Where in the world are Trader Joe’s warehouses? (2015)(sburer.github.io) |
Where in the world are Trader Joe’s warehouses? (2015)(sburer.github.io) |
A better start might be mapping known Aldi warehouses.
https://careers.aldi.us/employment/olathe-warehouse-jobs/61/...
I know that for McDonalds and Aldi, Albany, NY is “Boston” and Utica west is “Pennsylvania”. It’s all about the transport corridors and modes.
Where in the World are Trader Joe's's Warehouses?
Or should it have been...
Where in the World are Trader Joes's Warehouses?
But just looking at the clusters, esp. on the east coast and look at the marked known locations one can visually see that the 22 clusters don't make sense. You can visually cluster a lot of stores towards the existing warehouses and remove the need for the estimated ones in between.
But still this is an interesting approach as it helps in identifying the clusters that seem to be served by these known warehouses.
Maybe not taking the distance as the crow flies, but trying a street route could be an optimization. And then trying to find the minimal amount of clusters that still show the known locations at roughly the center.
Not sure if this would be a valid approach.
The organizers got a nice letter back from Trader Joes who said they really appreciated their enthusiasm but the East Lansing area was too small a municipal area for a Trader Joes but if that criteria changed they'd keep us in mind. A number of the group years later kept the campaign going and maintained an active Facebook page.
A couple of months ago Trader Joes announced an East Lansing store in that very strip mall they'd turned down decades earlier. Different store but the exact same development.
I think a big part of Trader Joe's success is that they have a good core of staples that people are willing to come in for, and then they have a big selection of new and interesting items that people are willing to try, since they're already there. The quality of the staples allows them to fly under the radar with the rotating stuff, which is in reality pretty hit or miss. But this symbiotic relationship between the core and the experimental sides allows them to quickly iterate through the experimental stuff to find more popular items.
Another thing I've seen is that a product might appear only once in a while, but is never discontinued - it's in rotation with other products. I've seen this a lot with frozen goods. That gives them a way to offer variety without having zillions of SKUs in stock at any given time.
https://www.forbes.com/sites/sanfordstein/2019/10/25/aldi-ri...
Next step would be to plot the known/suspected warehouses and give an error measurement for the best predicted locations against those more or less known warehouses.
Further steps could be to look into a pattern of how those known/suspected warehouses are placed in relation to stores, and extrapolate that into the missing warehouse locations.
Another possibility is that trader Joe's does actually manufacturer a lot of their rotating products but just simply rotates the store that receive them so they don't need to have a massive production for something so small. Cacio Pepe sauce for new england area for this month, southwest region next month.
Granted, it can be fixed by resizing my window.
*I also prefer sans-serif fonts but that's just my personal preference.
I'm such an idiot shopper. I was on a date with a girl and going to cook her dinner but I was missing a few vegetables. Went to Fred Myer (local Kroger chain). I was picking up some potatoes and the girl found a stack for half the price that looked just as good, hidden on the other side of the produce aisle. She was like, "you don't look for good deals, do you?" Ugh. Shamed. I wish I'd had an excuse like "I wanted organic" but the truth was I'd never known there was a whole separate stack. Damn you Fred Myer!
Their diet stuff flies off the shelves, so that HN story about diet soda "spoiling" (was it methlyation?) isn't a problem. I doubt it lasts even a day on the shelf.
Their kettle salt+vinegar potato chips, orange "yogurt" (comparable to yoplait orange cream "yogurt"), generic life cereal is all pretty good. You can tell, because those are often not in stock, I think their production is limited by agreements with the name brands I would speculate.
Aldi's generic soda was pretty bad. Meijers, most grocery generics, all pretty crappy.
But my experiences are from the Seattle Area south to Oregon.
I would say Kroger isn't a real supermarket, it's a junk food market and pharmacopia.
I suspect that's why they don't partner with delivery vendors. Grocery stores would rather you came in person. You'll make impulse buys, they can direct you to products where they have excess inventory, and they can maintain a direct relationship with you.
Most are forced to offer delivery precisely because they don't have a "great and unique selection of food." If they don't support delivery, you'll get the same products from a competitor who does. Trader Joe's doesn't have to because you can't find their products anywhere else.
The COO (?) specifically said that they preferred to invest in their people and store experience, not automation or such technology.
edit: ah, found the articles:
https://www.businessinsider.com/trader-joes-wont-offer-groce...
https://www.boston.com/food/coronavirus/2020/04/24/trader-jo...
It is an idiosyncratic store. To tell you the truth, I'm not as enthusiastic about them as some people are though I go in from time to time if they're convenient. They have a lot of prepared food and possible healthier and better quality prepared food is still prepared food which I don't eat a lot of.
From my experience on the customer side since, things haven't changed much at all. In light of that, I think that even now, online ordering for them would be a mess that the company just can't afford in customer goodwill.
Meat counter, extensive selection of frozen food. Good amount of space for non-food items, like over the counter medicine, schools supplies, cleaning supplies, personal care items.
Maybe a pharmacy, maybe not, depending on the store.
In Northern California, it seems Safeway and Lucky are the top ones, and of course Costco. Also 99 Ranch, often called Ranch 99, which is aimed at Asian food customers. There are other smaller chains and individual stores.
Whole Foods, or TJ's. Can I buy a mop, a bottle of Tylenol, and two quarts of motor oil? Not a chance.
TJ's is right off-campus and he's able to pick up meals he can prep in his dorm room a few nights a week when a lab or extra-curricular keeps him from being able to get food at the dining hall.
I cannot fathom how you've come to this conclusion. I've been to 100 Kroger stores in my life and not one fits your description.
I used to enjoy going to the market. (Well, and a lot of other things that aren't fun anymore).
Before I lived in Europe for a few years, I had to be physically restrained from tipping too extravagantly when I would be there.
It's because in the US we don't have much of a social safety network. Tips are like the libertarian version of social welfare. When I was a waiter in New York, for years, the hourly wage from the restaurant was $0.00 + taxes on whatever tips you made. There is no minimum wage for waiters. Waiters bought their own uniforms and their only income is on tips. And we would have Europeans come and drink coffee at a table for a few hours and leave no tip; they didn't understand that we made nothing unless they tipped. As it is now with the delivery services, the pickers and drivers are making the bare minimum; it's incumbent on us to tip them well. We understand that the service doesn't provide enough for them to live.
Here, if you order food for home delivery from the major grocery chains, the order is not packed by the driver, and fresh produce is typically in smaller paper bags inside the large outer bag (the ones the driver carries from the truck).
There is no tipping of the driver, who just puts down the bags outside our front door.
so are the coupons.