Ukrop’s loses No. 1 spot to Food Lion in sales survey
P. KEVIN MORLEY/TIMES-DISPATCH
Jen Wade and her son, Luke Wade, 3, shop at the Food Lion on Genito Road in Midlothian. Food Lion operates 52 stores in the Richmond area.
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For the first time in more than 20 years, Ukrop's Super Markets Inc. no longer commands the dominant spot for local grocery sales as increasing competition has nibbled away at its market share.
The hometown grocer lost its No. 1 spot to North Carolina-based Food Lion LLC, according to a study released yesterday by Food World, a trade publication that tracks the grocery industry in the mid-Atlantic.
Food Lion commands a 19.34 percent market share among any retailer selling groceries, while Ukrop's had 17.58 percent of the area's $3.07 billion in local grocery sales.
Ukrop's had been the market leader since 1986.
"Market share is not our thing," said Robert S. Ukrop, chairman, president and CEO of the family-owned chain.
"We think there is enough business for us to continue to do what we do. We just have to be better at it," Ukrop said. "The fact that we have as much of a market share as we have as the little guy is amazing."
Ukrop's was named the market leader in last year's survey, but the revised numbers released yesterday show that Food Lion's share actually was three-tenths of 1 percent higher.
Food World publisher Jeff Metzger said the biggest challenge for Ukrop's is competition.
"Ukrop's leadership position has been endangered for several years now as 10 Wal-Marts and a significantly more aggressive Kroger have attacked the family-owned retailer on many fronts," Metzger said.
Also eating away at its market share are nontraditional grocery operators such as Wal-Mart Stores Inc., drugstore chains CVS Corp. and Walgreens, and 7-Eleven Inc.
Food Lion, with 52 area stores, has more than double the number of locations that Ukrop's has here. Food Lion also has remodeled most of its area stores.
Ukrop's isn't open on Sundays and doesn't sell beer or wine, both of which are factors in its declining market share, Metzger said. "Sundays are the busiest shopping day of the year, and Kroger has made a very targeted attempt to capture traffic on that day."
The market results are based on food sales for the 12 months that ended March 31.
While Food Lion took over the top spot, its share of the local grocery dollars dropped one-tenth of 1 percent from last year. Sales, however, grew about $20 million to $594.2 million. The chain added a Bloom store, its upscale brand, in New Kent County.
For Ukrop's, market share dropped from 19.06 percent a year ago, and grocery sales fell about $26 million. Ukrop's closed a store last year.
Wal-Mart's local market share stayed about even with last year's results despite the recession driving a jump in sales at Wal-Mart stores nationwide.
The Kroger Co. saw market share grow nearly 1 percentage point. Sales increased largely because it opened a store in Hanover County.
Ukrop acknowledges it's getting tougher to fight for customers as competition increases. Kroger and Food Lion, Ukrop said, also are more aggressive with marketing.
Other factors affecting Ukrop's share were Whole Foods and Trader Joe's, both of which entered the market last year. The Fresh Market opened a second location in Chesterfield County this year. All three are less than a mile from existing Ukrop's stores.
"Those three retailers, while not doing the same per-unit volumes as Ukrop's, compete for the same customer. Throw a new Kroger, Sam's Club and BJ's [Wholesale Club] into the mix, and you have even more pressure on the longtime market leader in a very over-stored battleground," Metzger said.
Food Lion has capitalized on the downturn in the economy.
"Low prices are of primary importance when it comes to the mass market," said David Urban, a professor of marketing and interim business school dean at Virginia Commonwealth University.
"This does not mean that consumers do not care about service anymore, but it means that the value equation is more heavily weighted on price than it used to be," he said.
Frankie Marshburn, director of operations for Food Lion, said its reputation has helped as consumers' attitudes have changed. "We continue to focus on price and value."
VCU's Urban believes Ukrop's can regain some of the shoppers it lost.
"If people are switching away from Ukrop's and toward competitors that are perceived to be less expensive, it's possible that the dip in market share may reverse if the economy gets better, because the company has such a strong history," he said. "However, there's no guarantee."
Contact Louis Llovio at (804) 649-6348 or
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Reader Reactions
BabaBooey!
Why don’t you people stop arguing here online and set up your own personal account. Nobody wants to continue to read your childish opinions and such going back and forth. Use your time for something worthwhile. If you can’t accept others opinions then stop reading the articles!
