Albertsons: A Shot at the Crown

Albertsons: A Shot at the Crown

Written By
Mel Duvall
Mel Duvall
Feb 5, 2004
2 minute read
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Wal-Mart only began selling groceries in 1988. Now it sells $56 billion of foodstuffs and household goods in its supermarkets every year. That makes Larry Johnston an underdog. The alumnus of the fabled Jack Welch era of General Eelectric management aims to make Albertsons, with “Just” $36 billion in revenue, the nations greatest grocer. Hes assembled an all-star team in Idaho that combines top talent from Dell, Safeway and, yes, Wal-Mart to fulfill his quest. The moral of this story: if the boys in Boise, armed with technology and smart marketing, cant beat back the Behemoth from Bentonville, its quite possible that no one can.

Cathy Bishop is a power shopper. Cruising the aisles of the Jewel supermarket in Barrington, Ill., she knows exactly what she wants and how much shes willing to pay for it. She also has no problem using technology, if she thinks its going to make her trip faster, or save her money.

As Bishop rounds the corner to the laundry-detergent aisle, she pulls a wireless handheld computer from a holster on her shopping cart and points it like a gun at a bottle of Tide with bleach. The Symbol 6553 device scans the bar code, displays the $12.49 price, then shows her total bill at this point, $28.13.

The computer beeps to alert her to a special on a nearby shelf for Bounty paper towels, but she ignores the promotion and moves on to her next destination, a newly installed section of toys co-branded with the Toys R Us chain. Bishop is thinking about presents for her grandchildren. The toy area could save her a trip to the mall. For now, she just uses the section for gift ideas.

After the final item is placed into a shopping bag already in her cart, Bishop proceeds to a self-service checkout register. She slides the Symbol handheld into a dock. Her total—$43.18 now—flashes on a touch-sensitive screen. The system asks her if she has any coupons. She scans a coupon for Dole frozen fruit-juice bars past a bar-code reader, deposits the coupon in a slot and, when done, sees the savings applied to her bill. Bishop completes her purchase by swiping a credit card through a magnetic reader; barely 30 seconds after arriving at the register, she is heading out the door.

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