Walden University Wk 3 Core Skills, Competencies, and Capabilities of Trader Joe Discussion Wolfe (2009, p. 63) calls on leaders at all levels of an organization to “view the organization as a living system, directing the flows of energies [passions and skills] within that body of people and transforming their collective energy [relationships and shared values] and effort into the products and services brought to the marketplace [to meet the organization’s Soulful Purpose].”
As such, it is critical to analyze what skills, competencies, and capabilities an organization actually has, and how these energies can best be tapped to ward off external threats, seize on opportunities, and navigate into new “blue oceans” of value creation. Indeed, all strategic (or not strategic!) action, and all value creation by an organization, is done through the application of skills (what individual people can do [think in terms of active verbs]), competencies (what groups of individuals can do[think organization functions]), and capabilities (what supporting plant, machinery, software, and systems/processes, etc.) can do.
Indeed, in the iterative, feedback and feed-forward five-question strategy playbook framework, one of the central questions is, which capabilities must be in place (to win)? (What skills, competencies and capabilities do you need now, and in the future?) It is to this central question that we turn to this week’s case study.
To prepare for this Discussion:
Review all required readings, including the Weekly Briefing, which provides additional guidance on how to complete the Assignment.
Review this week’s case study. You can, and should, scan it multiple times.
Retrieve and review the Value chain of activities template.
Identify and review all relevant readings from the MBA Capstone Program Bibliography.
Utilize information in the case study, and other basic industry research data you can find in the Walden Library (Hoover’s database would be a good place to start, as would Business Source Complete). Remember, you will have to search for information on the most relevant Trader Joe’s competitors, as well as Trader Joe’s to be able to make an appropriate relative ranking of resources.
BY DAY 3
Post a polished skills, competencies, and capabilities analysis that responds to each of the prompts below:
Use your best judgment, based on the information in the case and your research, and rate Trader Joe’s current profile of skills, competencies, and capabilities, as identified in the detailed value chain in the case supplemental document. Fill your rating in the table and explain your rating. Use the following scale to rate and state any assumptions you make:
If the skill, competency, or capability is “World Class” (clearly best in industry and could be benchmark for other industries), rate the item a 10.
If the skill, competency, or capability is “Industry Best” (clearly number 1 or 2 in the industry), rate the item an 8.
If the skill, competency, or capability is “Industry Average,” rate the item a 5.
If the skill, competency, or capability “Needs Improvement,” rate the item a 3.
If the skill, competency, or capability is a “Critical Deficiency,” rate the item a 1.
What is your average rating (which assumes that all the skills, competencies, and capabilities in the value chain were equally important)? Does this average tell you anything? What?
What three skills, competencies, or capabilities, across all categories, do you think are strategically the most important in the industry? Why?
Based on your responses above, does Trader Joe’s have the capabilities in place to win? To continue to win? Why?
What should Trader Joe’s do right now to leverage its competitive strengths and mitigate or improve upon competitive weaknesses?
Be sure to integrate concepts and quotes from this week’s readings. To obtain an exemplary assessment, you must also integrate at least one resource from the Walden MBA Program Capstone Bibliography as well.
General Guidance: Your original post, due by Day 3, will contain two elements:
Your summary response to questions 2–5 above (4 single-spaced paragraphs) that will be the body of the Discussion text area
Your completed version of the Trader Joe’s supplemental table, which you should attach to your response (make sure to rename the file and append your last name first initial to the file name)
Refer to the Week 3 Discussion 1 rubric for grading elements and criteria. Your Instructor will use the rubric to assess your work. 9 -7 1 4 -4 1 9
REV: APRIL 8, 2014
DAVID L. AGER
MICHAEL A. ROBERTO
Trader Joe’s
In July 2013, Market Force Information released the results of a new study in which over 6,000
Americans ranked their favorite supermarkets in a variety of categories. Trader Joe’s ranked No. 1
overall.1 Consumer Reports ranked Trader Joe’s the second-best supermarket in the country in 2012.2
One year earlier, Fast Company named Trader Joe’s the 11th most innovative firm in the U.S.3
Hundreds of people waited in line for the doors to open on March 22, 2013 at the grand opening
of Trader Joe’s in Columbia, South Carolina. Local police directed traffic, and people hunted for
parking at nearby businesses because they couldn’t find a spot in Trader Joe’s parking lot.4
Customers arrived at 3:00 a.m. on June 29, 2012, to line up for the opening of a new Trader Joe’s in
Lexington, Kentucky.5 That same scene played out at new store openings around the country. Job
seekers flooded the firm with applications when they learned of a new store. Meanwhile, retail
experts marveled that the quirky grocer generated much higher sales per square foot than any of its
rivals.
