Archive for Sobeys
The Talented Tongue of Private Brand.
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The Canadian newspaper Metro features a this great article on John Hale, Director of Product Appraisal, he is the taste tester and trainer of tasting panels for the Canadian grocer Sobey’s, this is the man that makes sure Private Brands taste.
Fine-tuning the Canadian customer’s palate
John Hale has eaten his way to the top of the food chain, parlaying his sensitive palate into a job perfecting the Sobeys store brand, Compliments.
“I’m a sensitive guy,” the stocky 40-something Yorkshire, England, native says to laughs from a colleague who describes him as “looking like a football hooligan.”
Hale’s tongue was poached from the U.K. supermarket chain Tesco in 2007 when he brought his 25 years of experience to Canada to take up a post as director of product appraisal and product development for Sobeys.
His job is to taste-train members of the public so they can help Sobeys craft a range of delicious dishes. A team of 100 panelists are drawn from the general public and it’s Hale’s job to teach their tongues how to taste over a six-week course.
“When you start with a customer, they always say, ‘It’s nice, it’s tasty, it’s lovely.’ That’s not really what I’m after — I’m after what’s in that product,” he explains.
He’s not a chef and has never worked as one — he studied chemistry, not culinary — but his exceptional chops have made him a sought-after foodie.
He tends to arrive at work by 7 a.m. and works until 7 p.m., Monday to Friday. “A lot of that’s my choice, because I’m dedicated to what I do,” he says. “There’s a lot pride here — pride in getting really good products out on the shelves.”
Most of his day is spent eating food. Teams of 12 panelists work on a product, with six products sampled in a three-hour session. “We made sure that our products were good enough for our customers and if they weren’t, we put them back in product development,” he says. “To be honest with you, I don’t think I’ve ever packed a lunch.”
While most people think taste comes from the mouth, Hale says in fact the nose knows: 85 per cent of “taste” comes through smell.
Job hazards are hot and spicy foods, which can damage your taste buds, and the constant risk of overeating.
For Hale, his job is a dream come true. “I wouldn’t swap working with food for anything,” he says. And to unwind after work, he turns to his favorite pastime: Cooking.
France is the global hot spot for training people in his job, along with Leeds and Reading universities in the U.K.. In Canada, he cites George Brown College in Ontario.
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This cover story from Private Label Buyer magazine takes a look at Canada’s second largest retailer, Sobey’s and their award winning Private Brands. I have had the pleasure of visiting a number of Sobey’s stores and they are truly best in class.
A Foodie’s Delight
Sobeys, Canada’s second-largest food retailer, responds to its customers’ culinary desires with award-winning products under its food-focused strategy and private label brand, Compliments.
These days, retailers all across North America are trying to refocus their business strategies to survive and thrive through the global economic crisis. And in many cases, private label reorganization is involved. And although it’s tempting to oversaturate a private label program with every offering under the sun, in the end, a retailer has to focus on what it does best.
Stellarton, Nova Scotia-based Sobeys Inc. stands out as a company that is not just surviving the recession, but thriving in it as well. This reality is all largely a result of the company’s unwavering strategy: to focus on food.
Bill McEwan, president and CEO of Sobeys, believes this focus explains how the retailer has had industry-leading same-store sales for the last five years.
“On my watch, you’re never going to see a chainsaw [in our stores,]” he says. “You’re never going to see bath towels.”
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This article from The Canadian Press takes a look at Canadian usage of Private Brands. With research from the NPD Group and examples from Loblaw’s and Sobey’s
Store brand products gaining favour with food shoppers, study shows
Canadian grocery shoppers driven to purchase store brand products because of financial necessity during the recession now claim a longer term loyalty to them, a recent study shows.
In fact, when asked what they purchased in the last 12 months, store brands represented 50 per cent or more of food items for two of three households surveyed in Canada.
“This is a long term trend and I think it will continue to grow,” says Joel Gregoire, food and beverage industry analyst for the NPD Group which provides consumer and retail information for manufacturers, retailers and service companies.
Store brands are those which are the supermarket’s own brand of products or a brand name exclusively for sale at particular chains. For example, Sobey’s store brand products are sold under the Compliments label while Loblaws’ label is President’s Choice. An example of a generic label is No Name Brand.
Gregoire says that the study shows “nearly every Canadian household is consuming store brand goods in some form or another within an average week.”
Read the entire article. Store brand products gaining favour with food shoppers, study shows
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