Acquired - Trader Joe’s
Episode Date: October 27, 2025Trader Joe's breaks every rule of modern retail. They don't do e-commerce. They don't do delivery. No sales, coupons, or loyalty programs. They only stock 4,000 SKUs versus 50,000+ at normal ...supermarkets. Their parking lots are famously terrible and they're constantly out of your favorite items. Shoppers brave long lines and cramped aisles while overly-friendly employees in Hawaiian shirts try to chat them up. Everything about the Trader Joe's experience seems designed to drive modern consumers away. And yet they generate $2,000+ per square foot in sales — double their nearest competitor in Whole Foods and nearly 4x the industry average — and Americans are obsessed with them. How on earth did a company that so steadfastly refuses to participate in the 21st century build the most beloved grocery chain in America?Today we tell the full story: how “Trader” Joe Coulombe started out cloning 7-Elevens in 1960s Los Angeles, pivoted to slinging hard liquor, discovered the enormous market opportunities for California wine and health food before anyone else, and ultimately built perhaps the most counter-positioned business we’ve ever studied on Acquired by doing almost everything differently than the supermarket-CPG industrial complex. Tune in for a wild voyage on the high seas of grocery retail!Sponsors:Many thanks to our fantastic Fall ‘25 Season partners:J.P. Morgan PaymentsSentryWorkOSShopifyLinks:Sign up for email updates and vote on future episodes!Worldly Partners’ Multi-Decade Trader Joe’s StudyBecoming Trader JoeThe Secret Life of GroceriesBuild a Brand Like Trader Joe'sAll episode sourcesCarve Outs:AirPods Pro 3Mario Kart 8More Acquired:Get email updates and vote on future episodes!Join the SlackSubscribe to ACQ2Check out the latest swag in the ACQ Merch Store!Note: Acquired hosts and guests may hold assets discussed in this episode. This podcast is not investment advice, and is intended for informational and entertainment purposes only. You should do your own research and make your own independent decisions when considering any financial transactions.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I decided today needed to be an all Trader Joe's Day.
Actually, I got to show you.
Check out my hall.
Oh, ho!
Top bag! You are styling.
Take that to Europe.
I've got some two-buck Chuck.
Nice.
Got so many nuts.
So many nuts.
Some chocolate, some cheese.
A little picnic we're going to have here in the recording studio.
All right, here I am popping this bottle of Charles Shaw.
and
we are ready to go.
All right.
That might be the nicest
line opener that has ever been used.
Two-back check.
All right.
Let's do it.
Who got the truth?
Is it you?
Is it you?
Is it you? Is it you?
Is it you?
Is it you?
Sit me down.
Say it straight.
Another story on the way.
Who got the truth?
Welcome to the fall 2025 season of Acquired, the podcast about great companies and the stories and playbooks behind them.
I'm Ben Gilbert.
I'm David Rosenthal.
And we are your hosts.
Peanut Butter-filled pretzel nuggets.
Some hold-the-cone mini-ice-cream cones, plantain ships, and mandarin orange chicken.
These are a few of the items I picked up this week on my trip to Trader Joe's.
You know, David had to do a research trip.
It was mandatory.
Had to do the research trip.
I don't think I've ever spent more money at Trader Joe's because I just said yes to everything.
It felt like I needed to have it all.
But you couldn't have spent that much money.
That's part of the point.
Listeners, America seems to have an obsession with this grocery store, Trader Joe's.
It's a strange mashup of a health food store that carries interesting and quirky products,
inspired by traveling the South Seas, but for value-conscious shoppers.
and they break every rule in grocery retailing.
It's not that convenient.
They don't stock all the things you need to buy each week.
You can't buy online.
You can't get it delivered in any way,
even as the whole world turns to grocery e-commerce.
Parking is reliably horrible.
I mean, every trader chose I've ever been to.
Part of the strategy, Ben. It's part of the strategy.
Apparently, the stores are small,
and I'm always bumping into other shoppers.
there's never any sales or discounts and they don't offer any coupons.
They sell almost none of your favorite known brand names, and their produce leaves a lot to be desired.
And yet, people love it.
I mean, in an era where most grocery chains are being disrupted, Trader Joe's cult following
has driven it to be more successful than ever, as far as we can tell from the outside, at least,
because it is an intensely private company.
Yes, it is.
But this is the perfect example.
of something that we talk a lot about on Acquired,
aligning all the trade-offs you make in your business
to all work together in a beautiful, self-reinforcing puzzle.
Trader Joe's is not the best grocery store,
but it might be your favorite store.
And today, we dive into how this travel-themed,
pseudo-healthy, national neighborhood grocery chain
came to exist from the unlikeliest of places
as a clone trying to rip off 7-Eleven in the 1960s.
I mean, I wrote this whole script
And everything you just said is accurate
But it sounds ridiculous
Should we just stop the episode there?
Do you feel that's sufficient?
All right, well, listeners,
If you want to know every time an episode drops,
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After you listen,
come talk about this with the entire Slack community, Acquired.fm slash Slack. If you want more
acquired, check out our interview show, ACQ2. Search ACQ2 in any podcast player to listen. And before we
dive in, we want to briefly thank our presenting partner, J.P. Morgan Payments. Yes, just like
how we say every company has a story. Every company's story is powered by payments, and JPMorgan
Payments is a part of so many of their journeys from CED to IPO and beyond. So with that, David,
happy 10 year anniversary. Happy 10 year
anniversary. Toast by two buck chuck to you right now. You've got the two buck chuck open bed. I've got mine sitting right here. I'm waiting to open it until the end of the episode when I tell the amazing story of how it came to be. Cheers. Well, cheers. Listeners, we are recording this on the 10 year anniversary of posting our very first episode. It has been an amazing 10 years with all of you. Thank you so much for listening. What a journey together. With that, listeners, this show is not investment advice. David and I may have investments in the companies we discuss and this show is for informational and our
purpose only. David Rosenthal, where are we starting our story?
Oh, man. Well, I wish that you and I had investments in this company, but unfortunately,
only one person in the world does, and he's deceased, as we will see at the end of the episode.
Yes. We start with Trader Joe himself, Joe Kloom, because he can't separate Trader Joe's
from Trader Joe.
Joe Colombe was born in 1930 in San Diego, California,
the same hotbed of American retailing innovation
that produced Salt Price, Price Club,
and everything that would become Costco.
So, we so lovingly talked about on that episode a few years ago.
Joe's father was an engineer at Conveyor,
an aircraft manufacturer in Southern California
in the defense industry there.
and his mother was a school teacher
and perhaps inspired by his mother Joe was a very good student
he ends up going to Stanford for his undergrad
he gets his undergrad degree in economics in 1952
and then somewhat unusually for the time
he stays on at Stanford for an extra two years
and he gets an MBA at the Stanford Graduate School of Business in 1954
You know, there's a lot of famous Stanford alumni. This is not one that people are walking around quoting, you know, Joe Colom was a GSB alum. Like, he's not the, you know, the Phil Knights come to mind. Back then, not that many people were going to business school, or at least not Stanford Business School. And reflecting that, Joe goes to get a job after GSB. And the only job he can get is back in Southern California at the lowly owl drug company.
which is a subsidiary of the larger Rexall drug company, a line of regional drug stores throughout America.
And this is a struggling company.
How times have changed for new GSB grads these days in the job market.
So what was Al?
Al was a chain of 300 drug stores up and down the West Coast.
So Joe gets hired by an executive named Bud Fisher, who specifically wanted to bring in a recent MBA grad.
to research alternatives for turning around owl.
The company is struggling.
So Joe goes off, and he scours the country
and comes across a relatively new concept
coming out of Texas,
launched by a company called the Southland Corporation,
called the convenience store.
And Southland has just recently rebranded
their stores that they are operating very successfully in Texas,
and this convenience store model
to something called
7-Elevens.
Ah, yes.
The history of 7-Eleven
and the Southland Corporation
is fascinating
and probably merits an acquired episode
of its own someday.
Here is a list of crazy things
about 7-Eleven.
One, today, 2025,
they have more stores
than any other retailer
in the entire world.
They are the largest retailer
in the world by number of stores.
Which is not the way that you should be impressed by a retail company, but it is impressive.
No, their market cap is about $30 billion.
So like a small fraction of Walmart and Costco and Amazon, et cetera.
Two, they invented the to-go coffee cup.
And also the self-serve soda fountain.
And then this is my favorite.
In the 70s, the Southland Corporation franchised the 7-Eleven concept to a company in Japan, a supermarket chain there.
It became so successful in Japan, and 7-Elevens in Japan are like so deeply part of the Japanese culture
that in the 90s, 7-Eleven Japan bought out the 7-Eleven parent and now own the company.
7-Eleven today is a publicly traded Japanese company on the Tokyo Stock Exchange,
founded in Dallas, Texas, that operates the largest global retail chain in the world.
Of course. Of course.
Incredible.
But for our purposes today, back to its original instantiation,
as part of the Southland Corporation,
how did this come to be?
So Southland was founded in the 1920s
as an ice company.
Oh, yes.
This is before home refrigerators were a thing.
People had ice boxes in their houses
and they had to get their ice somewhere.
I've actually got the whole history on this.
Can I take it?
Yeah, go for it.
All right, so listeners,
this comes from Benjamin Lour,
who wrote the exceptional book,
The Secret Life of Groceries,
which we're going to reference a bunch in this episode.
So Southland had a chain
David of what you're talking about, these ice docks, where people would bring their mule-drawn
wagons and pick up ice in the Texas heat. Pre-cars, pre-refrigerators, pre-freezers, pre-anything.
So this innovation happens where in 1927, a guy named John Jefferson Green figures out,
hey, I don't think people want to leave their house in the middle of the Texas heat in the summer
to bring their mule and wagon over to get the ice.
I think we should do it when it's a little bit cooler outside.
What if we open at like 7 a.m.
And we stay open late till like 11 p.m.
So our customers can come get their ice for their ice boxes
when it's not going to melt on the way home.
That is exactly right.
This meant, of course, that his hours are now even longer
than the general stores where people are going and getting their goods.
So as legend has it, a woman comes up to his ice dock
and says, you know, you're the only thing open right now.
I really wish you stocked milk in addition to your ice.
Makes sense. I buy my ice for my icebox from you. Why can't I buy the things that I put in my
icebox? Exactly. And so John Jefferson Green immediately calls the folks he knows at the
Salfling Corporation, kind of the parent and says, if you give me the money, I'll source
milk and eggs and bread, and I'll split the profits with you. This way you can kind of be in
another line of business. We've got this stand. We may as well do this too. And the convenience
store was born, or more effectively, the first 7-Eleven. Even though it wouldn't be fully
rebranded yet, this becomes 7-Eleven. And this, of course, seems obvious today. Like, oh, I didn't
anybody try this before. This is the heyday of the Milkman and the produce man and
poultry man. These things get delivered, or you pick them up in a market in town. The modern
supermarket, let alone convenience store, doesn't exist yet. We're so far from that. Yeah.
So this was a truly kind of wild idea.
And over the next few years, they start adding other daily items you might want, bread, beer, cigarettes, magazines, et cetera.
People love it.
Then, fast forward to after World War II, when the American economy is booming, people have cars, people are moving to suburbs, people get refrigerators, they no longer need ice anymore.
The company just completely sheds the ice business and becomes the 7-Eleven business.
In 1946, they officially changed the name of the stores to their operating hours, 7-Eleven.
And, David, you're talking about the rise of the automobile and refrigerators happening.
That technology change and the post-World War II shift means this thing has perfect product market fit.
By 1951, it becomes Texas's largest retailer of beverages, milk, and bread.
They've got a little under 100 stores.
this is like a movement.
They found the formula
and they just expanded incredibly fast
to meet the desire of customers.
So if you fast forward
then 14 more years in 1965,
what does this look like?
In that year,
they opened 398 stores
in a single year,
I think all in Texas.
Yeah.
For context, Trader Joe's
today in 2025
has 600 stores.
So 7-Eleven is blowing the doors off.
This is true blitzscaling that's happening to sort of fully seize this opportunity that people are clearly going crazy for.
Like we said, they are the largest retailer in the world by number of stores today.
There's this sort of delicious thing in the history of retail and the history of grocery, where when we're sitting here today, you sort of look at these models and you're like, there's nothing innovative about that.
This is completely obvious.
And at the time, this was breakthrough.
This was completely innovative.
Yeah.
Yes.
Well, speaking of completely obvious, back to Joe and the Trader Joe's story, he's working at Al for Bud.