With all that success, Trader Joe’s had attracted imitators. Tesco, the world’s third-largest retailer,
had launched a chain of small neighborhood markets in the western United States. The British firm
appeared to borrow extensively from the Trader Joe’s concept with its Fresh & Easy stores. In April
2013, Tesco announced that it was withdrawing from the U.S. market, hoping to find a buyer for its
approximately 200 stores. The British retailer recorded a $1.8 billion loss associated with its failure in
the U.S. market.6
Tesco’s troubles did not discourage other retailers from introducing smaller-footprint stores. WalMart, the world’s largest retailer, had experimented with its Neighborhood Markets concept since
1998. These smaller grocery stores differed from traditional Wal-Mart supercenters in size and
product variety. They were roughly 38,000 square feet in size and only offered grocery and pharmacy
items. The Neighborhood Markets concept had evolved over the years and recently began to show
promising results. In 2011 the firm launched Wal-Mart Express, a 12,000–15,000-square-foot store that
the company described as a “bit of a hybrid between a food, pharmacy and convenience store.” The
first 10 stores turned profitable in one year. 7
In May 2013, Wal-Mart announced strong comparable store sales growth at these smaller
locations, and the firm indicated that 40% of new store openings over the next year would come in
the small-format category. In 2013, it planned to open over 100 small-format stores. The head of WalMart’s U.S. business, Bill Simon, declared at an industry conference, “You’ll see us increasingly
moving into smaller formats. They compete really well against multiple channels.”8 Many other
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
HBS Senior Fellow David L. Ager and Michael A. Roberto, Trustee Professor of Management at Bryant University, prepared this case. This case
was developed from published sources. Funding for the development of this case was provided by Harvard Business School, and not by the
company. HBS cases are developed solely as the basis for class discussion. Cases are not intended to serve as endorsements, sources of primary
data, or illustrations of effective or ineffective management.
Copyright © 2013, 2014 President and Fellows of Harvard College. To order copies or request permission to reproduce materials, call 1-800-5457685, write Harvard Business School Publishing, Boston, MA 02163, or go to www.hbsp.harvard.edu/educators. This publication may not be
digitized, photocopied, or otherwise reproduced, posted, or transmitted, without the permission of Harvard Business School.
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University, 2020.
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Trader Joe’s
retailers, including Target, Kroger, Giant, Tops, and Publix, had launched smaller-format
experiments as well. Meanwhile, Amazon continued to make a push into the grocery business. In
June 2013, Amazon expanded its online grocery service outside of Seattle for the first time, with an
entry into the Los Angeles market. Experts predicted that Amazon would introduce the service in San
Francisco later in the year and as many as 20 additional cities in 2014.9 As the onslaught of new
competition emerged, Trader Joe’s had to consider how it might adapt to cope with these threats.
Company History
Joe Coulombe grew up in San Diego, California during the Great Depression. After completing his
MBA at Stanford in 1954, Coulombe took a job with Rexall, a North American drugstore chain. While
working there, he launched a convenience store chain called Pronto Markets in 1958. Coulombe
eventually acquired the small chain from Rexall and branched out on his own. He secured financing
from Adohr Milk Farms. However, 7-Eleven acquired Adohr Milk Farms in 1965. The dominant
player in the convenience store industry now owned Coulombe’s source of capital, which he found
untenable. Coulombe shifted his strategy and founded Trader Joe’s in 1967. He explained the origins
of the concept:
Scientific American had a story that of all people qualified to go to college, 60% were going.
