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Meijer's Small Store Makes Expansion Easier

By Mike Duff | Jul 6, 2009

Meijer’s driving reason for developing a new 102,000 foot store format in the Chicago suburb of Niles, Ill. - one that will be oriented toward food, health and beauty aids and pharmacy – is to facilitate expansion by fitting into locations that would be impossible for the company’s full-sized supercenters.

Meijer spokesman Frank Guglielmi said the new format, half the size of the company’s typical supercenters, provides greater flexibility as the retailer looks into additional locations, particularly in the high-density environments that constitutes the Chicago market. Not long ago, Meijer launched a 156,000 square foot supercenter format that is about 12 percent smaller than the company average and designed to get it into some tighter spots than might have been possible with larger floor plans. The 156,000 square foot stores cut back on general merchandise relative to larger Meijer supercenters, said Guglielmi, reducing the space designed for shoes among other areas. Still, non-foods in that format are not reduced as much as will be the case in Niles.

The 156,000 square food Meijer stores “have done well,” said Guglielmi. “A little different design can bring a store to a market that’s more densely populated, and even to an urban-type area. It’s no secret that Chicago is a densely populated area.”

Chicago, Detroit, Cincinnati and Indianapolis are all metropolitan areas where Meijer competes and that have neighborhoods where finding the space necessary to operated a 200,000 square foot supercenter is difficult.

Real estate isn’t the only consideration that Meijer faces in developing new stores. Shopping patterns can be a challenge, too. “We have people in Ohio, Indiana, Michigan and even Illinois who will drive 20 miles to a Meijer store, but if you get into Chicago or those densely populated areas, people only drive two or three miles to a store. This pilot gives us the flexibility to go into those densely populated areas,” Guglielmi said.

Meijer refers to the new 102,000 square foot store concept as a pilot, and it’s significant that the company applies that specific term. For years now, Meijer has developed new store formats leading up to defined prototypes. It has then rolled out additional stores and remodels using that prototype as a guide yet refining the format in almost every case, shrinking or shifting departments based on performance, demographics and store size. Thus, the term pilot indicates that Meijer looks at the new store format as a work in progress, both in the sense that it is something the retailer will reproduced in additional locations and will vary as occasion and geography suggest.

Meijer is interested in urban opportunities beyond Chicago. Currently, it is evaluating a location on Eight Mile Road in Detroit that would provide a little less than 200,000 square feet of store space. Guglielmi acknowledged the company’s interest in the location, although he said the company was still in the due diligence stage of evaluation and couldn’t say just what kind of operation Meijer might install in the space. He noted that, while smaller formats are important, the company remains committed to developing more full-range supercenters in the 200,000 square foot range where they are practical.

Meijer currently operates 189 supercenters and continues to open a handful each year. In 2007, Hank Meijer, the company’s CEO and co-chairman, and Mark Murray, its president, told Retailing Today magazine that they planned to open about five stores a year for the next few years, then shift to 10 annually later. Since April, Meijer has opened four new supercenters in Michigan, Ohio and Indiana and plans to add a fifth in October, this a 200,000 square foot store in rural Hartland, Mich. The privately held company has been determined to grow within its means and, while a variety of formats remain on its agenda, a smaller sized store might turn out to be just the right vehicle to help accelerate expansion by creating more space-related opportunities and by keeping development costs in check.

Tomorrow: How a smaller Meijer fits in the competitive environment.

Mike Duff has written about retail and related fields over 20 years. His work has appeared in publications as diverse as Retailing Today, Drug Store News, Supermarket Business, Consumer Digest, MarketingWeek, American Food and Ag Exporter magazines.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
  • New Meijer Concept Store will Focus on Grocery, Local Assortments

    Progressive Grocer - 151 days 19 hours 48 minutes ago

    Supercenter chain Meijer plans to open a new smaller-format, grocery-focused store in the Chicago suburb of Niles, Ill.

  • Meijer Expands Food and Drug Initiatives in Smaller Format

    BNET Retail - 146 days 22 hours 28 minutes ago

    In its 75th anniversary year, Meijer is going back to its roots, developing a grocery-oriented format it will test in Niles, Ill. While half the size of a typical Meijer supercenter, the new format wont be tiny, coming in at 102,000 square feet. It is scheduled to open in the first quarter of 2010 and will be grocery and pharmacy focused,...

  • Small Store Stands Meijer to Counter Kroger Marketplace, Among Others

    BNET Retail - 139 days 20 hours 1 minute ago

    If retail success is based, as the saying goes, on location, location, location, then its important to fit in a suitable spot, something that Meijer has recognized and Kroger realized some time ago. Now, though, Meijers move to develop a smaller store concept in the Chicago suburb of Niles, Ill., could give it the jump on Kroger in a...

  • Meijer to Test Smaller Format

    Supermarket News - 151 days 1 hour 28 minutes ago

    GRAND RAPIDS, Mich.  Supercenter pioneer Meijer, based here, yesterday said it would open a new format considerably smaller than its typical store and focused on the grocery side of the business. The 102,000-square-foot outlet  about half the size of a typical Meijer but still more than twice the size of a typical supermarket  is scheduled...

  • Living Large

    Supermarket News - 264 days 11 hours 43 minutes ago

    For Meijer, big is still better. While many operators are pondering the value of smaller formats, Grand Rapids, Mich.-based Meijer shows no signs of moving away from the 200,000-square-foot-plus stores that have been its bread and butter since 1962, when it opened its first Thrifty Acres store. As the company celebrates its 75th anniversary this...

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