And this is like the mid-50s, so this is right as 7-Eleven is starting to really scale up,
but before it's hitting those sort of crazy hundreds of stores per year number.
Yep.
They get wind of what's happening.
Joe travels to Texas.
There is absolutely no reason that this won't work in California.
We got to turn around Al.
let's just copy-paste this 7-Eleven thing.
Now, remember, Al is part of this bigger conglomerate of Rexall,
this slow-moving ship.
So he comes back, they're like, oh, we're going to do this,
and Rexel's like, I don't know, wait, you know,
it's corporate bureaucracy, it gets slowed down,
Bud can't push it through with the powers that be.
And I guess a drug store was actually pretty different
than a convenience store at this point.
So then, this is like the path almost taken for Joe.
He gets a call from another.
Southern California company one day, that is also looking to recruit recent MBA grads,
this time to help them with their management of their new successful startup business line
that they've started. This is the semiconductor division, the new startup division of the Hughes
Aircraft Company. And Joe actually jumps ship for 18 months and goes and works at Hughes,
and he's basically like the CFO of their semiconductor division.
Joe works in semiconductors?
Yes, during which time, it grows 700%.
Shocklink semiconductor just gotten started.
We're about to hit Fairchild and Intel.
Silicon Valley's about to boom.
There was this whole alternative path
that Trader Joe might have actually been like a traitorous aid or something.
Wow.
Totally wild.
So he's on this path.
But then he leaves Hughes?
So then Bud calls him back up after 18 months that he's been at Hughes, and he's like, all right, I have finally persuaded Rexall to go ahead with the cloning 7-Eleven concept.
We've got to go-ahead.
You did all the research.
You've been there on the ground.
You are the guy to run this.
I want to hire you back.
I'm going to make you president of our new division within Al that is going to copy 7-Eleven and bring convenience stores to Southern California.
Just a few years out of business school and I get to be the president of something that's corporate approved. Let's go.
So at age 27, he comes back to Owl slash Rexall as the new president of the newly christened Pronto Markets.
Pronto, convenience store. You're in, you're out. Pronto.
Gidea.
They build six Pronto convenience stores in the L.A. Metro area as a pilot.
And off to the races.
as you would expect, it works great.
Instant product market fit, tons of demand.
They're blowing the doors off.
And I should say, I looked up some of the stuff they were selling.
This is awesome.
Of course it's like cheese and eggs and bread and stuff.
It's also ammo?
Ammunition for guns, yes.
Like very successful, high-volume business.
Tobacco selling what Joe calls girly magazines.
Pornographic magazines.
This is not the Trader Joe's that you know today.
That's exactly right.
And that might have been the story.
Joe might have built the 7-Eleven of the West Coast, except that the parent company, Rexall,
had a couple different irons in the fire for turnarounds here.
And one of the other irons was they had bought another little startup company called Tupperware.
Oh, yes.
The multi-level marketing maker of food containers.
Right.
Come over.
We'll have a little party at my house.
house and I'll sell you some Tupperware because you're my neighbor.
You can't make this stuff up.
They bought Tupperware.
It becomes so successful that the management team that's running Rexall is like, screw this
crappy retail business.
We're going all in on products and multi-level marketing.
They decide that they're going to sell off the entire retail division piece by piece
and buy a bunch of other product companies.
They end up buying Duracel, the battery company.
Which would eventually be owned by Berkshire.
Crazy.
And isn't there something with oil here where, like, the owners of Rexall wanted to fully invest in the supplier of Tupperware?
So they bought into, like, an oil business.
Yes.
And they needed to free up the capital to do that.
They were super all in on Tupperware.
Yes.
Interesting.
So this leaves Joe, you know, he's 27, 28.
He just quit his job in semiconductors, right?
Like, he's got a wife.
He's got, like, a young family.
And he's got a successful early business here that he's running.
So he goes to Rexall and he says, hey, rather than just selling off Pronto as part of all the drugstore operations, what if I buy just these six Pronto markets from you, do like a management buyout?
But of course, Joe has no money.
Yes, he has no money.
He doesn't come from a wealthy family.
He hasn't really earned money yet.
Yes.
So the Rexal CFO says, all right, I'll tell you what, I will sell these things to you for $10,000 over the book value that we essentially have these leases on, on our books.
And what's book value on this?
Book value is $15,000.
So if you can scrape together $25,000, I will sell you pronto markets.
And inflation adjusted, this is now the early 60s.
This would have been about $250,000 today.
Joe and his wife Alice
sell their house
to raise money for this
Wow
They borrow money from their parents
This is like full-on Savannah bananas
Full-on Savannah bananas
You know Jesse Cole
May as well be on an air mattress
In a garage
Instead of a yellow tuxedo
You know Joe is wearing a Hawaiian shirt here
Yes
That only gets them to like
$14,000
He needs another $11,000
So it's like his whole net worth now
Because he doesn't own a home
and he's borrowed money from his parents.
He decides to do a combination of two things
for the remaining $11,000.
One, he goes to Bank of America,
takes out a loan.
Still, they won't loan him enough money
to get all the way to the $25,000.
He goes to the current employees
of the six Pronto stores.
And he says, like, I believe in this.
I have sold my house.
I have borrowed money.
You guys obviously believe in this with me.
We see how it's working.
I will offer to you to also invest in this buyout at book value.
So I will give you the valuation that it is on the books at Rexall,
even though I'm buying it at $10,000 above book.
So he's giving him, what, a 40% discount on the price that he's paying for his shares?
Yes, and collectively with equity dollars invested by the employees, his partners,
they get to the $25,000, summer in 1962, they closed the deal, and Joe and the employees become the owners of the newly incorporated Pronto markets.
Joe writes in his great, great, great, great autobiography called Becoming Trader Joe that came out a couple of years ago that employees owned about half the company.
I don't think it's quite half.
That doesn't pencil out.
But it was a significant chunk, at least a quarter, if not a third of the company, is owned by these early employees.
It's interesting that their entry price is actually lower than his.
I was doing the research and I tried to figure out the total return since Joe bought in.
His employees actually got a better multiple.
So anybody who held from that original date all the way through till, spoiler alert, he sells the business later,
would have beat Joe by, you know, almost 2x.
Yeah.
But even more importantly, though, almost nothing from Pronto Market survives to Trader Joe's today.
You know, not the ammo, not the cigarettes, not the girly magazine.
magazines, but this does.
But the sort of respect for employees...
The spirit of treating your employees as partners.
Yes.
And I think right after he takes it over is when he sets his really aggressive employee comp plan.
A thing you commonly hear about Trader Joe's today that he did right away is we're going
to have some of the highest paid employees in the industry and we're going to attract the
best talent by just effectively overpaying for everyone.
Basically every employee at Trader Joe's get paid between 40 and 150.
50% over what average compensation is for their roles in retail.
I saw 60% over, so it kind of falls in that range.
I say overpaid, but Joe's philosophy on this is it's not overpaying.
Because we're attracting the best people and because we're setting up all the right incentives,
they're just going to make the product that much better for customers.
We're going to do clever things like rotate the employees around.
No one's just a cashier.
They're working in all the different jobs, so they get to know the business really well.
They get to be really knowledgeable about the products.
And then if anybody asks us anything about them, literally anybody on staff could have the right answer.
Also carries through right to this day. Every trader Joe's you go to, there's a captain who's essentially the manager of the store. There's a first mate who's an assistant manager. And then everybody else does the same job.
The nautical naming. There's no dedicated cashiers. There's no dedicated baggers. There's no dedicated stockers. Everybody does everything.
All right. So everything's going to go great, right? He pulled together this capital. He's leveraged to the gills. He owes money all.
all over town. All these employees have bet their life savings on him too.
So he's leveraged to the gills just to do the buyout. You're not going to get far just with the
buyout. You also need like a balance sheet to have working capital, to get product, to expand.
He also doesn't want to have just six convenience stores here. He wants to expand, open new
stores. So shortly after doing the buyout, he goes to one of his biggest suppliers,
a dairy company called Ador Milk Farms, A-D-H-O-R, which is Rhoda, spelled backwards.
Come back to that in a minute.
He goes to the owner and president of Ador, a guy named Merritt Adamson, Jr., and says, hey, let's do a deal here.
I need financing for working capital expansion and all these things.
You need distribution.
You give me debt financing, and Pronto will exclusively carry Ad-Or.
dairy products. You know, milk, ice cream. Nothing like borrowing money from your most important supplier.
Yeah, right, right, right. It's good because they know your business really well and you're working
together anyway, but... It can work great. But you're really leveraged now on this one supplier.
Yes. I really need your goods and I also really need your money and I really need you to stay happy with me
so that nothing bad happens to any of these covenants or whatever in the debt. Yep. So over the first
couple of years, it does go great. Pronto becomes Ador's largest retailer. And then in October of
1965, Joe goes to meet Merritt for his monthly lunch meeting with him. They have monthly lunch
meetings to check in about the business, the relationship. And Merritt starts drinking. He orders one
gin and bermuth, two gin and removes three. He orders his fourth gin cocktail. And Joe's like,
all right. He's got something he needs to tell me.
And it's not going to be good news.
Yes.
And listeners, before David breaks the news to us of what is going to happen,
there are three pieces of background that are worth knowing about Ador and about the dairy industry at this moment in time that sets up this meeting.
One, refrigeration has gone mainstream at this point.
Yes, 1965 were well past the icebox era.
People's buying patterns have changed.
Convenience stores have now popped up everywhere.
So this sort of dampened demand for milkmen.
since people are now picking up their own milk.
And so the Adhor company has had to do this crazy rejiggering of who is actually selling their product.
And I said it a minute ago that Pronto, still relatively little Pronto markets in L.A.
is Ador's largest seller of their products.
That is not a good sign for Ador.
They are not doing good here.
All right.
So why are they not doing well?
well the American preference was shifting from whole milk to skim milk and you might just say oh well
I'm sure they just skim the fat off that's part of the process I assume that's what happens
there are different cows that produce milk that is well suited to be whole milk versus well
suited to be skim milk there's holstein cows which produce white chalky milk that you sort of
expect to become skim milk there's these guernsey cows the milk has this yellow
hue to them. It produces this really rich, creamy milk. Unfortunately, Ador had mostly Guernsey
cows. And Ador, it's not like they have just a few of these. They are the nation's largest dairy farm,
and they have the wrong kind of cow for where the future is going. In one minute, it will all
become clear to you why they are the nation's largest dairy farm, by real estate at least, and why their cows are
real fat and real happy but continue for the moment and then third there's another thing happening which
is it's not just joe who realizes that seven eleven is a good idea in california it's also
seven eleven and other competitors that pop up to yes so what is the news well after the fourth
drink. The news that Merritt finally shares with Joe is that he's made the difficult decision
to sell the family business, that or dairy operation. That's troubling enough to Joe. This is his
biggest financing partner, biggest supplier. It's like, all right, well, who's the buyer? And
Merritt's like, the buyer is the Southland Corporation. 7-Eleven is coming.
to California, and they needed a dairy supplier, and, yeah, I sold our operations to them.
Brutal.
Not good. Not good.
Not great, Bob.
All right, so what's really going on here?
So at the same time as Merritt is having these problems with the family operations of running a dairy farm,
he also has an incredible opportunity that is the flip side of the coin.
why are the cattle so fat, so happy, and distributed across so much land?
And what has merit inherited that's been passed down through generations of his family?
Why is it called Ador and what is Rhoda?
His mother, Rhoda, was the descendant and inheritor of the original California-Spanish land grant
of the area that is now the entire city of Malibu.
The most today expensive, attractive, real estate in perhaps the entire country.
They own the entire city.
This is the dairy farm.
The cows are grazing in Malibu.
Yes.
You can't make this up.
And so they have finally made the rational decision here to sell off the dairy operations and develop this as real estate, which they had already been doing.
little by little. So Pronto
markets is toast. 7-Eleven
is at least a thousand times bigger
and any
landlord is going to want to sign
them over little Pronto
markets. In real estate,
having the bigger balance sheet is the way
to be the preferred tenant, especially if
you can promise, hey, longer leases
and we're more credit-worthy.
And the operating history, yeah, you're a landlord. Would you
rather have 7-Eleven be your tenant or
start-up Pronto markets? You're going to bet on
7-11. Yes. And
that not only takes away his milk supply, it's also his current debt holder, who he owes money to. And he's in this business that has no structural or strategic barriers at all. He is doing the exact same thing as 7-Eleven at smaller scale. And so the core insight is that Pronto Markets is effectively just an empty vessel to sell the same products. In a situation like that, it is a race to the bottom on your margins and scale will determine the winner.