I felt this newly educated—not smarter but better-educated—class of people would want
something different, and that was the genesis of Trader Joe’s. All Trader Joe’s were located
near centers of learning. Pasadena, where I opened the first one, was because Pasadena is the
epitome of a well-educated town. I reframed this: Trader Joe’s is for overeducated and
underpaid people, for all the classical musicians, museum curators, journalists—that’s why
we’ve always had good press, frankly! 10
Trader Joe’s offered products aimed at the sophisticated consumer interested in finding good
bargains. The store tried to offer products (such as whole-bean coffees, sprouted wheat bread, and
black rice) not typically found at supermarkets. The environmental movement had caught
Coulombe’s eye during those early years, which prompted him to sell many natural and organic
foods. Soon the company began offering private label items. The first private label product, granola,
launched in 1972.11 In the ensuing years, Trader Joe’s offered an extensive line of private label items
with brand names such as Trader Joe’s, Trader Ming’s, Trader Jose, Trader Giotto, and the like.
Interestingly, Coulombe also experimented with a variety of nonfood items, ranging from music
albums to pantyhose. In addition, trying to cater to the educated, sophisticated customer, Coulombe
chose to offer a wide selection of California wines. The wine became a focal point in the ensuing
years, while the albums and pantyhose disappeared from the store’s shelves.
The stores tended to be quite small, less than 10,000 square feet in many cases. Trader Joe’s
stocked far fewer items than a typical supermarket. All of its stores adopted a South Seas theme:
Coulombe remembered, “I read that the 747 [Boeing jumbo jet] would radically reduce the cost of
travel, and I came up with the term ‘Trader’ to evoke the South Seas. The first stores were loaded
with marine artifacts.”12 Coulombe also outfitted the employees with Hawaiian shirts. The store
manager became known as the “Captain” of that location, with a “First Mate” serving as his or her
assistant.
Coulombe believed strongly in paying employees a good wage. He decided that his average fulltime employee should earn the median family income for the state of California—$7,000 per year at
the time the company was founded. He said, “What I keep telling people [is] forget about the
2
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University, 2020.
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merchandise; it’s the quality of the people in the stores.”13 He took great pride in the fact that many
employees loved working there and stayed for years.
The company eschewed traditional supermarket advertising, such as coupon-filled circulars in the
Sunday newspaper or television commercials. Instead, it distributed a customer newsletter, which
came to be known as the “Fearless Flyer.” The newsletter provided information on certain products
and introduced new items. It did not offer sales and promotions, however. Instead, the company
embraced an “everyday low-pricing” philosophy. Coulombe also recorded many short radio ads in
which he would tell behind-the-scenes stories about various products. Early commercials were
broadcast on KFAC, a classical music station based in Los Angeles.14
The Aldi acquisition
Coulombe pursued a very deliberate growth strategy: during his 20year tenure as CEO, he typically opened roughly one store per year. He did so without ever straying
from the Southern California region. In 1979, German grocer Theo Albrecht, who owned one of
Germany’s most successful grocery chains—Aldi North—became enamored with the Trader Joe’s
concept, and acquired the company. Coulombe agreed to remain as CEO, a position he held until
1988. Albrecht ran a lean low-cost operation with minimal overhead. His discount grocery stores bore
a strong resemblance to the Trader Joe’s business model, minus the South Seas theme and a concerted
focus on cultured, urbane consumers. Aldi North sold mostly private label goods at low prices,
stocked far fewer items than a typical supermarket, and maintained a fairly small footprint. It also
carried a small amount of fresh fruits and vegetables. Theo’s brother, Karl, owned a sister chain, Aldi
Sud, which would eventually open small-footprint discount grocery stores in the United States. As of
July 2013, Aldi Sud operated over 1,000 stores across 31 states. 15 Together, the two Aldi chains
operated roughly 10,000 stores around the globe. 16 Many experts attributed Wal-Mart’s exit from the
German market in 2006 to its failure to match Aldi’s combination of merchandising prowess and
operational efficiency.
