Produce Land: New Adventures in Food Shopping

Whole Foods, the supermarket chain that caters to the health conscious upscale set, is setting out to revolutionize the way people shop for food.

Whatever you call it, Whole Foods executives believe that the ideas in the store — which is broken up into enticing, food-centric lands, [a] la Disney — could have the kind of industry-shaking impact on grocery shopping that Starbucks has had on coffee drinking. Whole Foods could help transform grocery shopping into interactive theater.

Whole Foods is not only creating Disney-like “lands” where shoppers can drink, relax, and eat gourmet foods (and shop for gourmet-ish foods, of course), they’re making like the Michael J. Fox character in The Secret of My Success and going bigger while everyone else is going smaller.

Whole Foods is waving goodbye to those smallish, 31,000-square-foot stores and saying hello to 50,000-square-foot versions, 58 of which will be built in the next four years. This, at a time when the rest of the industry is actually shrinking its stores to an average 34,000 square feet, the Food Marketing Institute estimates.

This showcase Whole Foods is 80,000 square feet. Executives won't say what it cost, but supermarket real estate experts familiar with Whole Foods peg it as high as $15 million, about twice the industry average.

What that investment bought: more room to wow shoppers — and more reasons for them to dawdle. And, as always, all the food is free of artificial preservatives, colors, flavors, sweeteners or hydrogenated fats.

These developments – particularly if they turn out to be profitable – will have traditional supermarket chains quaking in their boots (anyone been to a King Kullen lately? It’s not for shits and giggles). I wouldn’t be surprised if the executives at Whole Foods looked at the Trader Joe’s success story – healthy foods, unusual choices, good prices, unusually good service – and translated them into their long-term strategy.

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Article Author: Eric Berlin

Eric Berlin is the publisher of Online Media Cultist. He's also prone to referring to himself in the third person in author bios in an attempt to make it look like someone Less Important wrote it for him.
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