Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Whole Foods denied ‘ World’s Healthiest’

- RACHEL PREMACK

Whole Foods Market says it’s “America’s Healthiest Grocery Store.”

But the grocery chain is looking to update its slogan to reflect a loftier moniker: “World’s Healthiest Grocery Store.”

Unfortunat­ely for the grocer, the U. S. Patent and Trademark Office recently rejected its applicatio­n to register that slogan. Whole Foods will have six months to update and refile the case and may choose not to do so.

Whole Foods’ attempts to break into the global market has been slow. It launched its first internatio­nal outlet 14 years ago and has opened just 19 since, in just three countries.

The agency said it rejected the trademark because it makes a “laudatory” claim, or is based on exaggerate­d praise that can’t be proven or has not been proved true. For instance, Papa John’s slogan “Better Ingredient­s, Better Pizza” was initially struck down by a court in 2000 because it could not substantia­te that it indeed had better ingredient­s than all of its competitor­s.

Companies still try to trademark these sorts of affirmatio­ns anyway, said Jonathan Hyman, a partner at California- based intellectu­al property law firm Knobbe, Martens, Olson & Bear. “Companies attempt to register these kinds of marks all the time, though it’s sometimes not successful.”

That’s because they can manage to argue that the superlativ­e is a distinguis­hing mark of the company, rather than a factual statement, Hyman said. Papa John’s continued to advertise their pizza pies with “Better Ingredient­s, Better Pizza” because their consumers already associated that with their company. Whole Foods used a similar argument when it managed to claim “America’s Healthiest Grocery Store” in 2010, wrote Mike Ortega, trademark consultant for brand agency Interbrand, in an Interbrand publicatio­n.

They could also use facts to back up their slogan. “Leading Brand” or “Trusted by Moms” are approved taglines when a brand can quantitati­vely prove that those are indeed true.

But Whole Foods isn’t recognized as the world’s healthiest grocery store. It functions only in the United States, England and Canada, which is hardly the entire globe. On top of that, few probably associate the phrase “World’s Healthiest Grocery Store” with Whole Foods; it has never used the slogan.

“The trademark applicatio­n could be a sign that Whole Foods could be planning to expand its locations beyond just three countries,” Ortega wrote.

It does indicate that Whole Foods is still looking to continue to expand globally. Based in Austin, Texas, Whole Foods opened its first internatio­nal outlet in Toronto in 2002 and expanded shortly afterward to the United Kingdom.

The internatio­nal push has not been as lucrative as executives hoped. That’s in part thanks to efforts by Wal- Mart to expand its organic sections and pre- existing upscale grocers that have claimed what might be Whole Food’s clientele, such as the United Kingdom’s Waitrose.

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