Albrecht gave Coulombe a great deal of autonomy to continue running Trader Joe’s as he wished,
and executives from Germany visited the Trader Joe’s headquarters in California only once per year.
However, Trader Joe’s adopted Albrecht’s obsession with secrecy. Theo and Karl Albrecht
maintained very private lives—so much so that German newspapers had a difficult time finding a
photograph of Theo when he died in 2010.17 Consistent with Albrecht’s philosophy, Trader Joe’s did
not have signs with the company’s name or logo at its headquarters in Monrovia, California. Further,
company executives almost never talked to the media. And the company’s website remained very
simple, with little information about the company’s strategy, leadership team, or financial success.
The site did not even have a timeline of the firm’s history until 2009.18
New leadership Coulombe stepped down as CEO in 1988 and was replaced by fellow
Stanford graduate John Shields. Under the new CEO’s leadership, Trader Joe’s expanded beyond its
Southern California base. The company opened its first locations in Northern California in 1988, and
expanded to Arizona in 1993. The next big move entailed the opening of locations on the East Coast.
Trader Joe’s chose Brookline, Massachusetts—a suburb of Boston—as the site of its first East Coast
store.19 The Boston area, of course, had more universities than virtually any metropolitan area in the
country.20
Trader Joe’s began selling its now-famous private label wines in 2002. The wines—sold under the
brand name Charles Shaw Winery—became a huge hit with customers. They affixed the name “Two
Buck Chuck” to the wine, because it sold for $1.99 per bottle in California ($2.99 on the East Coast).
Soon, Charles Shaw wines had become a classic example of “cheap chic.”21
3
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Trader Joe’s expanded to the Midwest in 2000, opening stores in the Chicago area. On St. Patrick’s
Day in 2006, the company opened its first store in Manhattan. Soon thereafter, Trader Joe’s made its
debut in the southeastern part of the United States. The stores remained fairly low-tech during this
time. The company did not even introduce price scanners at the checkout lines until 2001, and it
continues to eschew self-checkout to this day. In 2001 Shields stepped down as CEO; by that time, the
chain had grown to 175 locations. Dan Bane succeeded him as chief executive, and was still the
company’s leader as of 2013. Trader Joe’s remained a privately held company, owned by an Albrecht
family trust since Theo’s death in 2010.22
The Supermarket Industry
Wal-Mart, Kroger, Safeway, and Supervalu were the four largest grocers in the United States. 23
(See Exhibit 1 for a list of the top grocers in the country.) Supermarkets traditionally operated on
very thin profit margins, and they faced increasing challenges in 2013. Many traditional supermarket
chains found themselves squeezed between premium players such as Whole Foods at the high end of
the market, and “hard discounters” such as Dollar General and Aldi at the low end.24 (See Exhibit 2
for details on the financial performance of several grocery retailers.)
Whole Foods Market ranked as the nation’s leading retailer of organic and natural foods. The
company operated more than 330 stores in the United States, Canada, and the United Kingdom.
Stores averaged roughly 38,000 square feet. Whole Foods locations typically carried 21,000 stockkeeping units (SKUs). Two-thirds of its sales consisted of perishable items, including bakery and
prepared foods. That percentage ranked much higher than most supermarkets in the country. In 2012
Whole Foods achieved 8.4% same-store sales growth. Over the past decade, the company had
benefited from robust growth in natural and organic food sales in the United States. 25
Meanwhile, Dollar General operated the largest number of small discount stores in the United
States, with over 10,000 locations in 40 states. Dollar General’s stores typically carried approximately
10,000 SKUs (mostly simple necessities such as laundry detergent, paper towels, socks, etc.) and had
7,200 square feet of selling space. The average customer completed a shopping trip in roughly 10
minutes. The company reported same-store sales growth of 4.7% in its 2012 annual report.26
Supermarkets had faced another major challenge in recent years. Their share of grocery sales in
the United States fell to 51% in 2011. Just a decade earlier, supermarkets had accounted for two-thirds
of all grocery sales in the nation. But supermarkets lost ground as large discount retailers (Wal-Mart,
Target), warehouse clubs (Costco, BJ’s, Sam’s Club), and pharmacy chains (CVS, Walgreen’s)
increased their emphasis on grocery sales.27
Wal-Mart had become the largest grocery retailer in the nation. The company operated over 3,000
supercenters throughout the U.S. These supercenters had an average of 185,000 square feet and
carried over 100,000 SKUs. Supercenters sold groceries as well as general merchandise, including
apparel, electronics, home goods, hardware, toys, and more. In 2012 Wal-Mart’s grocery revenues
exceeded $100 billion. Wal-Mart’s highly efficient operations enabled it to take share from traditional
supermarkets by dropping prices significantly. 28 While Target did not operate nearly as many
supercenters as Wal-Mart, the company had recently expanded its food section dramatically at stores
throughout the country. By 2013, groceries accounted for nearly 20% of Target’s revenue. Like WalMart, Target found that grocery sales drove store traffic, leading to increased sales of higher-margin
items such as apparel and electronics.29
4
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University, 2020.
