Ahold Delhaize Strategy Day

This is the place for general and miscellaneous posts on topics which might extend past the boundaries of any specific region. No non-grocery posts.
jamcool
Store Manager
Store Manager
Posts: 1048
Joined: March 5th, 2009, 10:27 pm
Been thanked: 56 times
Status: Offline

Re: Ahold Delhaize Strategy Day

Post by jamcool »

ClownLoach wrote: May 9th, 2024, 6:08 pm
marketreportblog wrote: May 9th, 2024, 6:04 pm
ClownLoach wrote: May 9th, 2024, 2:04 pm A "Strategy Day" type open house is not going to announce anything of substance from a transaction perspective, or even anything from a financial or restructuring perspective.

These types of calls happen all the time at retailers, they're usually called "investor day" and they accompany the rollouts of new product lines, new logos, new ad campaigns, new marketing strategies, and generally are accompanying a new prototype store from some hotshot design firm that looks really cool and innovative but typically is too expensive to roll out anywhere.

Anything that would be of real importance, such as expanding to a new market via merger or acquisition would have been prefaced by a statement months ago that the company is "seeking strategic alternatives" which requires thousands of pages of filings with the SEC and such. I am sure if said actions had occurred we would have a thousand posts already.

Anything involving the Kroger Albertsons merger would not be discussed in any form as that transaction at this current time is not apparently open for discussion. If a change was made involving Ahold Delhaize maybe replacing C&S you would be hearing from Kroger first.

So don't expect this to be anything meaningful. It will be a corporate cheerleading event with a bunch of cool PowerPoint slides and maybe a remodeled pretty store that will never be duplicated in it's current costly form. They do need a new logo for some brands as the fruit bowl looks stuck in the early 2000s so my bet is on that along with a marketing campaign, some "new lower prices" strategy etc. If you're expecting anything major then take this as your warning to prepare for disappointment.
I'm inclined to agree. Still, I'm interested in hearing Ahold Delhaize articulate their US strategy, particularly with Stop & Shop where from the outside it truly seems like there is no strategy at all other than barely get by and close stores when their leases run out. I want to hear how they describe what they're doing and what they're hoping to do in the future.
They're probably going to show off a remodeled Stop and Shop somewhere with yet another new logo, a new tagline, a new private label maybe. Once again these are very high level type events that will not reveal any specific operating details. They are usually intended to "fake out" a few stores and try to convince investors that the company knows what it's doing because of the fact that the store looks really pretty for the meeting. They are not going to reveal anything past that. These are events run by the marketing department that allow them to show off like cheerleaders. The people running these events typically wouldn't even understand how to gather shopping carts in the parking lot and won't have any actionable information. Obviously investors are concerned about their operations so they are going to try to convince them to please go away and stop complaining.

Remember that again if they intend to actually do something productive that is of financial significance they would not report it at a meeting like this, there would be an SEC filing of upcoming meeting announcing an important transaction, etc. If anyone asks questions like why have so many Stop & Shop closed, are they profitable etc. they are going to be referred back to the next scheduled earnings call Q&A where their questions will be answered after appropriate legal warnings, lawyers present etc.

I worked for a company that held one of these meetings for investors. It was Circuit City. They announced that they were going to remodel the entire chain and rebrand to The City. They built a few prototype stores with a really cool layout with lots of circular fixtures that looked something like a futuristic version of the Apple store. The company was in bankruptcy less than two months later and the majority of the just opened new stores were the first wave of liquidation before the entire chain went under. One of the new The City stores had just held its grand opening a few days before being announced as closing. Someone in finance was unaware and sold the wrong store to the liquidator, they were supposed to sell the old crummy store in the same town.

That should tell you about how much these meetings are worth.
Rebranding to. “The City” sounds like that ill-fated attempt to rename Pizza Hut to just “The Hut”. Or the earlier attempt to rename Jack In The Box to “Monterey Jack’s”.
pseudo3d
Posts: 3918
Joined: November 12th, 2015, 7:01 pm
Has thanked: 7 times
Been thanked: 83 times
Status: Offline

Re: Ahold Delhaize Strategy Day

Post by pseudo3d »

ClownLoach wrote: May 9th, 2024, 2:04 pm A "Strategy Day" type open house is not going to announce anything of substance from a transaction perspective, or even anything from a financial or restructuring perspective.

These types of calls happen all the time at retailers, they're usually called "investor day" and they accompany the rollouts of new product lines, new logos, new ad campaigns, a fluffy new loyalty card program, new marketing strategies, new mission statement stuff. Generally meetings like this are accompanied by a new prototype store from some hotshot design firm that looks really cool and innovative but typically is too expensive to roll out anywhere.

