Archives for posts with tag: food
Is Whole Foods boycott impacting the company's financials?

Ed note: I’ve pulled off a few blogs from Medill Money Mavens, which has been down for the past couple of weeks. Figured I needed to keep ‘em safe somewhere in cyberspace. This particular blog is from 8/26/09. – KR

BY KATIE ROGERS – MEDILL NEWS SERVICE

Nearly 29,000 people now subscribe to a Facebook group calling for a boycott of Whole Foods Market Inc. since CEO John Mackey wrote an op-ed against proposed methods of health care reform in the Wall Street Journal Aug. 12.

Not surpisingly, after it lead off with Margaret Thatcher’s quote, the problem with socialism is that eventually you run out of other people’s money,” Mackey’s piece just didn’t seem to sit well with Whole Foods’s left-leaning consumer base.

And now, an online consumer ratings group called YouGov reports that consumer ratings of the company are beginning to plummet. The company, which actually tracks a company’s “buzz” within news and pop culture, posted numbers that indicate positive public perception of the company has dropped significantly in past weeks, according to Mashable.

The boycott doesn’t stop with Facebook. A WordPress blog, Twitter feed and Flickr pool have all been registered, indicating a social media siege from all angles.

The impact of a social media-generated movement like this one remains to be seen, but it’s clear that Whole Foods — and companies that find themselves in hot water on the Internet — won’t get away with a vague response posted in the same forum that houses thousands angry customers.

But financially, it seems there’s still appetite for shares of Whole Foods [[WFMI]]. Shares are rebounding since the first few days after Mackey’s op-ed was published, with shares trading near $28.38, a small jump of 0.55 percent, early in the day Wednesday.

In short, a Facebook-led attack spurred by a CEO’s interpretation of health care reform seems less like a problem for the company than, say, a crashed economy that saw shares tank to around $8 in November 2008.

A snapshot of YTD performance is below:

Screengrab from Google Finance 8/26/2009
Via Google Finance
via Creative Commons

via Creative Commons

Katie Rogers/MEDILL

In the midst of recession, companies are beginning to harness social media techniques to keep tabs on customers. GrubHub.com, an online food ordering web site, Twitters, Facebooks and blogs to keep up with their tech-savvy client base.

A deflated economy inevitably finds fewer consumers eating out, but GrubHub.com co-founder and CEO Matt Maloney has found a sweet spot even in hard times by marketing home delivery to the tech- and social media-savvy.

“We processed $20 million in delivery orders last year,” Maloney said from GrubHub headquarters in Chicago’s Lincoln Park neighborhood. “We’re probably going to triple that this year. It’s an incredible growth trajectory in the midst of a real economic recession.”

What started out as a business plan that won the University of Chicago alum the Edward L. Kaplan New Venture Challenge from the school in 2006 has grown into a 40-employee company with six locations in major markets across the country and 3,000 restaurant partners.

At first, customers would view the Web site and directly phone the restaurant with their orders. Now, customers have the option to order via the Internet.

GrubHub launched an iPhone ordering application in June 2008, believed to be the first of its kind released by any online food ordering company in the U.S., Maloney said. Although the iPhone has added to sales, he said the majority of orders still go through GrubHub via desktop computers.

The concept has resonated with consumers in the Chicago market. Resident Elizabeth Pirrie, 26, simply doesn’t have the energy to seek out meals when a point-and-click option exists. Convenience seems to trump the extra cost of having a meal delivered over making one at home.

“’I’m obsessed with GrubHub because I’m lazy mostly,” Pirrie joked. “Sad but true.”

Eventually, Maloney and GrubHub co-founder Mike Evans saw the draw of social media and the potential buying power of the tech-friendly consumer.

They hired Amy Le, GrubHub’s community social media manager, earlier this year. She operates GrubHub’s Twitter account, manages traffic on the company’s food blog and helps update its Facebook page.

“A lot of the users using GrubHub are very tech-savvy,” Le said. “So we had to engage with our users.”

Catering to time-crunched residents with new technology seems to be working, Maloney said. He admits that the concept of online food ordering has been around much longer than GrubHub – but making it the easiest for customers to use, he suggested, has been key.

“We didn’t invent the idea,” Maloney said. “It’s the execution is what it is. We hope that the customer will want to use online ordering because it’s simply easier.”

Maloney said there is no markup on restaurant menu prices once the menus are placed in GrubHub’s database. Restaurants pay what Maloney called a “small percentage” of the meal price each time an order is placed.