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As a result of these trends, many traditional supermarket chains found themselves shedding
employees in order to become more cost competitive. Several experienced financial distress. The
Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Company (known as the A&P brand) had filed for bankruptcy
protection in December 2010. Supervalu, which operated chains such as Jewel and Albertson’s,
suspended its dividend in July 2012 and hired Goldman Sachs and Greenhill & Co. to examine
strategic options for the business. 30 In January 2013, Supervalu sold five of its grocery chains to
private equity investors, cutting the size of the company roughly in half.
Trader Joe’s in 2013
By 2013, Trader Joe’s had expanded to approximately 400 locations across 37 states and the
District of Columbia. Of the 414 stores currently open or set to open in the coming year, 172 were
located in California (see Exhibit 3 for a list of stores by state). Illinois ranked second, with 20
locations. The top five states accounted for 60% of the company’s stores.31 Experts estimated that
Trader Joe’s generated approximately $10 billion in annual revenue. 32 The company did not disclose
financial results, but most analysts believed that it achieved higher returns on investment than most
supermarkets in the nation. Experts noted that while Whole Foods Market had the highest sales per
square foot of any publicly traded grocer in the country, Trader Joe’s doubled the sales per square
foot achieved by Whole Foods (see Exhibit 1 for data on the top chains in the country).33
Store operations Many Trader Joe’s stores could be found in old strip malls in suburban
locations. The typical Trader Joe’s store had less than 15,000 square feet of selling space. Many early
locations maintained footprints of approximately 10,000 square feet. The typical supermarket ranged
in size from 40,000 to 50,000 square feet. As a result, Trader Joe’s did not have the wide aisles that
existed in many supermarkets. Writer Dave Gardetta explained the logic of the quirky, cramped
layout of the stores:
This “chevron” pattern is used in all Trader Joe’s stores, aisles canting left. . . . The offbeat
floor arrangement complements Trader Joe’s unregimented persona: “Hey, we just threw up
some shelves, and there they are.” It’s also a retail trick. Angled passageways reveal a store’s
contents in profile to arriving shoppers. Rows squared with the walls (see: any supermarket)
inadvertently conceal their contents from customers peering into a corridor’s mouth looking
for the toothbrush display.34
Checkout lines could be quite long at Trader Joe’s during busy Saturday mornings, and parking
lots tended to be quite crowded. One Los Angeles area blogger complained about it:
I love Trader Joe’s for their prices, for their Joe-Joe’s, for their simmering sauces. But, all the
mushy love I have for Trader Joe’s is nearly outweighed by how much I hate it for having
absolutely awful parking lots. If you don’t live near one of their new and improved stores—
i.e., the ones at Hollywood and Vine or Olympic and Barrington—then you’re stuck with an
archaic lot that is a one-way traffic jam from hell. This is my list of the 5 Worst Trader Joe’s
Parking Lots in LA.35
Trader Joe’s did not invest a great deal in technology within the stores. The company did not offer
self-checkout lanes, and it did not have flat-screen TVs at the checkout coun…
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