Anything that would be of real importance, such as expanding to a new market via merger or acquisition would have been prefaced by a statement months ago that the company is "seeking strategic alternatives" which requires thousands of pages of filings with the SEC and such. I am sure if said actions had occurred we would have a thousand posts already.

Anything involving the Kroger Albertsons merger would not be discussed in any form as that transaction at this current time is not apparently open for discussion. If a change was made involving Ahold Delhaize maybe replacing C&S you would be hearing from Kroger first.

So don't expect this to be anything meaningful. It will be a corporate cheerleading event with a bunch of cool PowerPoint slides and maybe a remodeled pretty store that will never be duplicated in it's current costly form. They do need a new logo for some brands as the fruit bowl looks stuck in the early 2000s so my bet is on that along with a marketing campaign, some "new lower prices" strategy etc. If you're expecting anything major then take this as your warning to prepare for disappointment.

I'm betting the fruit bowl is replaced by a Lion head and green lettering to match their recent corporate rebrand.
The problem is that unless something has been kept under wraps, there's not really a "flagship" to unveil. Most retailers will often do at least one time in their careers a prototype store that looks spectacular and use it as a "model" for future stores. Winn-Dixie's "Down-Down" Decor started as something upscale and dramatic. Market 32 started as Market Bistro. The original Mervyn's California concept included day care centers and an in-store restaurant. JCPenney had the "Penney's" concept in Texas.
ClownLoach
Valued Contributor
Valued Contributor
Posts: 3212
Joined: April 4th, 2016, 10:55 pm
Has thanked: 59 times
Been thanked: 328 times
Status: Offline

Re: Ahold Delhaize Strategy Day

Post by ClownLoach »

pseudo3d wrote: May 10th, 2024, 1:06 pm
ClownLoach wrote: May 9th, 2024, 2:04 pm A "Strategy Day" type open house is not going to announce anything of substance from a transaction perspective, or even anything from a financial or restructuring perspective.

These types of calls happen all the time at retailers, they're usually called "investor day" and they accompany the rollouts of new product lines, new logos, new ad campaigns, a fluffy new loyalty card program, new marketing strategies, new mission statement stuff. Generally meetings like this are accompanied by a new prototype store from some hotshot design firm that looks really cool and innovative but typically is too expensive to roll out anywhere.

Anything that would be of real importance, such as expanding to a new market via merger or acquisition would have been prefaced by a statement months ago that the company is "seeking strategic alternatives" which requires thousands of pages of filings with the SEC and such. I am sure if said actions had occurred we would have a thousand posts already.

Anything involving the Kroger Albertsons merger would not be discussed in any form as that transaction at this current time is not apparently open for discussion. If a change was made involving Ahold Delhaize maybe replacing C&S you would be hearing from Kroger first.

So don't expect this to be anything meaningful. It will be a corporate cheerleading event with a bunch of cool PowerPoint slides and maybe a remodeled pretty store that will never be duplicated in it's current costly form. They do need a new logo for some brands as the fruit bowl looks stuck in the early 2000s so my bet is on that along with a marketing campaign, some "new lower prices" strategy etc. If you're expecting anything major then take this as your warning to prepare for disappointment.

I'm betting the fruit bowl is replaced by a Lion head and green lettering to match their recent corporate rebrand.
The problem is that unless something has been kept under wraps, there's not really a "flagship" to unveil. Most retailers will often do at least one time in their careers a prototype store that looks spectacular and use it as a "model" for future stores. Winn-Dixie's "Down-Down" Decor started as something upscale and dramatic. Market 32 started as Market Bistro. The original Mervyn's California concept included day care centers and an in-store restaurant. JCPenney had the "Penney's" concept in Texas.
I've had to be involved in investor days and it is never something where they are the first to get their eyes on it... And usually when it is, it turns into a train wreck. The most recent "investor day" type presentation talked about all over this board was Rite Aid Store of the Future, and we know how badly that turned out. The smart companies know that investors aren't necessarily going to get in a plane and fly around to check out new stores. They put something together and then they make sure it's getting a good public reaction, then they show it off. By that time of the "unveiling" tens of thousands have already been through it, tweaks have been made and problems fixed. Just because things look good on blueprints doesn't mean they work in real life. Even the best intentions wind up having to be adjusted.
ClownLoach
Valued Contributor
Valued Contributor
Posts: 3212
Joined: April 4th, 2016, 10:55 pm
Has thanked: 59 times
Been thanked: 328 times
Status: Offline

Re: Ahold Delhaize Strategy Day

Post by ClownLoach »

jamcool wrote: May 10th, 2024, 9:30 am
ClownLoach wrote: May 9th, 2024, 6:08 pm
marketreportblog wrote: May 9th, 2024, 6:04 pm