So in other words, Pronto Markets is toast.
Yes.
So Joe has some soul searching to do.
He needs a retreat.
He goes on vacation.
He takes his wife and children.
First to a little cabin in California with his family.
Then he goes to St. Bart's in the Caribbean.
He somehow gets in touch with a friend who offers this insane beach house.
And he's like, well, I've never flown internationally before.
And I don't really have the money.
But I really do need a reset.
We are royally screwed.
He needs to come up with a plan.
Yes.
And that plan would become Trader Joe's.
But before we tell that story,
now it was a great time to thank our presenting partner, J.P. Morgan Payments.
Yes.
And listeners, this episode with Trader Joe's,
supply chain is much more important than your typical acquired episode.
We're sort of touching on it here,
but the whole rest of the episode is going to be about supply chain.
When you are talking about supply chain,
payments are a huge part of keeping shelves stocked and products moving.
So let's consider a typical manufacturer.
They're trying to balance paying their suppliers quickly to keep good relationships
while also optimizing their own working capital.
And meanwhile, their suppliers, especially the smaller ones, often struggle with cash flow
while they wait 30 or 60 or 90 days to get paid.
This is where JP Morgan's payments technology and global expertise come in.
They've transformed supply chain financing into a dynamic, tech-driven solution.
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Businesses can easily switch between supply chain finance
and dynamic discounting as their needs change.
It's all real-time with full visibility,
so you can track invoices and optimize payment timing in one place.
Well, supply chains like Trader Joe's prioritize simplicity,
which, spoiler alert, that is like a huge thing that we're going to
talk about later on the episode. The reality for most grocery retailers is different. They have
massive numbers of suppliers, stocking shelves with a diverse mix of products, but managing
these relationships is complex, especially when it comes to negotiating payment terms and
maintaining a steady flow of goods. And this is not unique to grocery. Many other industries,
like restaurants, automotive, hardware technology, and more depend on a large network of suppliers,
and in all likelihood, your industry can benefit from optimizing payment cycles and strengthening
supplier relationships. That's why over two million suppliers worldwide use these solutions.
It's a win-win, making supply chains more resilient and efficient. J.P. Morgan Payments is at the
forefront providing trusted, innovative financial, and operational infrastructure. So whether
you want to unlock more flexibility in your finances or build a supply chain that's ready for
anything, visit JPMorgan.com slash acquired to learn how JPMorgan payments can help you build
your business. And listeners, for anyone going to AWS Reinvent, we will be there with the
J.P. Morgan Payments team.
Yes.
We're doing a big interview on stage with AWS CEO, Matt Garman, and more.
You can find all of the details on that, plus a reinvent discount for acquired listeners in the show notes.
All right.
So, David, the origin of Trader Joe's.
Joe is there in St. Bart's, in his beach house, cocktail in hand, looking out over the ocean, thinking about how absolutely screwed he is.
He effectively...
And the plan is cocktails.
Effectively.
The plan is teaky.
Yeah.
The crazy thing that he does on this vacation and then henceforth his management style, he is a genius.
He premeditates the entire shifting landscape over the next 30 years ahead of him.
And he does it five years at a time in what he calls white papers or at other times theory papers that he publishes internally.
He carefully thinks through things like social.
change and cultural shifts and geopolitics and currency fluctuations, shifts in how people will be
educated and consumer buying preferences and travel patterns. As I really dug into this,
Joe's somewhat of a macro economist who, once he realized where all the world was going,
he places his bet in the form of a highly opinionated grocery store. And then he would execute
much of that vision himself. I mean, like physically moving pallets and typesetting newsletters
for customers. He is a complete unicorn.
Okay, so Joe comes back from this vacation, and what does he do?
Yes, he's a genius, but he also, he's got like a real back-against-the-wall problem.
Right. He's thought through all these implications, he's forecasted the future, and he's going to go out of business.
He needs to make his rent this month. So he needs to find something that he can start selling
that is basically the Venn diagram intersection of high enough value that he can get
real gross margin dollars out the bottom from his small handful number of stores to meet his
obligations.
He needs it to quickly become a good business.
Quickly provide returns and is protected from the 7-Eleven juggernaut that's coming.
Because you never want to compete with someone bigger, more established, better capitalized
than you on the exact same footing that they're on.
You need to do something different that they can't or won't do.
Yep.
And he lands on hard alcohol.
This is the hilarious thing about Trader Joe's.
It actually starts as a hard liquor company.
It's an ammo and tobacco company that gets into hard liquor.
Right, right, right.
So hard liquor is actually very, very, very attractive here.
It's very high value.
There are a set of laws called fair trade laws that impact everything that retailers sell in this era.
It's actually kind of crazy.
It's a holdover from the Depression.
We talked about it on the Costco episode where it was illegal for retailers to sell goods below the minimum price set by manufacturers.
Right.
It's not just MSRP.
It's not just a suggested retail price.
It's you will go to jail if we catch you selling below the price that the cabal of producers of any given goods set.
Yes.
Once all this stuff gets thrown out and rolled down constitutional, et cetera, now it's suggested.
Back then it was, like, mandated.
But the net of that is, if you can find a way to sell hard alcohol because they're high dollar value, you know you're going to get a certain amount of profit out of it.
And the way this works is you need to make sure you get liquor licenses, which are hard.
But if you have a liquor license, then it's like an annuity.
People are definitely going to come to your store.
They're definitely going to buy liquor.
And you have a regulatoryly protected profit on that liquor.
Yes.
And that's the moat.
against 7-11. 7-Eleven giant Southland Corporation, they're not going to come to California
and get liquor licenses for all these stores that they're going to open. They're out-of-state
corporation. Like, Joe can be much more nimble. He can invest the time and the money. These things
cost a lot of money back in the day because they're basically, like you said, a guaranteed
annuity profit stream. And he can invest at a small scale, raise more debt to do this. And this is
his way out. And that was basically his bet is 7-Eleven because this is like a small little arm of their
operation. They're not going to change their sort of national business model to in this little
pocket have liquor. I think that's right. And I think they did not sell hard liquor, period,
at that point in time. It just wasn't part of their strategy. Okay. I see. And there's one other,
perhaps unforeseen at the time, but ultimately incredibly strategic benefit to,
this decision to go all in on hard liquor, which is it's also a moat against supermarkets and the
grocery industry. They're not going to do hard liquor either. At least at this point in time.
So he goes, raises more capital, gets the licenses. This is like the third tranche of debt that he's
taken on now. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. So it works for a couple of years. Pronto markets basically
transforms into a liquor store. And it buys Joe a couple years to figure out the bigger business
plan and stave off the invasion from 7-Eleven. They're still selling other stuff in the stores,
but they start devoting more and more and more space to liquor because it's highest value per square
foot. They have a regulated, protected right to sell it that their competitors don't have.
I mean, there's an alternative world where Trader Joe basically becomes Total Wine or
Bevmo or something like that. Yeah, if they had just kept scaling this strategy linearly instead of
completely changing tracks and going in this other direction. Yeah. All right, so let's talk about
supermarkets. Listeners, I did sort of a brief history of supermarkets in America to come up to
speed on what Trader Joe's does differently and how we got here. So you go way back all the way to
pre-Civil War America and you've got general stores. We all sort of have this loose idea of what
this looks like. You got one counter. There's a bunch of goods that you can see.
but it's not self-served. You don't get to go pick up any goods yourself. The employee of the general
store, or more than likely the owner, is just going to be the person who fetches it for you and
then checks you out. That is kind of the retail experience in America, pre-Civil War.
Then there's this series of innovations that advanced from this to the grocery store. So the first
is the box, the cardboard box. And specifically, pre-cut, corrugated cardboard.
board boxes happen in the 1890s. It's rigid, it's cheap, and it enables shipping at scale.
So suddenly you can have regular shipments in predictable quantities inexpensively between producer
and retailer. That's puzzle piece number one. Then you've got the flat bottomed paper bag
that had happened a little bit before in the Civil War. They used to use cotton bags,
but it's in short supply because you need cotton for the soldiers. And so necessity is the
invention, we get the brown paper bag. You have canning. Before this, you only had glass. It would break. It was
fragile. It was expensive. Suddenly, you can use tin and you can manufacture this at scale. You can keep
goods fresh for a long period of time. It's durable. And again, it's in this easy-to-manufacture
fixed quantity size. You then get cardstock. This enables real consumer package goods like
cereal, cracker boxes, you know, that's still most food today.
Or most food sold in supermarkets.
Yes. All containers really move from bespoke one-off containers to mass-manufactured,
quantifiable, fixed sizes. By 1900, one-fifth of all U.S. manufacturing is packaged food.
That is how significant the shift is.
This is the rise of the great CPG companies on the product supplier.
side of the supermarket market?
Yeah, consumer packaged goods.
That's exactly right.
And in 1916, the real break from the general store of old happens, a guy named Clarence
Saunders launches a store where, thanks to packaged and branded products, you no longer
need an associate for help.
So consumers can actually go and touch the products for themselves instead of asking
the man behind the counter to get it for you, which was complete heresy at the time.
And it is the way that all stores work now.
Just like the convenience store innovation.
Yes.
Equally obvious today and equally wild back then.
Yes.
And that store that Clarence Saunders started was Pickly Wiggly.
That's right.
With 500 stores today.
So, David, you mentioned CPG, the sort of cousin of the supermarket,
these two entangled characters in our story,
the rise of the supermarket and the rise of the consumer package good.
What role does that play in the development of the grocery store?
Procter & Gamble, Unilever, Kellogg's, Gillette, Coca-Cola, Nassley.
Note all companies and products that you're not going to find in Trader Joe's today.
Not today, yeah.
So once you get this scale of packaging and consistency of products, you've basically paved the way for food brands to emerge.
You can start to promise quality to customers in a way that was previously reserved for the merchant.
You used to trust the store owner, not the granola maker.
And now the maker of granola can take on this new job to be done, which is taking a heterogeneous amount of natural products.
Remember, like we were talking about with milk or grains or any of these fruits, vegetables that turn into a CPG thing.
They are at one point natural products, and then putting them through some sort of manufacturing process to come out the other side as one predictable, promised, homogenous product.
Standardized, nationally available product, yep.
Yes, that lives up to a brand promise of whatever it is.
It's probably quality, but it's probably other things, too.
You start to get companies like the National Biscuit Company, realizing, well, we should lean into this.
Oh, boy, that sounds like Nabisco, doesn't it?
It is.
So you get them for the very first time slapping Nabisco on a cardboard box.
So this is a profound change for the entire value chain, where the trust is now with the brand.
not with the retailer, and retailers basically are shifting to serve as a vessel just to sell these
trusted branded products. Once brands, these producers of product, realize this power and realize,
oh, my God, it's all shifted to us now. They press this advantage, so they start advertising.
First, you get newspaper and magazine and then radio, and then the most perfect instantiation
you could ever ask for a brand television. The idea that you could ever ask for a brand television.
The idea that you could build trust with consumers through sight, sound, and motion,
beamed over the air into everyone's homes in the 1950s and 60s, it's nirvana for this whole ecosystem to kind of come together.
And the net of all this for Joe and Trader Joe's and being about to get into this market is that supermarkets basically become real estate companies.
Yeah.
This is something I had no idea about until.
doing this research. They essentially stop having their core competency be the taste and opinion
of a merchant. They used to be in this great business where they would choose what to stock and then
they would be the source of trust. And now consumers are just saying, hey, you need to have these
things. Hey, I'm here for the Cheerios. Right. You say you need Cheerios. I'll go try and get Cheerio.
Oh, we're just getting whiplashed around as a commodity. And that makes it sound bad. But actually,
they do become real estate companies.
They become scaled real estate companies,
and they offload a lot of the merchandising operations to the brands.
For a lot of items, the grocery store employees don't stock the shelves.
The brands, the CPG companies, come in with their employees and stock the shelves.
It's crazy if you walk into a large-scale traditional supermarket today,
how many, quote-unquote, employees of the store are actually representatives of the producer,
the brand or more likely the distributor because the brands aren't going to directly show up to those
stores.
It's funny, when I finished reading Joe's book, one of the takeaways was it seems like if you can
master a negotiating real estate leases, two, regulatory stuff, like if you can figure out
regulatory arbitrage, and three, if you can figure out how to not have your employees and
customers steal from you, then you're going to run a good grocery store.
