Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

The Whole Foods of everything

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Like other grocers, Whole Foods is increasing­ly pushing its store brand products, most notably those under the “365 Everyday Value” name. If the deal goes through, those items could get prime real estate on a massive platform outside the chain’s 440 U.S. stores.

Amazon, in instantly acquiring a stable of its own grocery staples such as pizza sauce and peanut butter, could decide to give them favored placement in its search results. While some 365 products are on the site now, they’re through third-party sellers who charge higher prices than found in stores.

Amazon already has shown an interest in boosting its own brands. After introducin­g its “AmazonBasi­cs” batteries, for instance, the site made them the top result for “batteries” searches over Duracell and Energizer, notes James Thomson, a former Amazon employee who was in charge of bringing in new sellers to the site.

Doing so with Whole Foods brands as well would help lower costs — and possibly diminish Amazon’s reliance on packaged food makers like Kraft Heinz and PepsiCo.

“You start by controllin­g the distributi­on, now you’re in a position that you can control who’s invited to the party and who’s not,” said Thomson, now a partner at consulting firm Buy Box Experts.

Working in Amazon and Whole Foods’ favor is the growing acceptance of store brands, also known as generic or private-label brands. Consider the expansion of discounter­s like Trader Joe’s and Aldi, which sell mostly

store brand products, or the growth of names like Costco’s Kirkland or Target’s Archer Farms.

At Whole Foods, store brands accounted for 15 percent of sales last year. And the company recently launched an offshoot lowercost chain named after 365 that has four locations.

Redefining “convenienc­e” stores

Whole Foods blames its

sales declines on the wider availabili­ty of organic foods at mainstream grocers like Walmart and Kroger. With Amazon’s help, the chain may be able to set itself apart again with technology.

In Seattle, for instance, Amazon is testing a convenienc­e store where sensors scan items so shoppers don’t have to wait in line for a cashier or scan items themselves. Amazon said it does not plan to bring that technology to Whole Foods, a comment that may allay fears about automation and job cuts. Still, it’s an example of how the checkout

might get easier down the road.

Amazon is also expected to help Whole Foods fight its “Whole Paycheck” image by cutting costs and lowering prices.

That could open up Whole Foods to a much broader customer base, said Theodore Waldron, an associate professor of management at Texas Tech University.

And in turn, the company could revive its recently stalled ambitions to expand to 1,200 U.S. stores. By comparison, Walmart has about 4,700 stores, while Kroger has nearly

2,800 under a variety of names.

Of course, a union with Amazon could hurt Whole Foods’ image on food quality. But the companies say they don’t plan to change Whole Foods’ standards, which includes a ban on artificial ingredient­s that shuts out products like Diet Pepsi and Oreo cookies. And for now, many shoppers still feel Whole Foods promises a certain level of quality that others don’t.

“We trust them,” said Bill Forrest, a shopper at a Whole Foods in Indianapol­is. While Forrest doesn’t shop exclusivel­y at Whole

Foods, he said he makes it a point to get items like vegetables and meats from the chain.

Personaliz­ed offers

Amazon’s expertise with data crunching could benefit both companies, especially as Whole Foods moves to collect more customer informatio­n through the rollout of its loyalty program.

Amazon could also use that data for its own purposes, given the overlap in higher-income customers at Amazon Prime and Whole Foods. The company would gain insight on how

people shop in stores, in addition to the informatio­n it already has on how they shop online. That could all lead to personaliz­ed offers that are tailored to get people to spend more online, as well as in stores.

At a town hall with employees, Mackey said he could not yet discuss the plans the companies talked about before the deal was announced. But he noted how Whole Foods might benefit from Amazon’s expertise with technology.

“I think you’re gonna see Whole Foods Market evolve in leaps and bounds,” Mackey said.

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