I'm inclined to agree. Still, I'm interested in hearing Ahold Delhaize articulate their US strategy, particularly with Stop & Shop where from the outside it truly seems like there is no strategy at all other than barely get by and close stores when their leases run out. I want to hear how they describe what they're doing and what they're hoping to do in the future.
They're probably going to show off a remodeled Stop and Shop somewhere with yet another new logo, a new tagline, a new private label maybe. Once again these are very high level type events that will not reveal any specific operating details. They are usually intended to "fake out" a few stores and try to convince investors that the company knows what it's doing because of the fact that the store looks really pretty for the meeting. They are not going to reveal anything past that. These are events run by the marketing department that allow them to show off like cheerleaders. The people running these events typically wouldn't even understand how to gather shopping carts in the parking lot and won't have any actionable information. Obviously investors are concerned about their operations so they are going to try to convince them to please go away and stop complaining.

Remember that again if they intend to actually do something productive that is of financial significance they would not report it at a meeting like this, there would be an SEC filing of upcoming meeting announcing an important transaction, etc. If anyone asks questions like why have so many Stop & Shop closed, are they profitable etc. they are going to be referred back to the next scheduled earnings call Q&A where their questions will be answered after appropriate legal warnings, lawyers present etc.

I worked for a company that held one of these meetings for investors. It was Circuit City. They announced that they were going to remodel the entire chain and rebrand to The City. They built a few prototype stores with a really cool layout with lots of circular fixtures that looked something like a futuristic version of the Apple store. The company was in bankruptcy less than two months later and the majority of the just opened new stores were the first wave of liquidation before the entire chain went under. One of the new The City stores had just held its grand opening a few days before being announced as closing. Someone in finance was unaware and sold the wrong store to the liquidator, they were supposed to sell the old crummy store in the same town.

That should tell you about how much these meetings are worth.
Rebranding to. “The City” sounds like that ill-fated attempt to rename Pizza Hut to just “The Hut”. Or the earlier attempt to rename Jack In The Box to “Monterey Jack’s”.
If they had listened to their employees, it would have probably kept the Circuit somehow and dropped the City. Even if it was just called "Circuit." That was what most employees referred to it as, never "The City". The new name was only to go on new stores with the completely new format which was like a super sized Apple store but more sleek, interactive and comfortable. They realized that if they could get people through the doors they loved the new stores, but until they tried a different name people thought it was the same old Circuit City that they had stopped shopping at years ago. They had proven inept at marketing to drive traffic into stores, and the stores were too different from one another. The newer store designs were quickly copied by Best Buy who lowered their fixtures and sight lines, cut down all the forklift pallet racking on the floor, etc. But too many old ones remained with limited selections, dim lighting and such. They were one of the best examples of a chain that would see sales at their best increase 300% when a store was completely remodeled, expanded, or relocated because customers did not associate the older stores with the latest technology. Despite the obvious return on investment from remodels and relocations they overspent on the fat cat executives at the office instead.
buckguy
Store Manager
Store Manager
Posts: 1046
Joined: January 31st, 2017, 10:54 am
Has thanked: 3 times
Been thanked: 67 times
Status: Offline

Re: Ahold Delhaize Strategy Day

Post by buckguy »

ClownLoach wrote: May 10th, 2024, 9:24 am
veteran+ wrote: May 10th, 2024, 7:35 am
marketreportblog wrote: May 9th, 2024, 6:42 pm

I'm with you on all this. There's a relatively new Stop & Shop in Waterbury, where they moved across the street into a closed ShopRite. It honestly looks really good and would be perfect for exactly what you describe (although it doesn't get particularly good reviews online, with complaints ranging from out-of-stocks to prices to racism so... I have no idea how well the store is actually being run). They deflected specifics on store performance from the Q1 results call to this strategy call, but still, as you said it wouldn't surprise me if they deflect again to the next earnings call.
That's a great looking store and I love that black ceiling! :D
Black ceilings come out badly about 90% of the time. The surrounding design and lighting must be perfect for them to work. They pulled it off here beautifully, I agree. And I think the black works with the branding here. Most of the other pictures of Stop & Shop stores I've seen posted looked dated and cheaply designed. This probably wasn't too expensive to produce but looks really good. And the deli case looks great with the large assortment of Boars Head. That's a store I would want to go see. So if they're going to discuss improvements like that it would be worthy of a meeting like that.
It looks better than their last round of remodels which truly have a cheap appearance. My guess is that you'd really need to know the chain and its operations in depth to get much from this kind of call. Absent a knowledge of "inside baseball", it's likely to be a PR exercise.
Post Reply