That's actually the core of this industry is those three things.
now, of course, there's way more to it. And those way more things are the things you kind of want
the business to be. But it's shocking how much of the bedrock of just not losing money comes down
to your real estate leases, not getting stolen from, and understanding the regulatory environment
you exist in and not running a foul of it. Yeah. So back to Joe and his Pronto dilemma and what's
going to become Trader Joe's here. The hard liquor thing was a competitive response to 7-Eleven.
Turns out it's also a great competitive response to supermarkets.
So after a year or two of stabilizing the ship, Joe's ambitious, he wants to do more than just hard liquor.
And he realizes that this state of play in the supermarket industry between the big brands and the supermarkets who have essentially become real estate companies actually has created a wide open vacuum for a new, different kind of grocer,
to come in and actually return to merchandising and product knowledge.
Yes.
So as the legend goes, in the late 60s, he's hit by two simultaneous bolts of inspiration.
The first is an article that he reads in Scientific American that states that starting with the GI Bill after World War II,
the rate of college education in America went from 2% of high school.
school graduates to 60% of high school graduates by 1964. Thanks to the GI Bill. Basically,
in America, it went from nobody went to college after high school except the very privileged elite
to 60% of high school graduates now go to college. This is a massive demographic change
in America. And it's not just that everyone gets educated when they're in college. They sort of
become more aware of the world. Yes. So that leads into the second
bolt of inspiration that he has from another article he reads, this time in the Wall Street
Journal, which is that Boeing, the aircraft company, is going to be launching the 747
commercially and that it would dramatically reduce the cost of international overseas travel
and make it accessible to the average American.
So the stat on this is insane.
The 747 immediately cut the cost of international travel to Europe by,
50% and within 10 years the real cost of traveling to Europe was cut by a factor of 15. Wow. So you go
from this insane thing where 80% of Americans in 1965 had not ever set foot on a plane to suddenly
it going down by 15x to get to Europe. Americans are about to be well-traveled. And well-educated.
Yes. In Joe's mind, these two people,
pieces of information from these two articles coalesce into this massive epiphany that he has
about the future of the American public. He writes in the book, 7-Eleven, and the whole convenience
store genre served only the most basic needs of the most mindless demographics with cigarettes,
Coca-Cola, milk, Budweiser, candy, bread, and eggs. Dimly, I saw an opportunity to differentiate
ourselves radically from mainstream retailing to mainstream people.
I mean, this is it. This is the core insight. You hit me with a quote. I'm hitting you with
a quote. This is from The Secret Life of Groceries. Back in 1970, Trader Joe Colom looked at the grocery
industry and saw two paths. The first required becoming an active retailer, which for him
meant rejecting a passive role as a supermarket landlord and applying an intensive effort
to seek out or create, quote, discontinuous products that could not be imitated by
competitors. The second was to grow big. Sell goods that are available in infinite supply,
remind you of the everything store. Yep. And compete ruthlessly on price. This ladder path was
essentially what every single one of his competitors was attempting. They would spend the next
decades scaling up to carry bigger and bigger inventories, gobbling up larger and larger
warehouse spaces, forever looking over their shoulders at competitors and trying to shave down costs.
He saw his own ruin there. The biggest chain in the world would always win, and however many
competed, there would only be one or two that survived to the end. That's it. It's this realization
that, look, I don't think I'm going to eventually be Walmart if I'm not going to be Walmart or
Kroger or Albertsons or, you know, one of the big giant, quote-unquote, winners. Let's go in the
extreme other direction. Right. And oh, by the way, there are these two intertwined, massive demographic
trends that are starting with the young people coming out of college and are soon going to become
the whole country that are in my favor. But the thing that's not obvious that takes a Joe Kulom to, like,
figure out is how is it that well-traveled, well-educated people are going to let you take a
non-traditional path in grocery? This is the genius insight of the thing that he delivered that we didn't
know that we needed. You know, it's like Steve Jobs giving us the iPod and we didn't all know
that we needed that thing. Why is it that well-traveled, well-educated people needed a divergent
grocery store? Yes, and this is also where it's so crazy path dependent. At this time, in the
late 1960s, early 1970s, the best way to target these types of consumers that differentiates them
from other mass market consumers, the best way to do so is their alcohol consumption preferences.
Like, it couldn't be more perfect. He's already a liquor store.
It's so true. I didn't realize how important basically being a liquor store was to the Trader Joe's story.
The rest of Trader Joe's kind of falls out of selling liquor.
Yes. So at the time, in the late 60s, early 70s, there was a sharp divide along these lines in the country.
Blue-collar Americans drank beer. Educated Americans drank cocktails and spirits. And soon to be wine, thanks to Trader Joe's.
Fascinating. It was the mark of sophistication back then. So Joe decides that his store, the newly survived Pronto markets, should create a new tagline.
designed for this target new customer base,
the world's largest assortment of alcoholic beverages,
which becomes 100 different brands of scotch,
70 different brands of bourbon,
50 different brands of rum, and so on and so on and so on.
You weren't kidding when you said it could have easily become a Bev-Mo or total wine.
Absolutely.
So he knows this is a wholly different unique retail concept versus
Pronto. He needs a new name because this is a new store. So in another almost completely
foreign thing to today, the culture back then, especially Joe's target market of educated,
soon-to-be-traveled folks, was completely obsessed in America with a fad known as Tiki culture.
Yes. And it was inspired by what people, you know, Americans who were about to be able to travel,
but heretofore had not actually traveled around the world, thought that Polynesia and South Pacific culture was like.
And, you know, there's like movies, there's the James Bond movies.
Yeah, yeah.
It started with the South Pacific movie, and it bled into cocktails, into drinks.
So drinks like the Mai Tai, these like South Pacific, Caribbean was a bit of a version of this,
drinks were super popular among this educated class of people.
If you go to Disney World, you can still see some vestiges of this.
there's the Polynesian resort.
The Dull Whip and the, what's the bird?
Remember Nolan Bushnell told us on the Atari episode
that he was inspired by all the animatronic birds,
which is right next to the Dull Whip stand,
and not too far over is the Jungle Cruise.
And Joe Colom says the Jungle Cruise
was one of his two inspirations for embracing this traitor idea,
this Tiki traitor thing.
The other of which is a book that he was reading
called White Shadows in the South Seas.
And when you look at it,
The cover is, like, evocative of this, we'll put it in the email newsletter.
It's very Trader Joe's-y-in-looking.
And then the final piece of this sort of branding stew in Joe's mind is that one of the cornerstone
cultural elements of Tiki culture were these two competing restaurant chains that scaled across
America in cities across America.
Oh, Trader Vicks.
Don the Beachcomer was the first one.
And then their competitive.
Trader Vicks. And they were these teaky-themed restaurants. And so, borrowing from Trader Vicks,
along with all this other influence and Disney World and Hollywood and movies and books, Joe gets the
idea. It should feel like traders on the high seas. It should have a maritime element and a
teaky traitor element. And we're going to call it Trader Joe's. Too perfect. So in August 1967,
Joe opens the first Trader Joe's on Arroyo Parkway in Pasadena, California.
Joe decides that Pasadena is the perfect first target market because Caltech and a whole bunch of universities are there.
You've got professors, you got graduates coming out.
And was this one of the Pronto markets before?
Was he in the same real estate?
No, this is a new store.
Ah.
And when it opens, August, 1967, it's got a lot of the elements of Trader Joe's today.
are called crew members, store manager is a captain, there's the assistant manager first mate,
the employees all wear Hawaiian shirts, and it's got a new strategy. But before we talk about
what that new strategy is. Yes, we want to thank one of our favorite companies. Shopify.
Okay, David, I had an idea for this one. I want to take listeners on a tour of my house
and point out some of the products that I own from businesses built on Shopify. Are you game?
This is awesome. You referenced this on our last read. This is great. Let's go.
All right. So upstairs, I'm sleeping on brook linen sheets and parachute pillows,
all from founders that built amazing businesses on Shopify. My wife's jewelry collection includes
pieces from At Present. That's the company that our friend Mark Bridge started.
Of course, Shadow Mark. Yep. Thanks on the Rolex episode. And in my closet,
Marine Layer, got some Rothies and, of course, Warby Parker, all built on Shopify.
That is quite the entrepreneurial set of items in your house there.
Keeps going. Downstairs and in the kitchen, there's, of course, dandelion chocolate, athletic brewing, and a few phony ngronies in the fridge.
Delicious.
My coffee mug right here is from Mir. I love how light these stainless steel mugs are.
And I've got a coat ofaxi bag by the door over there.
Another amazing founder story built on Shopify.
And then here's one that surprised me.
in my toddler's playroom, we've got Hot Wheels and Fisher Price because Mattel runs their online
stores on Shopify.
That might be my favorite big Shopify customer because I guess that means Barbie runs on Shopify
too, since it's part of Mattel, which means a huge part of my house with my four-year-old
girl, also runs on Shopify.
Yes, I was wondering.
And listeners, it's not just creator brands or small startups.
David, those books on the shelf behind you from Penguin Publishing, they sell through Shopify, the New York Times store, Shopify.
Yeah.
And get this. My old house had an air conditioner from Carrier, a 110-year-old public company that also sells on Shopify.
Yeah, basically invented air conditioning? Amazing story. Sells on Shopify. It is breakout founders and the biggest enterprises that are powered by Shopify today.
Yes. And for these smaller niche brands, Shopify obviously is everywhere.
That purple shop pay button at checkout has become so trustworthy and so insanely easy to buy things you want.
And for the bigger enterprise brands, it's proof that Shopify isn't just for startups.
They power some of the largest and most established retailers in the world.
So if you run a business, whether you're just starting out or operating at global scale, Shopify is the platform built for you.
Head to Shopify.com slash acquired.
That's S-H-O-P-I-F-Y.com slash acquired.
And just tell them that Ben and David sent you.
All right. So, David, what is strategically different? What are the choices that Joe made when he opened that first Trader Joe's in Pasadena, other than, of course, putting everyone in Hawaiian shirts?
So the first, obviously, is the target market, like we just talked about, you know, these newly educated college grads who are about to travel the world.
Joe has his sort of foxy shorthand for this in the book of the overeducated and underpaid.
Yes. It's interesting. At this point, it's not branded products.
really the way that Trader Joe's is today. It's just a convenience slash grocery store
that happens to target people who value authenticity, quality, sophistication, but also want
affordability. It's sort of this early career post-grad type of person. So it's near college
campuses. It's near large hospitals. Interestingly, it's also near retirees. Yes. Because
retirees sort of behave similarly to younger pre-family folks. This is the dual
pillars of Trader Joe's target customers. It's young professionals starting out and retirees.
Yes. It's funny. The retirees also very value-focused. And large consumers of liquor,
candy, high-fiber foods, vitamins. It's a big profit center. A thing that they do here to sort of
play into the over-educated, or I would say highly educated, underpaid, is the Victorian art
with the sort of cheesy humorous captions,
they adopt this as their visual identity.
It's a double win.
It plays off this educated customer base
where they can make jokes.
Like if you go by the,
is it the guacamole that they call
Avocado's number
as a play on Avogadro's number.
Yes.
In, is that chemistry?
I think so.
Or they used to have the Sir Isaac Newton's.
Of course.
But two, Victorian imagery
is royalty-free.
Anything before 1906 is public,
domain. So this is just Joe being cheap. All the packaging is just ripping off these old royalty-free
images. That's Trader Joe's right there. It's amazing. And so he really comes up with this thing he calls
the four tests, which is one, we want to stock goods that are high value per cubic inch.
Yes. It starts, of course, with liquor, as we talked about. Yes. And then, of course, vitamins and
you walk into a Trader Joe's today, you can almost feel that it's stocked with things that are high-value
density. Even though the goods aren't expensive, the way it's all jammed into the store, it feels
dense. Yes. And Trader Joe's today average about, call it 15,000-ish, maybe a little less
square feet per store. The average supermarket is like 50,000 square feet. And the average Walmart
is like 150,000 square feet. And back then Trader Joe's was like 4,000 square feet. I mean,
these were tiny stores, so they needed high value density in them. Or I'm going to come
back to that in a minute. He wanted them to be 4,000 square.
Two, high rate of consumption. You want customers coming back
over and over again. Vitamin's. Three, goods that are
easily handled. So much of Trader Joe's business
stems out of this, that they are unwilling to start
doing things that are hard to handle, that are logistically difficult. And they
kind of have this ethos of, if we can make it so people are willing to
overlook the fact that we don't have
some stuff that's hard to handle,
then great. All the better business for us
if we can keep customers coming back and we only have to deal
with easily handleable goods. And then
the fourth is probably the most important.