Appears some only want to read posts they agree with and don’t want to allow responses from opposing views. This is a discussion comment board. Go to the blogs like the “huff"ington post and similar if you only want one point of view.
Thank you to the RTD for listening to my retoric! poa
bw, I grow tired of hearing you whine. Feel free to find someone else who will listen to your rhetoric. I will not respond to any more of your Ukrops post.Go out and find a soapbox or go into politics.FU.
oneuser-my misstake, thought this was an open discussion where you could respond to others comments. Did not know the rules of the self appointed blog police. Right.
When a poster says he does not shop Ukrops because it is non-union, then that is relevant to Ukrops market share. And my response on income was directly to the other poster, but you seem to only have a problem with my anti-union responses, not the pro union ones? Just like your option to select a grocer, next time you see a response here from bw just skip so you don’t waste you time on my obviously flawed opinions. PO
I bought some marked down meat at Food Lion last night. Kroger has a huge pile of it at the East Ridge store.
bw, You keep running back to the union topic.Please learn to read the headline and try to not let anyone lead you as they have obviously done(Since you followed someone else when they stray off topic). I do not care what you do or make again it is off topic. Hurry to Ukrops this morning and get the marked down meat from Saturday.
oneuser-if you will look at the second page of this comment thread you will see a poster that injected the union vs. nonunion grocers into this discussion. Was also part of comments on the prior day’s discussion of this topic, so you are incorrect that I am directing the topic.
“keep up” - that would also apply to unions as far as I am concerned, but of course I sure you disagree. This is not the Chicago meat plants of the 1930’s & ‘40’S. While unions may have spurred benefits years ago, vacations and 5 day work weeks are part of society and most any company now. Bring us all up to date of any great things unions have done lately? “Scabs get the same benefits as dues paying union members.“ - That works for me - I get no benefit from unions, only higher prices.
(123456) So what does a union journeyman make? Is he overpaid? Is his work any better than my non-union electician. BTW I did not mention my “profession” so how could you possibly decide I make less?
another poster says, “more jobs going overseas via outsourcing, off-shoring…wish they had someone to bargain agains corporate America for them.“ - Does anyone thing unions wages in manufacturing might have something to do with those jobs leaving the U.S.?
“The media had brainwashed most people “to believe that Unions are bad”-I guess by Media you mean Fox News (or anywone who disagees) as certainly the so called main stream media is in the hand of the current administration who is in bed with the unions. One Congressman has even started a bill to tax employer paid health care benefits to pay for the health care of the uninsured, but union workers would be exempt. I guess that would include the “poor” unionized professional ball players!
I will conclude this and agree to disagree. And I will be shopping this morning at Ukrops - Great ad they had in RTD today. I need to support them since they only had $540 million in sales last year in their 25 stores while the great FL had $595 mil. (oh, yea, they had 52 stores!
Another quick point…Wegmans just put a store in Fredericksburg behind Park Central. They will soon be in Richmond once the Ukrop family money runs out and they can’t lobby Henrico or Chesterfield government to block them like they did with Whole Foods for so long.
Also, The Market neat Shockoe Bottom is owned by Farm Fresh, trying to creep back in the area :-).
I had to chime in when I heard negativity towards UNIONS. Granted, UNIONS have had their issues in the past, but without Unions we would all be working in Walmart type environments unless we got lucky with a moral employer which is rare in todays corporate environment. Most employers look at workers as “ a cost”, not an asset. It is no secret most employers try to trim the payroll or benefits/wages at the first hint the shareholders are unhappy with earnings.
UNIONS protect the worker and at least make sure the worker gets a fair living wage comparable to the increase in productivity and earnings of the company. If the company makes record profits, why shouldn’t workers get a raise? Most employers give a paltry 2-5% increase per year and that barely keeps up with inflation. And they expect you to be ecstatic about that!
The media had brainwashed most people to believe that Unions are bad and that “open door policy” is the way to go. That these companies will actually listen to their workers. Yet I hear of so many non-union workers getting screwed in the end with non-competitive or rising-cost healthcare plans, stagnant wages, cancelled pensions and 401k’s, yet everyone blames the Unions?
With more jobs going overseas via outsourcing, off-shoring, and all the facets of globalization, i wonder how many people who get underemployed in the next 10 years wish they had someone to bargain agains corporate America for them.
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