Don Ceaser, owner of Robinson’s #1 Ribs in Lincoln Park, joined GrubHub’s network in 2004. What started out as 75 to 80 orders taken by phone per month in 2004 has grown to 500 orders per month “in peak times” this year, Ceaser said. The restaurant’s deliveries are up by 1,400 this year, a 37 percent jump in business compared with last year.

Ceaser uses two other delivery services, GrubHub competitors Foodler.com and Delivery.com, along with an online ordering program built into the restaurant’s Web site. But when Ceaser does the math, he figures about 80 percent of his deliveries are generated through GrubHub.

“They’re probably the most effective marketing tool that I have,” Ceaser said. “At least with online services, I know what (ad revenue) is coming in, because I pay for what I get.”

Ceaser said he didn’t know why business would be up even during the recession, except to say consumers are increasingly reliant on the Internet.

That  same question nags Grubhub, even as the company prepares to open a new office in Los Angeles next month.

“Are we creating this market and is the economy holding us back?” Maloney posits, “Or are people trading down? Are they not going out to eat as much and the economy is helping us out?”

While Maloney struggles for an answer, GrubHub seems to have found its niche with residents who like a lot of technology, who don’t have much extra time, and have even less energy.

Lincoln Park resident Kathleen Ford, 25, said she most often uses the service late at night, after a long day at working as a waitress at a nearby restaurant.

“When it’s late and I’m like ‘wow, I forgot to eat today,’” Ford said, “it tells me who is still delivering to my address.”

See for yourself

Twitter.com/grubhub

The Daily Grub Blog

Image via Jeremy Brooks/Flickr.com

Ed note: I’ve pulled off a few blogs from Medill Money Mavens, which has been down for the past couple of weeks. Figured I needed to keep ‘em safe somewhere in cyberspace. This particular blog is from 8/12/09. – KR

BY KATIE ROGERS — MEDILL REPORTS

Shares of Downers Grove-based food company Sara Lee Corp. (SLE: 9.72 -1.08 (-10.00%) plunged despite a narrower loss in its fiscal 2009 fourth quarter, as it released lackluster guidance for the 2010 fiscal year.

Sara Lee posted a quarterly loss of $14 million, or 2 cents per share, a paltry sum compared with a loss of $672 million, or 95 cents per share, for the same quarter a year ago.

The narrower loss didn’t impress investors, as the company released a revenue outlook for the current fiscal year that disappointed analysts.

Sara Lee said it expects earnings between $1.03 to $1.09 per diluted share on net sales of between $12.9 billion and $13.2 billion for the 2010 fiscal year. Sara Lee reported net sales of $12.9 billion for fiscal year 2009, a 2.5 percent drop from $13.2 billion for the year before.

Shares of the company dropped $1.08, or 10 percent, to close at $9.72 Wednesday.

Roadsidetraveler/Flickr.com
Roadsidepictures/Flickr.com
Ed note: I’ve pulled off a few blogs from Medill Money Mavens, which has been down for the past couple of weeks. Figured I needed to keep ‘em safe somewhere in cyberspace. This particular blog is from 7/30/09. – KR

BY KATIE ROGERS– MEDILL NEWS SERVICE

By attracting weary, worried customers with dirt-cheap food options, there’s no doubt that McDonald’s Corp. became a corporate anomaly amid the severe recession.

But after such a rapid period of growth in the first quarter, some analysts think the fast food giant might not have anywhere else to grow.

Morgan Stanley downgraded MCD stock Thursday from “equal-weight” to “overweight,” reporting that June and July 2009 sales numbers indicated “clear evidence of a gradual deceleration in sales, especially in the core US and European markets.”

Louisville-based Yum! Brands Inc. (Taco Bell, KFC, Pizza Hut) is the brokerage’s new favorite in the fast-food industry, given the company’s potential to expand globally.

In its Q2 earnings statement last week, McDonald’s said it will be pushing its McCafé coffee line — coffee now accounts for 5 percent of the company’s sales — and Angus beef burger line to drive revenue in the second half of the year.

McDonald’s shares closed Thursday at $55.59, down 82 cents from the previous day’s close. Yum! shares, on the other hand, closed at $35.30, up $1.35 from the day before.

cashier When Lisa Santos opened the upscale Southport Grocery and Café Inc. nearly six years ago in the Wrigleyville neighborhood, her eatery was the result of several years of planning and a lot of sleepless nights.

“The first year was hard,” Santos, 46, recently said while sitting at a communal table in the café during a weekday brunch period. “I would lay in bed and all I could think about was [balance] spreadsheets. ‘Break even’ was in my head. It was horrible. I mean, it’s your dream and you know you’re not going to make any money for awhile.”