Something that Trader Joe's can be outstanding
in terms of price
or assortment. Yes.
This is the counter positioning. This is how
can we be different than what every other
player in the market is doing.
So this last
strategic canon
is, I think, most perfectly,
perhaps in Trader Joe's entire history exemplified
in the first new product category
that they add Beyond Liquor
to this official new first Trader Joe's store.
You mentioned a minute ago
that Joe's target square footage size
for the new Trader Joe's store concept
was like 4,4,400 square feet.
The first location on Arroyo in Pasadena,
even though it's small today,
was actually about twice that size.
It was like 7,000 or 8,000 square feet.
Not by design.
We want to be in Pasadena.
That's the perfect first market.
I'm willing to trade off having a bigger store
than I would actually like.
And he was meticulous about location picking.
It wasn't just, let's look at some census data
and figure out incomes.
I mean, it was the soft factors of, is there a university close?
But he would just go drive up and down all the neighborhoods around it
and try to figure out, hey, are these my customers?
How easy is it to access my store if I put it on this block versus that block?
Oh, if I'm on the wrong side of a divided highway,
then I actually can't access all the people who have to, you know,
make a left turn into traffic.
It was really this sixth sense for developing.
What is my actual easy, addressable customer base from this store
who is going to make this store their home spot.
Yep. So they move in, got the Trader Joe's concept with hard liquor being the cornerstone sort of first.
Yeah, what was the second?
Well, they got to figure out what to do with all this extra space.
And at first, they try bringing in a meat department, a meat butcher, as a concession, as a subtenant.
Which they don't have now, right?
No, no, no. Long gone.
Too hard to handle.
Too hard to handle and not differentiated.
I mean, that's what the supermarkets do.
He's building the anti-supermarket.
Right.
And then one of the store managers in the portfolio says, hey, I know this other meat guy,
while we're thinking meats here, he used to have the shop next to one of their other Pronto
markets here in L.A.
He moved up to Northern California, to Napa County.
He's gotten to know some of the wine guys up in Napa.
Now, this is like late 60s, early 70s.
This is before California wine and Napa is a thing.
Which I didn't know until starting this episode that the whole concept of Napa is like a 60-year-old.
Yeah. Oh, yeah. We're going to do it. So this manager, this captain, is like, well, Joe, alcohols, you know, our sort of core product here, what if we try expanding into wine?
Joe's like, all right, great, let's try it.
Meanwhile, Joe doesn't drink wine.
Yeah, yet, yet. He would become a huge anophile, unafile, how do you pronounce it?
I have no idea.
I think it's like O-E-N-O-P-H-I-L-E, the wine lover, own a file.
Learn something new every day.
Yeah.
So Joe's like, great, let's try it.
They use a whole bunch of that extra space that they have in the Arroyo Boulevard store,
and they install the, quote-unquote,
world's greatest variety of California wine.
Right there in the Trader Joe store,
and the world's greatest variety was 17,
Different kinds of wine from different wineries in Napa.
17.
Now, the crazy thing.
That's so funny.
I actually think there's a pretty good chance that this was the world's greatest variety of California wine in one retailer.
Because it wasn't a market yet.
Americans were not yet drinking wine, let alone Napa wine or Snomah wine.
It's Trader Joe's that makes it a thing.
Wow.
Because by God, it becomes a huge hit as you.
could imagine with the Trader Joe's target demographic. I mean, what more sophisticated,
worldly thing could you offer them? I mean, it makes so much sense in retrospect.
Wine is the ultimate non-commodity commodity. Oh, yeah. There's this great line that you can't
sell wine. You have to sell wines. Yes. The consumer psyche around wine is that we are
trained to believe that's this heterogeneous product, whereas milk, vitamin,
D whole milk is vitamin D whole milk.
Milk is milk.
It's all interchangeable.
Wines aren't that way at all.
They're the complete opposite side of the spectrum.
Amazing thing if you're trying to be this merchant who is selecting goods on behalf of your
customers and your brand promise as the merchant is just, come to my store and be delighted.
And you don't need to just say, like, hey, I'll always have milk for you.
You say, come to my store and I will pick out interesting wines.
and when the wines are gone, they're gone, so they're small batch, they're boutique.
I'm buying however much supply I can get of a thing that I think is great, you can build
a much better business on being known for, I will be surprised and delighted when I come
to the store and you have selected interesting items for me than you can on you are an empty
vessel through which to provide me milk.
Yeah, or nobisco or whatever large CPG brand. It's so perfect.
wine comes with all of these other amazing aspects to it, too.
Drinking it makes you seem sophisticated, European.
It has this rich tradition going back for all of recorded human history.
You can spend a whole lifetime studying it and still never come close to learning everything about wine.
High repeat purchase, high density.
I mean, it really fits the four tests super easy to handle.
And now a great way to be differentiated
because no one else is doing the California wine thing.
This is new.
They can build a brand around being California wine purveyors.
So it happened by accident that they had this extra space
that the old store manager knew the meat guy
who moved to Napa, who knew the wine guys.
But I think this probably becomes the most important factor
in Trader Joe's success.
And they also,
also timed it perfectly. This is the unlock for thinking about Trader Joe's. They are wine
merchants, and they merchandise everything in the same way you would merchandise wine.
Yes, they really ask themselves this question of, could grocery be the same? Could we
actively seek out and purchase things in small finite batches that we think would be
interesting to provide to our customers? And would people buy in to a store where you
you go and you don't always know exactly what you're going to get, but you can trust that the person
who found it for you found a great treasure. Yes, it's perfect. And like I said, they nailed the
timing. So this is the late 60s, early 70s, where they're starting out becoming a California wine
merchant. American and specifically Californian wine is about to have a rocket chip ascendancy.
If you've ever seen the movie Bottle Shock, which came out a couple years ago, it's about this thing that really happened, the 1976 Judgment of Paris, which is one of the most seminal events in the history of the wine industry.
It was a blind taste test where Parisian wine critics did blind tasting of all the top French wines, the Bordeaux, the everything, all the famous, all the old world grates against Napa Valley.
wines and the Napa wines trouts the top Bordeaux in like every category. And it was this
bomb that went off in the wine industry and started the whole culture of Napa and Sonoma
and American wines and the tourism there and the romance. And Trader Joe is like a few years into
being the number one seller of the widest variety of California wines. Yes. And their target market
is exactly who is going to consume this stuff and love it. It's so great. So the early days of the Trader Joe's
wine program were unbelievable. Joe and all the employees, they start learning about wine,
going up to Napa, conducting tastings, meeting all these winemakers who are essentially guys in the
garage at this point in time. They bring it back to Pasadena. They get Heights, Freemark Abbey,
like some of the best wines and winemakers in the entire world get history.
are being sold for $10 a bottle in Trader Joe's in Southern California.
So they start evangelizing it to their customer base.
Like you said, it meets all the tests.
Like, we're all in.
In 1970, they start publishing a free newsletter to all their customers
to educate them about wine and update them about all the new shipments that are coming in.
Do they already have the Fearless Flyer?
Is this like in addition to that?
This is how the Fearless Flyer starts.
Ah.
They call it the Trader Joe's Wine.
Insiders Report.
Hmm.
And it's this whole newsletter, you know, imagine you're a wine merchant.
This eventually, once they get more into grocery in 1985, this becomes the fearless
flyer.
But it's the same approach to it.
It's merchandising.
It's telling the stories of these products, just like you would with a wine.
Fascinating.
It's incredible.
No other grocery is doing anything like this.
No.
So by 1970, the year they launched The Insiders Report and third.
Three years after this first Trader Joe's launches on a Royal Boulevard, Trader Joe's becomes the largest wine retailer in California, which is, on the one hand, completely insane.
But on the other hand, shows just how young and new the wine drinking market was in America and that Trader Joe's was the one making it happen, starting in California.
And they still have, what, single-digit stores at this point?
Yeah.
Pretty quickly, they add imported wine, too. So not just domestic Californian wine. They go to Europe. They go to France. They go to Spade. They go to Portugal. All the great winemaking countries. They go to Italy. And they start bringing imported wines back, too. That also sells like wildfire. They also do this really clever thing where fair trade laws applied to wines as well. And with imported wines, they didn't actually set the minimum prices based on,
the wine label. It was based on the distributor, the importer, that brought it in to the country.
Which makes it different than the way that domestic products worked. And multiple importers would
import the same labels and wines from Europe. And so Trader Joe's just like, oh, this is an
arbitrage. We'll just go find importers that are willing to set the lowest minimum price for the
wines that they're importing. And we can break the street price from the other importers.
That's interesting.
Because in other fair trade categories, you'd have to go to the entire distributed group of producers and say, hey, all milk producers or all whiskey producers, can you guys agree to lower the fair trade price?
And they'd all be like, no.
It was uniform across the whole product, yeah.
But in this scenario, you just have to go to one distributor and say, hey, you're importing the French wine.
Can you set the price a little lower?
I want to sell it lower.
Yeah.
Then, pretty quickly, wine collecting starts to become a thing.
And Trader Joe's is just blowing out wine.
They're the number one retail in California.
At one point, Joe decides he's going to set up a wine bank for his customers.
Did you read about this?
Yes.
This is awesome.
He's like, great, how am I going to sell more to my customers and give them something they want, meet their needs?
Sell it to them and then also sell them a place to put it.
Yes.
Brilliant, right?
Trader Jiz does not have wine banks today.
It turns out it's a bad business idea because when couples get divorced, the first thing is go raid the wine bank, pull out all the wine that is now worth a lot of money, and then the other spouse will sue the wine bank.
So they're just like in the middle of these divorces all the time?
They get dragged into all these divorce lawsuits.
Brutal.
But what you're starting to see here with the ability to find clever ways to do regulatory arbitrage.
or sell below the fair trade price.
Joe is a master of reading all the regulations,
not trusting what anybody tells him of like,
oh, this is the way you're supposed to do it.
He's like, show me the regulation.
And he pours over the regulation,
and he synthesizes it all from all the different bodies,
whether it's the USDA or the FTC or the state of California
or the Interstate Commerce Commission
or just understanding the full landscape,
holding it all in his head and saying,
I have it.
I know a way that we can perform.
provide value to customers because this whole thing is like how do we give people the best value
possible, high value items at low prices, and do it in a legal way. And then I can market the heck
out of it. I can make it a thing that people know it's just one more great thing you'll get
from coming to Trader Joe's is one more thing that we only have here that you can't get anywhere
else and you're going to get a great value by doing it. High value to customers in differentiated
products. And wine is so perfect. So all that takes us through the early 70s and this sort of
first era of Trader Joe's on the back of liquor and then wines. Yeah, this is what he calls
Good Time Charlie building this party store. Somebody needs to do the era's tour of Trader Joe's.
That'd be amazing. Bring out the products from the different areas. Awesome. And that leads into the
next era that Joe also sort of in goofy fashion calls Whole Earth Harry, the health food era of Trader.
Joe's. So I think you could say about Joe that he was a genius at many, many things. Just about
every critical aspect of retailing. But I think maybe his greatest genius was identifying
major demographic and cultural trends that were just starting in America and then creating the
products and the merchandising to capitalize on them.
It is astonishing how he had his finger on the pulse and how he was willing to either change
what Trader Joe's was or adapt it and add a new layer on top to turn Trader Joe's into
the next version of what it needed to be. You mentioned some attributes on Joe himself.
This is a beautiful excerpt from Benjamin Lora's book that I think is just the best description
of him. Joe is a man frequently described as a genius.
by other very smart men.
And I should say, Benjamin Lohr, the guy who writing this, very critical, very journalistic in his approach.
The whole rest of the book is applying a lot of scrutiny to the grocery industry.
The fact that he talks about Joe this way actually has a lot of credibility.
When asking his employees and competitors and industry observers about him, I hear the word visionary.
So many times it becomes worrisome.
I hear he is brilliant, incredible, wise.
grown men tell me they are awestruck, chilled, giddy in his presence.
Executives who worked for him, stuffed sea-sweet dullards of the grotesquely self-confident variety
will drop all pretense and describe wanting to wake up early in the morning to race to work
because they can't wait to hear what Joe has to say.
They tell me he has a photographic memory, that he can read up to 1,200 words per minute,
that he adds, multiplies, or divides lists of figures in his brain quicker than they could ever scan them,
that he knows the names of all his employees, their spouse's names, and their dates of hire,
and their birthdays and their wedding anniversaries.
