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Coles Supermarkets - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Coles Supermarkets

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Coles Supermarkets
Type Subsidiary
Founded 1914
Headquarters Glen Iris, Victoria,
Flag of Australia Australia
No. of locations 740+
Key people Ian McLeod, Chief Operating Officer, Coles FLC
Industry Retail
Employees 92,000+
Parent Wesfarmers
Website www.coles.com.au

Coles Supermarkets is an Australian supermarket chain owned by Wesfarmers (formerly Coles Group before its acquisition on 23 November 2007). With over 740 stores nationally[1] and more than 92,000 employees[2] , Coles currently has second-largest market share behind Woolworths Supermarkets.[citation needed]

Contents

[edit] History

Coles was founded by George James (G.J.) Coles in 1914 when what was called the "Coles Variety Store" opened on 9 April in Smith Street in the Melbourne suburb of Collingwood. Expansion to more stores occurred and the chain was regarded as leaders in providing value to Australian shoppers (G. J. Coles learned the retail trade working for his father's "Coles Store" business at Wilmot, Tasmania between 1910 and 1913).

The exterior of a Coles supermarket in Springvale, Victoria.
The exterior of a Coles supermarket in Springvale, Victoria.
A Coles supermarket in Kurralta Park, Adelaide.
A Coles supermarket in Kurralta Park, Adelaide.

In 1960, the first supermarket was opened in Melbourne suburb Balwyn North and by 1973 Coles had established stores in all Australian capital cities.

Throughout the 1980s, stores were badged "Coles New World" (simply "New World" for a brief period late in the decade) until they were renamed Coles Supermarkets in the early 1990s and given the trademark "orb" logo. This was replaced with the "circled tick logo" in 2005, having first appeared as a secondary logo in 2003.

From mid 2006, many BI-LO supermarkets were re-badged as Coles Supermarkets. Newmart supermarkets, under which BI-LO traded in Western Australia, were re-badged as Coles Supermarkets in 2002-2003. Newmart stores co-located with Coles in the same area or shopping centre were sold to Foodland and re branded as the now-defunct Action Supermarkets chain.

Coles reported very poor a trading result for the 13 weeks to April 29, 2007, sparking criticism from many commentators.[3] The failure of the rebadging of BI-LO stores to Coles was blamed in part for the poor results, and a general public concencus that it is cheaper to shop at rival Woolworths, and the conversion program was put on hold at Easter 2007.[4]

On 2nd July 2007, Western Australian based company Wesfarmers agreed to purchase Coles Group Limited for AU$22 billion. The purchase is scheduled to be completed by October 2007.[5]

In August 2007, as Wesfarmers foreshadowed its plans for the restructuring of Coles Group following its anticipated takeover, it stated that one of three planned divisions would comprise supermarkets, liquor and convenience stores. [6]

In February 2008, Wesfarmers appointed UK retailer Ian McLeod as managing director of Coles Supermarkets plus liquor, fuel and convenience businesses. McLeod's previously headed UK car parts and cycle retailer Halfords and gained supermarket experience with Asda and Wal-Mart.[7]

[edit] Advertising

Coles' advertising campaigns on TV, radio, newspapers, catalogues and in-store have employed a host of different names, slogans and logos. Its original slogan was "Nothing over 2/6", when Coles was still primarily operating variety stores. The slogan "You'll find the best value is at Coles New World" was used in the 1980s, during the Coles New World era. In 1991, Coles New World was renamed as Coles Supermarkets and given the trademark New World "orb" logo which it has used for 15 years. In 1998, the capitalised "Supermarkets" text was removed from the logo leaving simply "Coles". Coles used "Serving You Better" from 1998 to 2003 with an associated jingle from 2000. This was replaced with "Save Everyday", endorsed by actress Lisa McCune which saw the "circled tick logo" introduced. The circled tick replaced the "orb" logo entirely in 2006 with minor changes to advertising graphics and fonts.

In 2007, that slogan, the circle tick and use of Lisa McCune ceased, with simply the Coles name in the new logo and no slogan at all, in preparation for an entirely new "circular" logo to match the Coles Group brand identity. Coles chose to remove the "Save Everyday" slogan and employed slogan "Something better every day".

[edit] Notable promotions

A fuel discount voucher.
A fuel discount voucher.
  • 4c-per-litre fuel offer: Spend $30 or more in a single transaction at either Coles, BI-LO, Pick'n'Pay Hypermarkets or Liquorland to receive a 4c discount coupon at the end of the receipt for use at Coles Express service stations. Currently the offer extends to 6c-per-litre if you also spend $2 or more in-store at Coles Express in the one transaction.
  • Shoppers can collect FlyBuys loyalty program points throughout Coles Group.
  • Between 1991 and 1993, Coles Supermarkets ran a promotion in conjunction with Apple Computer and 12 major suppliers entitled "Apples for Students", where students collected grocery dockets and returned them to their participating school, and once a certain value had been reached the school would be provided with a free Macintosh computer. 70% of Australia's schools and kindergartens participated and gained more than 25,000 computers, equipment and software worth $13.6 million. [8]

[edit] Private label brands

Coles has three levels of generic or private label brands, announced in 2005 to replace its existing brands such as Savings, Farmland, Persona and Reliance:

  • Coles $mart Buy, a budget label covering basic needs
  • You'll love Coles, a mid-price line
  • Coles Finest, a premium brand,[9] replacing the proposed George J Coles brand.

By 2006, 1,600 private label products had been introduced under the two cheaper brands.[9] Some adverse commentary was made about the loss of choice on supermarket shelves as private label brands started to dominate.[10]

[edit] Departments

Internal departments are organised along lines similar to Coles’ Australian competitors, structured into logical groupings such as service, dairy, bakery, delicatessen, fresh produce, grocery, meat, liquor, general merchandise and apparel and overhead. Many stores have their own bake house. Meat rooms (complete with onsite butchers) still operate in Western Australia and some older stores elsewhere. Liquor departments only exist in stores with 'Coles Liquor', as opposed to Liquorland. Liquorland stores operate with their own store manager and staff.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Company Info. Coles Supermarkets. Retrieved on 2007-09-21.
  2. ^ Company Info. Coles Supermarkets. Retrieved on 2007-10-01.
  3. ^ Coles Sales Growth Slows, Showing Takeover Challenge. Bloomberg (17 May 2007). Retrieved on 2007-08-23.
  4. ^ Coles Supermarket Sales Drop. Sydney Morning Herald (17 May 2007). Retrieved on 2007-08-23.
  5. ^ Coles sold for $22 billion. Herald-Sun, Melbourne (2 July, 2007). Retrieved on 2007-08-01.
  6. ^ Wesfarmers plans Coles investment, restructuring. Reuters (16 Aug 2007). Retrieved on 2007-08-16.
  7. ^ UK retailer to head up Coles. Sydney Morning Herald (7 February 2008). Retrieved on 2008-02-09.
  8. ^ Noric Dilanchian (24 June 2002). Developing and Protecting Brands and Trade Marks in Globalising Markets. Intellectual Property: Protection, Enforcement & Commercialisation 4th Annual National Conference, IES Conferences. Retrieved on 2007-08-23.
  9. ^ a b Urban, Rebecca. "Coles gets moving on house brands", The Age, 28 October 2006. Retrieved on 2007-10-12. 
  10. ^ Frew, Wendy; Julian Lee. "Choices fade as Coles stacks shelves", The Sydney Morning Herald, 18 March 2005. Retrieved on 2007-09-04. 

[edit] External links


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