Amazon has been pausing its brick-and-mortar supermarket expansion — with plans to close some Amazon Fresh and Amazon Go physical locations — to refine the plan and meet changing demands.
“We’re continuously refining our store formats to find the ones that will resonate with customers, will build our grocery brand, and will allow us to scale meaningfully over time,” said CFO Brian Olsavsky in a statement. This shift followed a flurry of job cuts and Amazon Prime benefit limitations.
The grocery segment hasn’t been completely forgotten, however. Amazon continues to fortify its Whole Foods strategy, recently announcing plans to install Amazon One contactless checkout payment at 11 Colorado locations.
3. Costco
Costco ranked No. 4 in the overall retail ranking and third in grocery. It owns 6.51% of the market, totaling $234 billion in sales. This is up slightly from last year’s $210 billion in sales.
Costco was recognized several times over the past year, most recently as a top five Most Trustworthy Retailer by Newsweek and Statista. In February of this year, Costco also ranked No. 2 as a top U.S. grocery retailer on the dunnhumby Retailer Preference Index. The company was recognized for its dependability and saving customers money while delivering a seamless experience.
4. Kroger
Kroger ranked No. 6 in the overall list, but made it to the Top 5 of the grocery ranking. The company has managed several significant enterprise-wide investments over the past year, including a heavy workforce wellbeing lift and a middle-mile transportationoverhaul, celebrating $148 billion in sales and a 4.12% share of the market.
Additionally, for the fourth consecutive year, the company’s retail media arm, Kroger Precision Marketing (KPM) — powered by 84.51° — recently received a platinum certification from the Trustworthy Accountability Group (TAG). The certification recognizes brands and tech providers who are fighting criminal activity and protecting brand safety across digital advertising.
5. Target
Target ranked No. 8 in the overall retail ranking, but just cracked the Top 5 of the grocery list. Making up 3.03% of the retail market, totaling $109 billion in sales, the company has made several strides over the past year. For example, it recently launched nationwide drive-up returns and is planning for several enterprise-wide upgrades.
Target says it plans to invest $4 billion to $5 billion this year to expand its guest-centric services, operations network of stores and supply chain facilities, digital experiences, and other capabilities like enterprise efficiency.
Rounding out the Top 10
The remainder of the Top 10 list is made up of Albertsons, George Weston (Loblaw), Empire Company, BJs Wholesale Club, and SpartanNash.
We recently featured Frank Vasi, tax manager at Albertsons in a RIS webinar that outlined common sources of friction in the retail experience. The company ranked No. 6 on the grocery ranking, making up 2.13% of the overall retail market share.
George Weston, one of Canada’s largest supermarket retailers, came in seventh with a 1.55% share of the retail market. Its retail brands include President’s Choice, No Name, and Joe Fresh.
Ranked eighth is Empire Company with a 0.86% share of the retail market. The Canadian-based company includes several well-known grocery brands, including Safeway, IGA, FreshCo, Sobeys, and more.
In the No. 9 spot among its grocery competitors is BJs Wholesale Club. BJs, which makes up a 0.54% share of the overall retail market, recently invested in an artificial intelligence-powered inventory robot that will increase its visibility into chainwide operations and club conditions.
And rounding out the Top 10 Grocery Retailers list is SpartanNash, which makes up 0.27% of the retail market and has recently made several leadership changes to bolster its executive team. It named Arpen Shah its vice president of merchandising strategy and analytics and promoted David Sisk to executive vice president, chief customer officer.
Methodology
While other lists rank retailers on total revenue, profit, or even share price, this annual list takes a different approach. The retailers that make our Top 100 are ranked on their piece of the total retail market.
Our rankings are based on data gathered from research partner Gary A. Williams, CEO of wRatings. The financial metrics of 180 publicly traded retailers were examined.
The economic data is from a trailing 12-month period ending on March 24, 2023. The percent of retail market share was calculated against a total retail market of around $3.6 trillion. The research ranked North American (including U.S., Canada, Bermuda, Virgin Islands) retailers across apparel, department store, grocery, furniture, beauty, building supply, convenience/fuel, e-commerce, hardlines, and softlines segments.”
*This article is excerpted from retailleader.com website, published 6th July 2023