But beyond all this awe, the steel cage memory, the gymnastic cognitive quickness,
the genius of Joe that impresses me most is his ability to project this integrity and decency when he wants
to.
He keeps you guessing exactly where the line lies between calculating businessman and wholesome self-taught
founder in a way that allows almost everyone who meets him to underestimate his abilities
yet simultaneously afford him huge amounts of respect.
It is an awesome talent,
especially in a business built on negotiation,
trust, and quick, decisive deals.
That is so awesome.
I'm telling you, this whole book is just beautiful pros.
But that's a great encapsulation,
and when you layer on top,
that intelligence with that interpersonal ability,
and then this thing you're talking about, David,
this seemingly ability to predict
the cultural future of where America is heading
and then build Trader Joe's as the product for that future, it's unbelievable.
It's amazing.
So this whole earth hairy era where we wrap ourselves in a blanket of granola and health food and...
almond butter and nuts and dried fruits.
So at the end of the 60s and into the 70s, the California hippie counterculture, summer a love movement kind of bifurcated and went off in a whole bunch of different directions.
And one of those directions was Silicon Valley and tech and computers and Steve Jobs and Nolan Bushnell and Woz and that becomes Apple and everything.
The Haydashbury.
Yeah.
Another one of those directions was the organic health food movement.
And for Joe and the target audience of overeducated, underpaid consumers, this just like wine is right in the sweet spot.
You can merchandise it just like wine.
You can tell the stories about what these foods are, why they're better, why they're great for your body.
It's high value per cubic inch.
It's more expensive than regular food.
Joe has this amazing quote on this.
He says, we prepared to marry the health food store to the liquor store.
This concept obviously was founded in schizophrenia.
But it occurred to me that people who really thought about what they ingested,
whether they were wine connoisseurs or health food nuts,
were basically on the same radar beam.
Both groups were fragmented from the masses
who willingly consumed Folgers coffee,
Best Foods, mayonnaise, Wonderbread, Coca-Cola, et cetera.
Both groups were the kind of people
who I was hoping represented a breakup
of mainstream consumption in America.
And so by the spring of 1971,
the Caterpillar, Good Time Charlie,
had emerged from his chrysalis
as Whole Earth Harry,
a party store,
come health food store. It's amazing. This is all happening, call it five to eight years before
John Mackey starts Whole Foods in Austin, Texas. So this is how on the pulse Joe was. And Whole Foods
would obviously become the closest substitute competitor that Trader Joe's has out there. I mean,
they're still pretty far apart. But yeah, it's wild. Joe sees all the things that
John would then see and create Whole Foods, and he saw him five plus years before.
Yep.
It's about aligning your tradeoffs.
The other amazing aligned thing about this customer base that he's trying to serve
and the business that he's trying to create of be this sort of anti-supermarket,
with health foods, you can buy batches of food from suppliers that the big chains won't or can't
because they're just not set up to do it.
The CPG companies are never going to touch this stuff, at least in the 70s.
There's this amazing story of someone comes to visit Trader Joe saying,
hey, I have a whole bunch of extra large eggs that I just can't sell to the supermarket chains.
Can you help me out?
They only want large eggs.
Yeah.
And Joe says, sure, what's going on with them?
And he says, well, they only want large eggs.
I'll sell you these extra large eggs that are at least 12% bigger, but for a lower price,
because I can't seem to unload them.
And he's like, why the deal?
And the supplier says, well, the large supermarket chains only want continuous items.
And I'm actually not sure I can regularly produce enough of these extra large eggs.
The kind of disturbing part about this is it's because it's at the end of the chicken's life that they produce these extra large eggs.
So it's kind of the last eggs they'll lay.
And unless I can promise a certain volume and certainty that I'll be able to supply, there's not a market for it.
The big supermarket industry just isn't interested.
Trader Joe's is like, we've got the perfect consumer for you. They're value conscious. Our message to them is sometimes we'll have stuff. Sometimes we won't. And so if you just want to sell those to me, I'm sure I can unload them on our customers. They're going to love the deal. And then it's actually not a big deal for me when I run out because that's not a part of our value proposition the way it is for the big supermarkets. So this begins what Joe calls intensive buying. If we have line a site on something that we can uniquely sell, that we're going to get a great deal on,
that we know our customers are going to love, we should do all we can to go and suck up all the
supply of that thing so we can get the lowest per unit price for our customers.
Yep. We'll tell the story. They'll get it. It's this storytelling. That's exactly right. It's
just like selling wines. They really start to bring that into foods in this era.
So for this whole Earth-Herry era of Trader Joe's, these health foods are the perfect vessel for all this.
Yeah, they basically create a blacklist of things. Over the year,
becomes no GMOs, no high-fructose corn syrup, no artificial flavors, no MSG, no bleached
flour, no added hormones in their dairy products. It kind of blossoms into this big list of
you can just trust the foods that we are giving to you is healthy in some way. The funny thing is
today most of what you're buying from them is processed packaged food. It's just story told very
well. And like, you know, you go to grab stuff in the freezer. It's a lot of salt. There's a lot of
deep-fried stuff. You can't make giant frozen meals at this scale without being very processed,
but they have this brand that they've built over 50 years of paying attention to the ingredients,
of doing what they can, of looking a lot more granola during this 1970s era, so they are
able to carry that brand with them. And they regularly update what they will and won't stock
and what they let their suppliers put in. So there is sort of this funny dichotomy of it being
a quote-unquote health food store. There have been other layers that have been at
since then. Yes. So it's fitting you say granola. The really strategic, critical element of adding
health foods to Trader Joe's isn't just that it also fits all the same criteria that Wine does
and that it's a perfect fit for the Trader Joe's target customer. All that is true. It's different
than wine in one critical aspect. Wine by nature is branded. It's not big brands.
But it's the brand of the winery and the label.
And that carries a huge amount of value.
Health foods, nuts, dried fruit, brand, granola.
This stuff is unbranded at the time.
And thus emerges the opportunity for Trader Joe's to start introducing their own product brands.
But first, before we tell the story of private label and Trader Joe's,
Joe's, this is a great time to thank good friend of the show, Century. That's S-E-N-T-R-Y, like someone's
standing guard. Yes, Sentry helps developers debug everything from errors to performance issues
and fix them before users get mad. Specifically, David, I've started describing it this way.
You know when you open an app and it just kind of hangs? Or you click a button and then an error
pops up? Yep. The people making those apps need to know about this and Sentry tells them so you don't
have to. Listeners, you have almost certainly used something today that relies on Century.
140,000 organizations. Basically, all of your favorite apps use Century to run better.
So I asked the team for some examples. If you're tracking a workout with tonal,
Sentry is there, or checking your kid into preschool with Brightwheel, Sentry, or brushing up
on your Spanish and do a lingo, or going for the win in Valorant, that is even helping to keep
satellites in space.
Or if I literally just read off Century's website, Disney Plus, Cloudflare, GitHub, Anthropic, Versel, Atlassium, all use Century.
And they do more than just tell you about the issues. It helps you figure out how to fix them, too.
Sentry now has an AI debugging agent called Sear, which can find the cause of even the gnarliest issues with nearly 95% accuracy.
Sear pulls from all the contexts that Century already has, your errors, logs, traces, code,
base, etc. to understand the root cause, offer a fix, and get you back to building. Their new AI
code review feature even can help you look at poll requests and predict the bugs before you ship
them into production. So awesome. So our thanks to Century for making sure that all of our favorite
stuff just works. You can check out Century.io slash acquired. That's S-E-N-T-R-Y-O-S-Aquired.
And just tell them that Ben and David sent you.
all right so david private label let's go what was the very first trader joe's private label product also it's
crazy to imagine trader joes without private label right i mean you walk in today you look around
over 80 percent of the stuff is trader joes except wine and some other things here and there
there's rx bars i noticed they used have spin drifts for a while i don't know if they still do some of
their cheeses yep but wine and spirits are the one being category left where
it's mostly not private label, including Charles Shaw, as we will talk about at the end of the
episode.
All right.
So how did they start?
All right.
The first private label product is naturally enough for Whole Earth Harry granola.
Perfect.
You can still buy Trader Joe's granola today.
I'm sure it's not the same recipe.
And it's like kind of the easiest thing, right?
You just take in a giant truckload of generic granola.
It's not that hard to throw it into bags.
And it's literally the product that is used as the euphemism for this whole.
health food category. Yes. Granola. Yes. So granola quickly leads them to private label honey,
freshly squeezed orange juice, which they have in the stores for a long time. They eventually
pull it out because it's too operationally complex. It's such a Trader Joe's thing, right?
Totally. Not easy to handle. Doesn't pass one of the four tests. Get it out of there.
Vitamins, private label, bran and bran flakes. And then the big one, the wine equivalent of health
foods. Their vendor there in Southern California that they are sourcing their brand and
bran flakes from turns out also does nuts and dried fruits. And so Joe and Trader Joe is on a whim because
their vendor of brand also offered it decided like, hey, let's get some nuts and dried
fruit in here too. All right. Now is a great time to eat some roasted and salted fancy mixed
nuts branded by Trader Joe's.
Got any dried fruit in there too?
Not this package.
I will say now when you go and grab,
they're not just like commodity nuts.
They have stuff that you can't get anywhere else,
like weird chili lime blends or sesame-crusted cashews
or interesting trail mixes that are not the generic thing.
Yep.
So nuts and dried fruits become the next rocket ship product category
for Trader Joe's.
and just like wine in the alcohol era.
I mean, customers love it.
Still due to having, this has got to be
one of the biggest product categories
for Trader Joe's to this day.
Yep.
Certainly in terms of space that I see in the stores,
the nut and dried fruit section is huge.
Just like with wine, Trader Joe's
quickly becomes the largest
nut and dried fruit retailer
in the whole state of California.
And it's all either unbranded
or Trader Joe's private label products
that they're selling. Incredible. Also, very high value per cubic inch, as high or higher
than wine. And just everything about it is great for Trader Joe's business model. It's yet another
thing where they're not carving off a piece of themselves and giving it to a brand. They're saying,
nope, this is a Trader Joe's thing. And when people come in here, they have a relationship with
us that we're not this vessel for other people. We're now slowly getting to make 100% of the
brand promise and the experience of Trader Joe's.
be our stores with our items in it and all of our operations.
There is no greater example of the difference
between the supermarket CPG brand, industrial, unholy alliance
versus the Trader Joe's approach, then nuts.
What is the one CPG brand at this time that sells nuts?
Planters?
Planters. Compare that.
It's the same nuts. A nut is a nut.
But what is the brand promise and product experience and job to be done by planters versus the nuts and dried fruit that you're buying at Holyth, Harry Trader Joe's polar universe opposites?
It's funny if I'm eating the same thing of mixed nuts that are salted from planters.
It feels like I should be drinking it with a beer and watching football.
And it's like bad for you.
And it feels like if I'm eating it out of this bag that I just ate the exact same nuts out of.
with this hippie-dippy little basket that shows some like roots in a sunshine on the bag and
this makes me feel good this is health food you're being discerning about what you're putting in
your body so funny it's the same nuts so once they realize this i mean they really just start
moving product category by product category obviously traitor joes is not getting into the
business of making these products themselves but what they
are doing is finding people that currently make something and working with them to make something
slightly different, almost always slightly different, putting it in Trader Joe's packaging
that is in some way unique. It's kind of like what Costco does. They want a unique skew for
Costco, so you're never price comparing it against something else. Like I remember my classic
example at Costco was I went and bought a sonic hair at Costco, but it turns out the way it was
packaged. It came with different accessories. So there was no apples to apples.
with the Sonic hair that I was buying elsewhere.
This takes it one step further.
They're saying, for most of these items,
there is no equivalent somewhere else.
Yeah, there's a few, like the pretzel thins.
But a lot of these things is a different set of spices,
one or two more or less ingredients in the pre-made meal.
Or maybe Trader Joe's merchandisers are collaborating with a supplier
to create a meal from scratch
based on their market intelligence and insights
about what consumers want.
Trader Joe's is actually making almost none of this, but they are integrating up the supply chain in a way where they can say, hey, we need a Trader Joe's unique product that you are making just for us.
And by the way, you will never tell a damn soul that you are the one who makes it.
My favorite example of this, obviously not from the health food era of Trader Joe's, is that there was a period of time, it may still be the case, that Wolfgang Pucks made the frozen pizzas for Trader Joe.
