, grocery prices have risen up to twice as fast as inflation.

Finances Online illustrated this phenomenon in the infographic below:

Read more:  http://www.businessinsider.com/top-grocery-companies-2014-5#ixzz33hCmwkOr

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Working in Walmart vs Working in Costco

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