Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Whole Foods places new limits on suppliers

Small business owners feel effect of change

- By Abha Bhattarai

The Washington Post

Whole Foods Markets is placing new limits on how products are sold in its stores and asking suppliers to help pay for the changes, riling some mom-and-pop vendors that have long depended on the grocer for visibility and shelf space.

The changes, outlined in an email recently sent to the company’s suppliers, are intended to save on costs and centralize operations. They come as Whole Food’s new owner, Amazon.com, pushes to reduce prices at the chain’s 473 stores.

Some small-business owners said they are already feeling the effect.

Valerie Gray, for instance, began selling her pasta sauce, Italian Heart’s Gourmet Foods, to the Whole Foods store in Reno, Nev., four years ago.

For years, she said, the grocer allowed her to display 108 bottles of pasta sauce at a time. A profession­al photograph of Ms. Gray and her husband hung from the ceiling, alongside a sign that read “Made Locally.”

But in the past month, that photo has come down, Ms. Gray said, and the shelves now accommodat­e just 36 bottles of sauce as the store makes room for national brands. Sales of Ms. Gray’s pasta sauce have dropped by 75 percent in the past month, she said.

“It feels like that local, personal touch is going away,” she said, adding that Whole Foods accounts for half of the company’s sales.

“It’s hard to set ourselves apart anymore in the sea of well-known national brands.”

Previously, Whole Foods allowed suppliers like Ms. Gray to oversee their own merchandis­e or hire local firms to do so. But under the new rules, Whole Foods is requiring suppliers to work exclusivel­y with Daymon, a Stamford, Conn.-based retail strategy firm, and its subsidiary, SAS Retail Services, to schedule in-store tastings, check inventory on shelves and create displays on their behalf. (Jeff Bezos, the founder and chief executive of Amazon, also owns The Washington Post.)

“For the last two years, we have been working to streamline our processes to ensure all our suppliers are supported and set up for success,” Don Clark, general vice president of purchasing for nonperisha­bles, said in a statement.

“The changes to our in-store execution and demo programs are creating a consistent, high-quality experience that benefits both our suppliers and our customers.”

In an email obtained by The Washington Post, Mr. Clark advised suppliers that they would be required to help fund the effort.

Suppliers that sell more than $300,000 of goods annually to Whole Foods will be required to discount their products by 3 percent (for groceries) or 5 percent (for health and beauty products) to fund the new program. Local suppliers also will have to pay $110 for each four-hour product demonstrat­ion by Daymon, while national suppliers will have to pay $165. Daymon did not respond to requests for comment.

“To successful­ly run this program, we need your financial support,” Mr. Clark wrote.

Some suppliers said the new policies put them at a disadvanta­ge because they rely on regular three-hour demonstrat­ions and tastings to introduce products that might be unfamiliar to shoppers.

“Right now, you can set up your table and sample away,” said Jenna Huntsberge­r, owner of Whisked, a Washington, D.C.based company that sells cookies, quiches and pies to area Whole Foods stores. “So many small brands have gotten their start like that, and shoppers love that they can walk by and meet the person who made their food.”

The changes also are likely to affect a cottage industry of companies that act as liaisons between local suppliers and sellers such as Whole Foods.

Sweet Leenie, a Baltimoreb­ased firm founded by former Whole Foods employee Kathleen Overman, specialize­s in hosting product demonstrat­ions for companies like gelato maker Dolcezza and Shenandoah Spice Company. Regular tastings at Whole Foods, Ms. Overman said, make up more than 80 percent of her business.

“Whole Foods has done a great job of creating a community of local food producers and brands,” she said. “Our job has always been to advocate for those small businesses, but with these new rules, companies like mine will no longer be useful.”

Since taking over the grocery chain in August, Amazon has looked for ways to combine the power of two well-known brands. Whole Foods stores now sell Amazon Echo devices, and Amazon has added more than 1,000 Whole Foods private-label products on its website.

It also is working to combine sales systems to eventually provide discounts to Amazon Prime members. There already are signs the efforts are paying off: Amazon sold $10 million in Whole Foodsbrand­ed products in the first four months following the merger, according to analytics firm One Click Retail.

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