But this illustrates the concept of we got to deliver unique and compelling value for our customers.
It's a Wolfgang Puck, frozen pizza.
You can go buy it in a supermarket.
The Trader Joe's version is smaller in diameter so that it fits in a toaster oven.
Ah.
There you go.
Compelling convenience value for our customers.
You don't have to turn on your whole big oven to make this pizza.
And also, I would bet that it also is just cheaper.
By getting rid of the brand, and thus getting rid of the brands need to market and have overhead costs in marketing, they just eliminate some of the waste in the system and pass that along to their customers.
So you're always getting a little bit of a better value in addition to a little bit of a unique product.
Oh, totally.
One thing we didn't talk about in the description of the brand supermarket industrial complex is how much of the totality of marketing is,
falling on the brands in this world. It's not just the national advertising on television. It's the
couponing. What is the definitive experience, at least in the until recent past, of the modern
American supermarket? You go in with your wad of coupons that you got from the circular. Who's paying
for those coupons is not the supermarket? It's the manufacturers. And then you get into all the dirty
stuff around like slotting fees. Did you read it all about this? Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. Totally. It's so
extractive. The brands have to pay money to the supermarkets just for the right to put their products
on the shelves. And then even in modern days, it's, hey, we've got in-store signage. We've got in-store
TV screens. They call it retail media. You should pay us to advertise in the store at the point
of sale. Trader Joe's is like, let's just eliminate all of that. The brand is just our brand.
If you make the food for us, we will pay you for that. But it's our brand. You don't have to pay in marketing
costs. You don't have to pay the slotting fees to get on our shelves. We don't have retail media
in our stores. The whole thing is about just compressing all of the margin out of all the
activities that need to happen in the traditional system for this streamlined system.
And in Joe's mind, and I think even through the next generations of Trader Joe's CEOs and all
the way up through the company today, that practice of the supermarket CPG industrial complex
is just like gross. It's just disgusting. It's like morally repugnant to them. Like I
genuinely think they feel that way. And it's another take on the same thing that Costco and
Saul Price and Jim Sinical had about why they don't do sales. And Trader Joe's also doesn't do
sales and doesn't have coupons. It's like, you're insulting your customers. You're pitching to them
as if this is this discount and great thing and benefit for them. But actually, it's the result of
this highly pernicious system that inflates costs across the board for them. Right.
It's a privileged position to be in, though, where you're lob and bombs. Probably somebody has to have
a 50,000 skew store. I mean, Trader Joe's and Costco both only stock about 4,000 items
at a time. It's a better business to be in. It's a more pleasant business to get to run. It's a
better business to work in. And at the end of the day, there probably also is going to be a much
larger market for a system that exists the other way to sell all these branded products.
There's a reason that Walmart and Kroger's and...
They're all much bigger businesses. Exactly. So, while we're on branded products, this is a
great little tidbit.
Eater the website submitted a FOIA request to the U.S. government, to the USDA and the FDA.
Oh, I remember this.
This is awesome.
To figure out via food recalls who makes Trader Joe's items.
And by the Freedom of Information Act, they have to provide that information.
And so there's a whole bunch of these on the internet where you can actually see the Trader Joe's PETA chips are made by Stacey's, which is Frito-Lay Pepsi.
The yogurt is Dan and Stonyfield Farm.
Tastybite makes a lot of Trader Joe's Indian food.
The Tastybite Punjab Eggplant ran 339 at Whole Foods.
And the seemingly identical or very similar is a whole dollar cheaper.
So even for these ones that are like extremely similar by cutting out the brand, by buying a mass quantity of it, and by eliminating all these slotting fees and retail media, you really knock a huge amount.
I mean, a dollar off of a $339 price is a huge percentage.
Yeah. Trader Joe's smoothies are very likely the same or very similar as naked juice plus or minus one or two ingredients. The hummus is very likely tribe hummus. The whole thing is great.
So the health food era really has two huge strategic impacts on Trader Joe's. It's getting them into private label, which becomes a cornerstone of the company all the way to this day. The other equally important thing is it diversifies them out of.
wine and liquor as their sole core differentiated thing for their target customers, which is hugely
important because right as health food is really ramping up and hitting its stride, in 1977,
California repeals the fair trade laws on alcohol and nearly everything else, which means that any
retailer can now price wine and alcohol at any price they want. And this leads to all the
alcohol discounters coming in.
Total wine and...
Bevmo and et cetera, et cetera, et cetera.
Now, of course, Trader Joe's is still in a great position and still does great,
but all of a sudden they had this category basically all to themselves.
With a regulatory pseudo-monopoly on it, or at least a scarce number of...
Yeah, right.
A price-regulated monopoly, you know, set profit margins.
But now you've got Bev-Mo showing up.
Now you've got total wine.
You've got discounters, dedicated big box liquor store.
that can just blow it out on prices and becomes a big competitive vector for Trader Joe's.
And this plays out most viscerally in wine and liquor, but it's everything across the board,
every product they sell. Now that Fair Trade is gone, profit margins to start getting eroded
in basically every category. So this is like a big, big strategic challenge, not just for
Trader Joe's, but for every retailer in the industry. And with deregulation like this,
it's good for consumers because prices are going to drop.
In some ways, it's good to be a retailer because now you have more control.
You can move prices up and down when before you were prohibited from doing so.
It's bad because your guaranteed profit margin is going away.
But what it does do is it shifts the entire competitive playing field to how good are you at your operations?
How tight are you at running your business, controlling your costs, accounting for everything,
and understanding all the impacts
now that your profit margins are shrinking
of things that ripple through your business.
Yes, and Trader Joe's certainly
does do all of those things coming out of this.
However, what you just said is true
for the majority of retailers out there,
but if you could somehow find a way
to make the majority of what you sell,
or maybe even eventually everything you sell,
truly differentiated,
one-of-one products.
Well, then you would be insulated from this price competition, have no direct competitors.
And man, it's really nice that Trader Joe's has just built up this private label expertise in the health food market.
Yep.
So Joe decides, all right, end of fair trade and deregulation.
I don't want to undersell.
This is a massive title wave that hits.
it's the industry. Retailers go out of business left and right, and Trader Joe's is not immune
from this either. People think the company is going to go under, like employees think the company
is going to go under, just like everyone else. Joe says, our way out is of course operational
excellence, but really in the long run, it's we got to differentiate and be one of one in everything.
So he calls this phase of the company Mac the Knife, this is really obscure. It's Mac the
knife like the song Mac the Knife from Three Penny Opera. That's funny. I had no idea where that
came from. Joe writes in the book, Friends, Mac the Knife has no competition. That's why I called it
Mac the Knife. My years at Pronto Markets convinced me that where there is no competition today,
there will be tomorrow. You must assume that competitors will open all around you. The answer is to
design a store that has no competition. After 1978, after the end of fair trade, I
paid no heed to nearby supermarkets, liquor stores, health food stores, or anything else.
The whole strategy becomes double down on private label, double down on differentiation,
become one of one.
Become one of one.
I love it.
Obviously, I love it because this is how you and I think about acquired.
Trader Joe's is a very looking at a mirror of the type of business we hope to build.
And so I think all of this is preaching to the choir.
How can you be more niche but serve the shit out of your niche?
How can you provide an incredible amount of value to your core customer base and not care about anybody outside your customer target?
How can you be N of one?
How can you provide only the most unique thing?
I can't decide if these are just the best principles to run a business or if these are just the ones that happen to appeal to us almost as an active vanity.
It's probably not the best way to run a scale business, but it's an amazing way to dominate.
a niche. Well, yes, I think that's true. And if you can somehow find a scale business that you can
run with these properties, it's amazing. That's when you get the apples, the Costco's, the Trader Joe's.
Right. Having no competition is a nice. It's a nice thing. So heading into this Mac the Knife era,
Joe institutes a rule that I assume is still in effect at Trader Joe's to this day, which is that,
Okay, everybody, obviously, private label, that's the strategy. That's for the future here. But Trader Joe's will never introduce any private label product just for the sake of having a private label product in that category.
Which is the opposite of most of these generic, like you go to Walmart, the great value brand is a crappier version of the exact same branded product, but it's priceless. So exactly. Trader Joe's private label products,
must be differentiated on some dimension.
And that doesn't necessarily have to be the item itself,
like we talk about with Wolfgang Puck, Pizza, etc.
It could be the packaging, it could be the price,
it could be the merchandising,
but you must have a differentiating factor.
And yeah, Ben, like you said,
this is the polar opposite
of the private label strategy at all the big supermarkets.
For them, it's like same product.
Are Amazon Basics batteries differentiated?
No, they're just cheaper.
Yes.
Also, it's kind of interesting that Walmart has great value. Target has good and gather. Amazon has basics. Costco has Kirkland signature. Trader Joe's has Trader Joe's. How come nobody else's brand is just the name of the retailer? I think actually it exposes that Trader Joe's is all in. Whereas these other brands sort of want to play both sides. We've got a house brand, but we also work great with third parties. Trader Joe's is like the Trader Joe's experience is walking into our store that is called.
called Trader Joe's and buying our products that are called Trader Joe's. And everything around it is
just wrapped in a big Trader Joe's blanket and you couldn't possibly decouple the two. And I don't
think other retailers feel that way. Yes, this is all to the point of it's doing a totally
different job at the other retailers. The other retailers want to use the house brand brand name
to signal to customers. This is the same product at a cheaper price. Yes. Trader Joe's wants to
signal to customers with all of their products. This is an end of one product. Yep. And it's almost
always true. These pretzels I'm eating with the peanut butter inside, I'm pretty sure there's a
Costco equivalent of these. But a lot of the things are truly unique. Yeah. Well, we'll get into
after Joe's era how Trader Joe's changes a bit as it scales. Yes. But for now, this is like
core, core tenants here. A great one that started during the health food era but then becomes so
emblematic of this is Trader Joe's basically invented packaged almond butter. Yes. Ammon butter
wasn't a thing. I couldn't believe this. Almond butter is one of my favorite foods in the world.
I eat it every day just like I eat a spinach fed or wrap. It is like a part of my identity is
almond butter. And reading this book and realizing that Trader Joe's invented it is like the coolest
thing. Yes. Ammon processing leaves lots of leftover little almond bits that are almonds but are just
little bits of almonds. And there's actually a different technological process that you need
to then turn that into butter versus what you need to use for bits of peanuts to turn into
peanut butter. So none of the big brands did this, even though peanut butter was this staple
CPG good in America. Penuts are also way cheaper to source than almonds. So you have to be
willing to mark up your almond butter or maybe use exclusively waste products, like all the bits
to make it. Exactly. But the big CPG companies.
almonds aren't a big part of what they're doing back in these days.
Right, at this point.
So Trader Joe's goes and learns the process and the technology of how to do this,
finds suppliers that are willing to do it,
and brings packaged almond butter to store shelves and grocery stores for the first time.
Yep.
And the secret weapon to really making all this work was the fearless flyer.
And back to the wine merchandising strategy.
They had the direct channel to their customers to tell long-form stories and merchandise these products and make them end of one.
It's a physical newsletter, and it's all about the product stories of these products that they're bringing to market.
It only comes, I don't know if it's four times a year or six times a year, but there's some scarcity to it, so you actually kind of pay attention when you get it.
there's also a funny thing where at first, Joe was resistant to doing it for two reasons.
One, it was really expensive to publish your own newspaper.
You'd have to work with a real publisher, printer, sort of thing, a typesetter.
And two, you don't want to be in the business of asking all these customers for their address
and then maintaining PII on them and tracking them when they move.
And so that one is great because Joe just realized, well, actually,
if I'm so good at targeting neighborhoods that have disposable income and are highly educated,
like I have a very particular sense of who my customer is. If they move, the person that moves into
their house is probably also going to be my customer. Yes. So I can just do zip code targeting.
And so he's like, this is great. We'll just mail them out to everybody in the area around the
store that I want to serve. And then for the first one, this is amazing. The timing of this is right
around the time that the original Mac is released. And so he was doing the Fearless Flyer himself
using desktop publishing software on the original Macintosh. And I will say when you pull up
the Fearless Flyer, you can kind of tell. It looks like one of these amateurishly laid out
desktop publishing software publications. Which today is part of the charm. But yeah, was done by Joe
himself back in the day. As is the goofy tagline that is very Trader Joe's in their sense of humor of
terrible dad jokes and puns. Trader Joe's Fearless Flyer, as always, free and worth every penny.
Yes. So this leads into, as far as I know, the one only other marketing advertising activity that Trader Joe's does.
Oh, on the radio?
Yeah, radio. And I believe, yeah, the only paid one, which also starts as an organic free thing.
Yes.
radio advertising.
So the classical music radio station in L.A.
Which, again, target customer, educated and underpaid,
asks Joe to come on once a week.
This is especially during the wine era of Trader Joe's,
and do a one-minute segment on a wine that they're bringing to town.
And, of course, Joe's like, amazing, I'm going to do that.
And then it broadens out to food.
And it works so well that they eventually decide, hey, we should actually do this as paid
radio advertising. But unlike everybody else who advertises on the radio, these aren't going to be
generic ads. It's going to be Joe written himself, speaking himself, telling the product
story of one singular product in every ad. And we're always going to end with, thank you for listening.
I love it. It's a non-advertisement advertisement. Joe basically discovered the power of podcasts
to reach your audience back in the 1970s.
They realized they should actually go pretty hard into this.
And in order to justify all the radio ad spend,
they needed a density of stores in a certain area.
And so when they were going to launch a new city,
they would have to make sure they had sufficient number of stores
to amortize buying radio ads for all the different areas it was going to reach.
Right.
Because it's going to reach the whole city.
Right.
They wouldn't just launch one store.
They would go into a city and launch several at a time.
time so you can get the economies of scale of that. There is one other place that they did
paid marketing. Do you know what it is? I don't know that I found this. Donations to the arts.
Ah, yes, yes. Again, on this theme of the highly educated and trying to reach them where they are,
they would do things like go to plays or go to the ballet, make donations appear in the playbill
in the pamphlet and the magazine. Yeah. My wife Jenny, who's an executive at the ballet here in
San Francisco will be very mad at me if I don't underscore for everyone listening that
supporting the arts is a great effective form of marketing for your company.
Because it is also tax deductible.
Also tax deductible. And for Trader Joe's, reaching exactly your target audience.
Yep. So coming out of that mid-70s, whole earth hairy, health food era of Trader Joe's,
it really was these two huge strategic things for the company. One was diversifying them out of
just wine and liquor into another new product category that they could be really differentiated
in. And then the bigger one of just getting them into this private label strategy as a whole
that they could then blow out with Mac the Knife and eventually transform the whole store,
basically, except wine and liquor into private label. There was one other thing, though,
that Joe did as a sort of strategic hedge against all the chaos that the repeal of fair trade
unleashed in the California retail sector.
Yeah, he sold the company.
Yeah.
Yeah, he sold the company.
Just a little hedge.
So what's the story?
In 1979,
Joe and all the other employee shareholders
completely sold out,
100% of the company's equity,
and they sold it to Teo Albrecht,
the owner of Aldi Nord,
which is one half of the Aldi Global Megastore Superchain
headquartered in Germany.
The even crazier twist, though,
is that Joe remained as the CEO of Trader Joe's
for another 10 years after selling the company
until he retired in 1988.
This is not the brother that owns the store called Aldi
in the United States.
Yes. To be super clear,
Aldi does not own Trader Joe's.
One, the Aldi that exists in the United States is Aldi sued, the other half of the
Aldi Empire that split in the late 60s, early 70s.
The relationship that owns Trader Joe's is the founder of Aldi Nord, the other half.
And the entity Aldi Nord never actually bought Trader Joe's.
Teo bought it himself personally.
And yes, Trader Joe's is now owned by the...
three German foundations that he set up for after his passing. And if you look lots of places on
the internet, it will tell you that all he owns Trader Joe's, and that is not true. Okay. How did this
happen? So as we said, when Joe did the management buyout of Pronto Markets, the predecessor
entity to Trader Joe's from Rexall Drugs, Joe was the founder and the largest shareholder,
but about like a quarter to a third of the company was owned by the other early employees.
And so by the time you get to the mid to late 70s here, a bunch of those folks had either retired or passed away
and they started having estate planning needs because Trader Joe starts becoming valuable.
And they had bought in for like a hundred bucks.
Yes, a valuation of $15,000.
Right.
So, yes, this stock is worth a lot.
They've got some giant capital gain.
So Joe and the company know this is a problem coming, and during the mid-70s, they spent a couple of years setting up a whole ownership structure to transfer ownership of the company into an official employee stock option plan or ESOP, as it's known in corporate finance.
This is the exact same kind of structure, by the way, that Dmitico de Soleil and Tom Ford used to protect Gucci as the mechanism by which they rebuff Bernard and LVIA.
MH and the handbag wars between Gucci and LVMH.
Amazing.
Yeah.
So the thing, though, about setting up this ESOP ownership plan and transferring ownership of the
company into it is it was predicated on there being a valuation for the company.
And right as it's about to happen is when Fair Trade gets repealed.
And interestingly, there had not been any primary capital infusions to look at.
The only valuation that ever happened was the $25,000 transaction.
when Joe bought Pronto.
Right. It's a big deal for whoever is coming in to create the valuation for this,
because that'll be the basis for which this entire corporate structure reorg employees owning it
and ESOP is going to be predicated on.
Yep, and the value that the original shareholders can cash out, et cetera, et cetera.
So then the end of fair trade hits.
The whole industry is in disarray, and nobody can agree on a valuation.
Because you don't know if the company is going to survive.
You don't know if it's actually way more valuable now.
The confidence that you have in the valuation is shot.
So it doesn't get issued.
Yep.
So the ESOP plan goes out the window.
Meanwhile, at the same time, Aldi had been expanding into America out of Germany.
And again, Aldi sued.
The other brother's company was the one doing this, not Aldi Nord, Teo Albrick's company.
Who has no exposure to the U.S. market at this point.
Right. But he's a little jealous of his brother, and he really would like some U.S. market exposure. Aldi, by the way, I didn't know this until doing research, is a acronym for All Brick discount. So there you go. That's where Aldi comes from. So Teo and Aldi Nord, they start looking at the U.S. market, too. They actually hire investment bankers to go over from Germany and start scouring the U.S., looking for other grocers or retailers in the U.S. that they could acquire and have Aldi Nord also enter America.
And that's how they find Trader Joe's.
Because at this point, it's still 20 stores all in California.
Yep.
But clearly they've got some magic here.
Yeah.
Teo is enraptured.
He meets Joe.
They hit it off.
He's like, this is incredible.
He spends years trying to convince Joe to sell.
And Joe's like, no way.
You know, you're very nice.
I respect you.
I appreciate what all he's done.
But one, I'm not selling.
Like, why on earth would I sell?
Two, no way in hell am I going to sell to Aldi.
Trader Joe's is special.
This will never be turned into Aldi.
And then the ESOP blows up a couple years later.
So Joe reengages with Teo and he basically says, I will sell to you.
Part of the reason I'm going to sell to you is the current situation is that so much of the income flows through me personally.
And I have a marginal tax rate of 73%.
Right.
The highest marginal tax bracket in the U.S. at this point in time is 73%.
Yeah.
Imagine for every dollar you make 73 cents is getting paid in taxes.
He's like, this is the worst structure imaginable.
Whatever it is, it has to be different than this.
Yeah.
So he says to Teo, all right, I will sell to you, but here are my conditions.
Number one, Trader Joe's will not become part of Aldi.
We will share nothing.
These are totally different businesses.
You won't use Trader Joe's as a vehicle.
for Aldi Nord to come to America.
Two, Ben, like you're saying,
we will have complete management autonomy
and the strategic operating plan
that we are going with now and for the future
is private label,
not the Aldi massive discount operating plan.
You either believe that and are in
or there's no deal.
Three, I can stay on as CEO
for as long or as short as I like.
No management contract.
It is 100% up to me.
Four, the price
you're going to pay for the company is three times what you offered me a couple years ago.
And then number five, the real kicker, we're going to put all this in contract.
It is going to be a one-page deal.
We're going to put these deal points in here.
One-page contract, no diligence, no definitive merger agreement, BS, that's it.
One page with these points.
I will draft it.
Sign the paper if you like it.
Pay me and my employees the money or no deal.
And Teo says, great, I'm in.
Awesome.
So they do the deal.
That's it.
God, the value of a we trust each other one-page contract thing is just, you just see it over and over again in the best businesses and the best partnerships of all time.
I mean, I was reading this in becoming Trader Joe and Joe's autobiography.
I just like, hold on like, this is why Warren Buffett wins.
Yeah.
This is why Berkshire is Berkshire.
So Teo Albrecht owns Trader Joe's.
And then now his three separate foundations, kind of just like the IKEA structure from that episode, own Trader Joe's.
And neither Teo nor certainly Aldi ever invest a single incremental dollar beyond the price that they bought it for.
It is very profitable, cash flow positive throwing off cash for the foundations ever since.
Yeah. As of 1976, so three years before the sale, Trader Joe's carried no fixed interest barrier.
debt never recorded a loss and became more profitable every year. Incredible. It's crazy. I'm
actually not sure we've covered a business on Acquired like this that starts with a giant amount of
leverage where the founder just mortgages his life. Sells his house. Yeah. And then manages to what
within 13 years of founding, get out from under it and then just incrementally pile up more cash
in the business every year. Maybe Nike.
Yeah, maybe Nike.
The Japanese trading company is a little bit of a twist, but...
Yeah, I mean, Teo Albrecht is a bit of a twist here, too.
But again, that didn't impact the business at all.
He just became the shareholder.
So meanwhile, there's a whole other parallel story, which is not for this episode,
which is Aldi sued.
Aldi is one of the biggest grocers in America now.
Yes.
There are 2,500 Aldi's in the U.S.
It is the fastest growing grocer in the U.S. since COVID.
and they plan to open 800 more stores in the next couple of years.
But it has absolutely nothing to do with Trader Tess.
Or even this branch of the family.
Yeah, crazy.
Okay, so this feels like it's some sort of climax, like it's like the end of the story.
The show is called Acquired.
This used to be where we would end the story.
There's like 20-something stores when this transaction happens.
They're still in Southern California.
The company is now 600 stores.
We are so far from...
Today, yeah.
Where Trader Joe's winds up.
I mean, we're only even at this point in time, in the beginning of the transition to private label, the Trader Joe's, as we know it today, has barely been started at the time of the sale to Teo's family.
It's the craziest thing.
It really is just a change in ownership and nothing else.
That does not interrupt the compounding of the business itself.
Yeah.
There's some kind of great lesson in there for investors.
Yes.
Yes.
All right.
But before we tell you that story, listeners,
We have to tell you about another friend of the show that we are very excited about here at Acquired HQ.
That's WorkOS.
Yes.
If you are building software that's used in enterprises, you've probably felt the pain of integrating things like SSO or SCIM that skim for people in the know, various permissions, audit logs, all the other features that your big enterprise customers demand that you have.
And if you haven't felt this pain yet, you absolutely will as soon as you get that first big enterprise customer.
WorkOS turns these potential deal blockers into simple drop-in APIs, letting you scale revenue earlier in the life of your company, or simplify your internal code base if you're already a larger company.
Ben and I were actually just talking with WorkOS's founder, Michael Grinich, and he pointed out that, especially in this AI era, it's not just about scaling revenue.
It's about landing a customer so your competitors don't.
Enterprise readiness has just become table stakes for companies no matter what their stage,
and Work OS is the go-to choice for the best software companies to shortcut this process
and get back to focusing on what makes their beer taste better, building the product itself.
Interestingly, this has accelerated in this AI era.
Open AI, Anthropic, Cursor, Perplexity, Sierra, Replet, Versal,
and hundreds of other AI startups rely on Work OS as their OTH solution.
So why have all of them jumped on the WorkOS train?
Yep, Michael was telling us it's basically two things.
One, AI companies are just scaling so much faster
that they need things like authorization, authentication, and SSO
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And two, unlike the old world of bring your own SaaS product for your little team,
these AI products reach pretty deep into your customer's systems and data
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So IT departments are scrutinizing software vendors
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check out WorkOS. It's the modern software platform to make all this happen.
That's WorkOS.com and just tell them that Ben and David sent you.
All right, David, the big expansion.
So what happens after the sale? Well, the immediate answer, of course, as we said, is nothing.
Joe sticks around as CEO for the next 10 years
running the private label strategy
and it works great
in Southern California
as you were saying about
so here's the thing about Joe
he really is like SoulPrice
who's this incredible entrepreneur
absolute genius
came up with all of this
truly innovative
orthogonal genius strategies
that nobody else in the industry was pursuing
Saul Price did the same
same thing at Costco, but Saul Price isn't the one who really built Costco, