Andrew Martin, New York Times wrote:Walter Robb, the company’s co-president, acknowledged that Whole Foods was fighting strong consumer perceptions about the chain’s prices, and he added that some of that was deserved. But he said the company had made a strong effort to challenge its competitors on price.
“I’m getting a little tired of that tag around our neck,” he said, referring to the nickname. “We are a lot more competitive than people give us credit for. We challenge anyone on like items.”
“The economy caught a lot of them off guard,” said David Orgel, the editor in chief of Supermarket News, a trade publication. He said that many grocers, aiming to compete with the likes of Whole Foods, have spent the last few years positioning their stores for a "more upscale experience." They are suddenly scrambling to give consumers the budget items that they are demanding.
Making matters worse for Whole Foods, consumer interest in organic food appears to be leveling off after several years of double-digit growth, according to the Hartman Group, a market research firm specializing in health and wellness.
Laurie Demeritt, president of the Hartman Group, said core consumers for organic goods, about 15 percent of the population, are becoming even more committed. But people less attached to such items are continuing to buy organic dairy products, produce and meat, and are buying fewer organic goods among packaged items, like cereal and crackers, she said.
This week, leading five customers through a store here, he breezed past the triple cream goat cheese, $39.99 a pound, and the fresh tuna, $19.99 a pound, to focus on the merits of beans, chicken thighs and frozen fish.
YourPalWill wrote:I note that the Whole Foods that I shop in usually sells boneless chicken thighs for $4.99 a pound as opposed to, say, Tony's Finer Foods where I may pay $2.69 a pound at most or $1.99 a pound on sale for the same product.
YourPalWill wrote:Nor have I ever seen WF's fresh tuna (which Costco sells fresher and better kept for $9.99 a pound) for less than $21.99 a pound.
Mhays wrote:Marketplace on Oakton is offering "all natural vegetarian" chickens
jlawrence01 wrote:My major problem with Whole Foods is their labeling of "local" items is baffling. I was in the Evanston store last September, a time when there was plenty of fresh new crop apples from Illinois and Michigan orchards on the market. I looked at their apples - priced at $1.99 - and labeled as "LOCAL" and all the apples were sourced from Washington state.
My local independent buys a lot of local produce and prices it at less than half price of WF.
eatchicago wrote: I'm pretty skeptical about this.
Darren72 wrote:Doesn't it seem likely that this was simply a mistake/oversight?
irisarbor wrote:...it IS much more expensive than the Jewel.
Mike G wrote: ...or Stanley's...
wak wrote:....by no means have I made a full comparison.
wak wrote:The one side of WF that most bothers me though is that I don't find the produce tastes any better than most traditionally produced foods. Somehow I would think that an a farm that strives to be organic would take the extra care to produce a better product, but I find the same bland tomatoes, hard-as-rock peaches, and sour oranges there as anywhere, although they tend to look much nicer on display at WF, and in some cases they do have a superior product.
Stanley's is a little hit and miss from a quality standpoint.
Mhays wrote:Aaron's Kosher is also labeled "natural" which is all that differentiates it from Empire or the other brands, which I don't find to be as good (though I have to say, while I don't like to mix food with politics, I am concerned about their business practices) so it must mean something, although humaneness or access to outdoors- probably not.
AP wrote:The FDA generally allows foods to be labeled as "natural" if such a claim is truthful and not misleading and the product does not contain added color, artificial flavors or synthetic substances, spokeswoman Kimberly Rawlings said. Agriculture Department policy roughly mirrors the FDA's, though it adds that "natural" meat and poultry products cannot be more than minimally processed.
Mike G wrote:You wanna load up the Escalade, go to WF and pay top dollar and it should all be as good as you're likely to find in any store at that moment.
wak wrote:
And I wish it were that easy. If I could go to WF and pay top dollar and get consistently good food I might just do it, but that's not how it works out. Instead I have to drive all over town, to H-Mart and Jerry's in Niles, to Costco, Trader Joes, Bari Foods, Stanleys, Carnicerias Guanajuantos on Ashland, Green City Market, Spice House, Devon, etc. I pay as much in gas as I do for the groceries, but at the end of the day, at least I'm eating well.
wak wrote:Instead I have to drive all over town, to H-Mart and Jerry's in Niles, to Costco, Trader Joes, Bari Foods, Stanleys, Carnicerias Guanajuantos on Ashland, Green City Market, Spice House, Devon, etc.
wak wrote:Well lets just be clear here, it's a Lexus, not an Escalade...
...I have to drive all over town, to H-Mart and Jerry's in Niles, to Costco, Trader Joes, Bari Foods, Stanleys, Carnicerias Guanajuantos on Ashland, Green City Market, Spice House, Devon, etc. I pay as much in gas as I do for the groceries, but at the end of the day, at least I'm eating well.