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{{Infobox_Company | company_name = Safeway, Inc. |
company_logo = ] |
company_type = [Public company({{NYSE|SWY-->)|
company_slogan = "Ingredients for life" |
foundation = ([American Falls, Idaho)|
location = [Pleasanton, California|
key_people = Steven Burd, CEO & Chairman|
revenue = 38.4 billion [United States dollar (2005)|
profit = 561 million [United States dollar (2005)|
num_employees = 201,000 (2005)
http://media.corporate-ir.net/media_files/IROL/64/64607/2006FactBook.pdf Safeway.Com (PDF file) Safeway Factbook 2006
| products = [Bakery, [dairy, [deli, [Dry Cleaning, [frozen foods, [general grocery, [meat, [pharmacy, [Photographic processing, [produce, [seafood, [snacks, [liquor, [flowers, [Western Union and [lottery|
homepage =
http://www.safeway.com/ www.safeway.com
-->
Safeway Inc. (), a Fortune 500 company, is North America's second largest supermarket chain, with over 1750 stores located throughout the western and central United States and Canada. Stores by Division/State, Safeway, Inc. Last accessed February 17, 2007. It also operates some stores in the
Mid-Atlantic States of the
Eastern Seaboard. The company is headquartered in
Pleasanton, California.
Supermarket News ranked Safeway No. 4 in the 2007 "Top 75 North American Food Retailers" based on 2006 fiscal year estimated sales of $40.5 billion. 2007 Top 75 North American Food Retailers,
Supermarket News, Last accessed February 24,
2007. Based on 2005 revenue, Safeway is the tenth-largest retailer in the United States. Top 100 Retailers: The Nation's Retail Power Players (PDF),
Stores, July 2006.
History
Founding and merger
The Safeway chain was created in a merger engineered by Merrill Lynch in 1926 of
Skaggs Stores and Sam Seelig Company. The name "Safeway" was created at that time for the stores and group.
Skaggs Stores had its start in 1915, when Marion B. Skaggs purchased his father's grocery store in American Falls, Idaho, for $1,089. The chain, which traded under the name
Skaggs' Cash Stores grew quickly, and Skaggs enlisted the help of his five brothers to help grow the network of stores which reached 191 by 1920.
Sam Seelig Co. was founded in
Los Angeles in the 1920s.
By the time of the merger in 1926, Seelig Stores had 322 stores centered in
Southern California, while Skaggs had grown to 673 stores centered in the Pacific Northwest region. The merger was orchestrated by Charles Merrill of Merrill Lynch, who later left Merrill Lynch, for a period of time, to run Safeway in the 1930s. At the time of the merger, the company was
headquartered in
Reno, Nevada. But in 1929, Safeway relocated its headquarters to a former grocery
warehouse in
Oakland, California.
Expansion
Safeway, with
financing supplied by Merrill Lynch, then began to aggressively acquire numerous regional grocery store chains, including MacMarr (a California chain also assembled by Charles Merrill), the Sanitary Grocery Company of
Washington D.C., Daniel Reeves of New York, and Burd Stores of
Kansas City, Missouri. The
company also acquired the
West Coast of the United States Piggly Wiggly stores in 1928 as part of the break up of that company by Wall Street. Most acquired chains retained their own names until the mid 1930s.
The number of stores peaked at 3,527 in 1931, when the numerous smaller grocery stores began being replaced with larger
supermarket stores.
International expansion was an early part of the company's growth. The company expanded into Canada in 1929, into the
United Kingdom in 1962, with the
acquisition of the eleven store John Gardner Limited, into Australia in 1963, with the acquisition of three store Pratt Supermarkets, into Germany in 1964, with the acquisition of several Big Bear stores. The company also had operations in Saudi Arabia in partnership with the
Tamimi Group in the 1970's and Kuwait during the 1970's and 1980s.
The company historically had drug store operations, under the Super S brand. However, these were sold in 1971.
1980s: Takeover and sell-offs
Following a hostile takeover bid from
corporate raiders Herbert Haft and
Robert Haft, the chain was acquired by KKR acting as a
White knight (business) in 1986. With the assistance of KKR, the company was taken private, and assumed tremendous debt. To pay off this debt, the company sold the West Germany and United Kingdom divisions (Safeway (UK), which is now part of Morrisons),
Dallas,
Salt Lake City, El Paso, Texas, Oklahoma stores, and the Liquor Barn divisions in 1987, and the Kansas City, Missouri, Little Rock, and
Houston divisions in 1988. (The Houston division was bought by a management-led group and became
AppleTree Markets.) Safeway's national presence was reduced to Northern California and several western states, plus the Washington, D.C. area. Safeway Australia was sold to the Australian-based
Woolworths Limited in 1985. Altogether, nearly half the 2,200 stores in the chain were sold.
In Southern California, Safeway sold most of its stores to
Vons in exchange for a 30% interest in the company. Safeway pulled out of established markets like Los Angeles and
San Diego, and diminishing operations in
Fresno, California, Modesto, Stockton, California, and
Sacramento, California.
Save-Mart purchased the few remaining Fresno stores in 1996.
In late 1987 Safeway acquired the Woodward’s Food Floors, which operated in the western Canadian provinces of British Columbia and Alberta.
The company was taken public again in 1990.
1990s and beyond
In the late 1990s, Safeway began to again aggressively acquire regional chains, including Randall's Food Markets in
Texas,
Carrs in
Alaska, and Dominick's in
Illinois. In 1997, it exercised its option to acquire control of Vons in
Southern California.
In 2001, Safeway acquired the family-owned Genuardi's chain, which had/has locations in
Pennsylvania,
New Jersey, and Delaware. This was a failure at first, with local shoppers not pleased with Safeway's changes. Safeway also created subsidiary "Blackhawk Network", a prepaid and payments network, a card-based financial solutions company, and a provider of third-party prepaid cards.
In October 2003, a
United Food and Commercial Workers#2003 California grocery strike was called by members of the
United Food and Commercial Workers at Vons stores in Southern California. The strike (and concurrent lockout (industry) at Albertsons and
Ralphs) lasted until the end of February 2004.
In January 2006, Dateline NBC conducted a grocery store
investigation of ten of the largest grocery stores in the nation, and found Safeway to be the most
hazardous grocery store, with 25 critical violations per each ten visits. The company reported to NBC that "Safeway has 'continued to enhance and re-energize store adherence to our food safety and
sanitation standards.'"
In November 2006, speculation rolled around as
The Chicago Sun Times reported that
Sears Holdings Corporation may buy Safeway.
Corporate governance
Current members of the board of directors of the company are: Steven Burd, Janet Grove, Mohan Gyani, Paul Hazen, Robert MacDonnell, Douglas Mackenzie, Rebecca Stirn, William Tauscher, and Raymond Viault. Corporate Governance (PDF), Safeway, Inc. Last retrieved
January 29,
2007.
Environmental Issues
On July 23, 2007, a city council hearing in Annapolis, Maryland, convened to consider a citywide ban on plastic shopping bags. These bags are made of polyethylene film, a petroleum product that persists in the environment for up to 1,000 years, allegedly killing wildlife in the process. The bill in question seeks to protect marine wildlife in Chesapeake Bay. Alexandra Cousteau, the granddaughter of Jacques Cousteau and director of an environmental education group called Earth Echo, attended the hearing in support of the bill. Also present at the meeting was a lobbyist for Safeway, who vehemently opposed the measure in the heated rhetoric of the war on terror: "At the hearing, a lobbyist for Safeway called the bill un-American, saying it would take choices away from consumers." Plastic bags are a widely recognized cause of plastic waste pollution in the oceans and rivers of the world. According to the Sierra Club, " few years ago the Algalita Research Foundation took samples from a wide swath of the Northern Pacific Ocean and found it to be a plastic soup containing 6 pounds of plastic trash for every pound of plankton". Despite claims made by major purveyors of plastic shopping bags (like Safeway) about the recycling potential of polyethylene film garbage such as plastic grocery bags, only 1% of the trillion plastic bags made worldwide are ever recycled. "Safeway and Albertsons maintain collection bins for used plastic bags. In 2003 Safeway collected 7,000 tons of plastic grocery bags, pallet-wrap plastic, and dry cleaners' bags. The plastic is sold to a company that makes Trex, lumber-like boards generated from plastic bags and 'reclaimed pallet wood and waste wood.'Composite lumber made partly with plastic is not considered to be recyclable even though it may last a long time" .
Locations
Safeway has a total of 1,534 stores in the United States and 221 stores in Canada, over 80% of which are located in Western states and provinces. The greatest concentration of Safeway branches is in
California with 539 stores (including the 303 branded as
Vons), followed by Washington with 168 stores and Colorado with 121. In Canada, the greatest number of Safeway locations is in Alberta with 89 stores and
British Columbia with 77 stores. Safeway stores by location, Safeway Inc.
Brands
Past brands
The company's most notable private label brands from the past are
Lucerne,
Empress, and
Townhouse. Of these three brands only Lucerne remains.
Brands today
Today,
Safeway Select is the company's signature private label that offers an
upscale range of products, a sub-label
Primo Taglio is used for deli products and
Lucerne is still used as a
dairy line. In 2006, Safeway introduced an
Organic foodally grown and processed line of Product (business) named
O Organics.
Some of the brands in use today are:
- Safeway Select (which includes the sub-brand Primo Taglio) - This is mostly the upscale items.
- Safeway - This is the non-branded items and Items like Go2 Cola that have unique names but are not a whole brand to themselves.
- Basic Red - This is used mostly for paper products it is also used for the two Gallon Tubs of Ice Cream
- Lucerne - This is one of two brands for dairy
- Dairy Glen - The second Dairy Brand used for the cheaper milk
- O Organics - products that are Organic
- The Produce Stand - prepackaged Produce (Baby Carrots, Raisins etc.)
- Priority - pet care brand.
- Ranchers Reserve - The upscale meat brand
- Butchers Cut - secondary meat brand
- Gourmet Meat Shoppe - Frozen meat products
- Captains Choice - Seafood Brand
- Oven Joy - Bread brand that is not Safeway or Safeway select
- Firefly Ridge - Wine
- Diablo Creek - Wine
- Spirits all have different labels depending on the individual variety.
Lifestyle branding
.On April 18,
2005, Safeway began a $100 million brand re-positioning campaign labeled "Ingredients for life." This was done in an attempt to differentiate itself from its competitors, and to increase
brand involvement. Steve Burd described it as "branding the shopping experience". Safeway ready to unveil new 'branding' campaign,
Supermarket News, March 2005.
The launch included a redesigned logo, a new slogan "Ingredients for life" alongside a four-panel life icon to be used throughout stores and advertising. Many locations are being converted to the "Lifestyle" format. The new look was designed by Michigan-based Avizia Inc. In addition to the "inviting decor with warm ambiance and subdued lighting", the move required heavy redesign of store layout, new employee uniforms,
sushi and
olive bars, and the addition of in-store Starbucks kiosks (with cupholders on grocery carts). The change also involved differentiating the company from competitors with promotions based on the company’s extensive loyalty card database. At the end of 2004 there were 142 "Lifestyle" format stores in the United States and Canada, with plans to open or remodel another 300 stores with this type of theme the following year. "Lifestyle format" stores have seen significantly higher average weekly sales than their other stores. By the end of 2006, shares were up proving that this rebranding campaign had a major impact on sale figures.
Safeway fuel
As well as groceries Safeway has fuel stations at some stores, along with a club card discount. Stores are required to monitor gas prices of competitors and adjust theirs accordingly. Stores offer a six, seven, ten, or eleven cent per gallon discount on purchases over $50 (after club/coupon savings), encouraging consumers to buy more products. Products typically not included range from alcohol, tobacco, pharmaceuticals, lottery tickets, fuel purchases, and sales tax.
Safeway ATM Network
The Safeway ATM Network is operated in Colorado,
Wyoming and
Washington. There are typically two machines located near the front of each store. Cirrus, Plus, Star, NYCE, Co-Op and most credit unions are on the network. The network was started in late 1998 in Denver and was expanded to Wyoming and Washington.
Banners
In addition to the Safeway name, the company also operates stores under the following banners:
- Carrs (Carr-Gottstein Foods), Alaskan supermarket chain
- Casa Ley, food stores in western Mexico, competes primarily with Wal-Mart
- Dominick's (Dominick's Finer Foods), Illinois supermarket chain
- Genuardi's (Genuardi's Family Markets), Mid-Atlantic supermarket chain
- Pak 'n' Save (warehouse store chain in California)
- Pavilions (supermarket), upscale division of The Vons Companies, Inc.
- Randall's Food Markets, southeast and central Texas supermarket chain
- Simon David, Dallas, Texas, specialty grocer
- Tom Thumb Food & Pharmacy, northern Texas supermarket chain
- Vons (The Vons Companies, Inc.), Southern California/Nevada supermarket chain
Logos
- The S Medallion (1946–December 1981) - The red "S" part was slightly thinned in late 1957, and would remain in this fashion through 1981.
- The Ribbon Leaf (January 1982–2005) - Safeway used this logo from January 1982 to April 17, 2005. The red stylized "S" was still located in the center.
Slogans
- Since We're Neighbors, Let's Be Friends (1974–1979) - Probably the first Safeway advertising campaign to make use of a singalong jingle. This slogan was used by the U.S. stores until July 16, 1979, when the "Everything" slogan was adopted. (lyrics acceptable)
- Today at Safeway (used by the Canadian stores during the same period as the American jingle listed above)
- Everything You Want from a Store and a Little Bit More (1979–December 1981) - This campaign, launched on July 16, 1979, was adopted, perhaps, to reflect the image of Safeway stores as "one stop shopping centers." This campaign was used through December 1981, although it was in use in the UK into the 1990s.
- Today's Safeway: Where You Get a Little Bit More (January 1982–1983) - The first Safeway ad campaign to make use of the company's new "ribbon leaf" logo.
- America's Favorite Food Store (1983–1986)
- I Work an Honest Day and I Want an Honest Deal (1985–1987) - "America's favorite food store" tagline used with this campaign through 1986 until the buyout and divestitures, which reduced the storecount and made the "America's favorite" line inaccurate. Also featured a song.
- Nobody Does It Better (1992–late 1990s) - This campaign is unique for being adapted from a pop song. In this case, the song was originally a hit for Carly Simon in 1977. Simon originally sang it as the theme song to 1977's James Bond movie, The Spy Who Loved Me (film).
- We Bring It All Together (late 1980s-early 1990s) Main slogan for Safeway locations in Canada.
- Giving Our Best (2001–2005)
- Vons is Value (mid-to-late 1990s)- Used only for Vons stores in Southern California. This was the first Vons ad campaign since Safeway took over ownership of the chain.
- Delivering Our Best (late 1990s–2005) Used only for Vons stores in Southern California, as a regional variant of the Safeway slogan.
- Today's Better Way (1990s) Main slogan for Safeway locations in Canada before Giving Our Best was used in the early 2000s.
- Ingredients for life (2005–present)
Image gallery
Image:lifeicon.jpg|Safeway's "life icon" was introduced as part of its brand-repositioning in 2005Image:Safewaystore.jpg|Exterior appearance of an early 21st century Safeway store in Sunnyvale, California.Image:Safewaysupermarketolderdesign.jpg], storeImage:Safewaydeliverytruck.jpg|A Safeway.com delivery truck, used for deliveries to people who buy their groceries online.
SCOP: Safeway Category Optimization Process
Safeway recently transitioned from regional control of their product assortments to national category management, known as the Safeway Category Optimization Process or SCOP. With all dry grocery corporate buying done from Safeway's Pleasanton offices, it is said to it will increase representation of manufacturers by experienced sales professionals with extensive product and category knowledge. Corporate Produce buying offices are located in Phoenix Arizona. This will mean consistency across the Safeway Chain, meaning you could go into a store in Winnipeg or San Francisco and find the same products at the same price as all negotiation is now done at the corprate level.
Trivia
In
Washington, D.C., many of the neighborhood Safeway stores have been given nicknames by residents both to identify the particular store and as a cultural comment of the state of the store or the stereotypes of the demographics of the shoppers inside the stores. Examples include the "
Soviet Safeway" (known for bare shelves and slow service), the "
Not-So-Safeway" (in a not-so-great neighborhood), the "
Senior Safeway" (located in the Watergate complex and patronized mostly by elderly residents there), the "
Social Safeway" (located in upper Georgetown and patronized by many young singles and embassy personnel), the "
Salsa or Spanish Safeway" (in a mostly-hispanic neighborhood), and the "
Secret Safeway" (located in a nondescript building in the Rosslyn neighborhood of Arlington, VA and known mostly to neighborhood residents but few passersby). NotForTourists.com (PDF file) A Tract On Washington, D.C., Safeway Identities
Nicknaming has also taken place in the company's home territory of the San Francisco Bay Area. The Safeway in the Marina District of San Francisco is commonly called "Dateway", a reference to the high number of singles who shop in the store A Blog one of many referring to the Marina Safeway in San Francisco as "Dateway".
In addition, Safeway employees have been known to nickname the company as "Slaveway".
"SAFEWAY Music"
Often referred to as "Safeway Music" the Safeway Radio network provides a plethora of music for customers to listen to as they shop. The satellite network also beams commercials and advertisements for Safeway products and brands that play intermitently with the music.
In Canada, the "Bread song":
Fats Domino's "I'm Walkin'" Plays at both 5 local time to remind the bakery staff to remove the fresh bread from the ovens and bring it to the floor for the Fresh French Bread at 5 campaign.
Popular favorites in the Safeway music library include songs by:
References
External links
Safeway Stores
US supermarket chain. Recipe ideas, a personalized shopping list, and a store locator.
Safeway Inc
Safeway Inc
Safeway Inc
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