Santos placed ads in local papers and magazines, but she didn’t turn a profit for the first few years. Business started to improve, however, after WTTW profiled Southport Grocery on the food program “Check Please!” in 2004, and products such as a gourmet cupcake, made with European-style butter and pure vanilla extract, met critical acclaim. Eventually, Santos began sleeping at night.

(View photo and audio slideshow here.)

Southport Grocery had revenue growth of 3 percent to 8 percent each year between 2003 and 2008. Santos’ original staff of seven burgeoned to between 25 and 35 depending on the time of year.

Southport Grocery’s revenue growth came from several factors, including Santos’ experience as an accountant and the grocery’s location on Southport Avenue, a boutique-heavy shopping corridor attracting affluent young professionals. Many of the young professionals push strollers and Baby Mum-Mums, rice rusk crackers for toddlers, are Southport Grocery’s best-selling item.

These days, customers are loyal to the point that they’ll rearrange their schedules for a visit. Wrigleyville mom Amy Katz, a weekday patron with toddler in tow, enjoys brunch on the weekends but recently visited during the week to avoid the long wait for bread pudding pancakes on Saturdays and Sundays.

“I thought we’d treat ourselves,” Katz said, perusing the boxes of Baby Mum-Mums.

Lines may be long on the weekends, but the recession is causing Santos to cut costs in anticipation of falling revenues. Santos estimated that revenues will fall 10 percent this year compared with 2008. Santos started seeing her top line slip in December, a drop that was a first for Southport Grocery. Still, she expects the business to turn a profit in 2009.

To reduce her expenses and combat lower sales, Santos has taken to canning goods in-house, shortening business hours, lowering prices where possible, and buying items in bulk and repackaging them under a house label. Selling specialty items, such as salts and baking sugars, allows Santos to cut “about $2 or $3 off every jar” for the customer, she said. Santos is also teaching her staff to pickle and can foods under the Southport Grocery label.

“It’s a lot of work to kind of figure out, ‘How do we fit this new paradigm?’ [The recession is] not going away anytime soon. It’s your new set of rules that you have to play with,” she said. “It’s amazing what you learn about your business during those times.”

Like upscale retailers, the sluggish economy has caused angst in upscale food businesses, both large and small. The Goddess and Grocer Inc., a small business peddling similar products as Whole Foods Market Inc. and Southport Grocery, is showing signs of growth. It opened its third Chicago location in Lincoln Park in March.

Most people don’t realize the manual labor involved with running a café and grocery, Santos said.

“You know, people think like, ‘Oh your fiends will come in and you’ll have coffee with them,’” Santos said with a smile. “It’s like, ‘You’ve got to be kidding me.’”

In the face of recession, Santos’s customers and employees remain committed to the small, upscale grocery and café. Co-head chef Derrick Dejaynes, 30, started as a server three years ago, and head line cook Carlos Valasquez began as a dishwasher more than four years ago.

“I started from the lowest and I kept going up and up and up,” Valasquez, 28, said recently, whisking an omelet.

Chicagoans Leah Bleuer, 33, and Erin Ryan, 29, have been coming to Southport Grocery occasionally for years because, as Bleuer joked recently, the food is reasonably priced, unique and “made with love.”

Southport Grocery and Café is different from other boutique grocery stores because items offered on the shelves are also featured on the café menu, Santos said. She now spends little to no money on advertising, instead relying on word-of-mouth. However, she makes sure to pepper customers who subscribe to Southport Grocery’s e-mail and Twitter lists with special offers, including “Secret Suppers,” where guests can gather and sample her and Dejaynes’ dinner creations after hours.

Guest checks average between $12 and $15, more if patrons purchase wine with their meal or additional items at checkout, Santos said. She has added more locally grown or locally made products each year as she continues to network with fellow food connoisseurs.

“It’s refreshing to see places that are getting stuff closer to home,” cashier Adam Galik, 26, said.

Admitting she went through an uncertain time as the recession took hold, Santo said that in the long run she expects to weather the storm, thanks in part to her business knowledge, which she said gives her a unique perspective.

“We are very financially focused here, even prior to this, and I’m surprised even at what I’m learning,” she said. “I’m wondering about businesses that aren’t as financially focused, what they’re learning.”

Santos plans to increase her branding power, possibly by selling her own cheeses and meats at some point in the future.

“I think it’s taking this idea of things that we make, that also fit the grocery, that have our brand on it, as taking it to the next level,” she said.

Guess how many calories is in this vegetarian club sandwich?
855.98

Grams of fat?
45.94 g

Crap. Foiled again.

Vegetarianism is still going ok, although I’m not sure that’s what you’d call it. I did break down and have some humanely raised, vegetarian meat last weekend. So sue me. It’s hard to teach a carnivore new tricks.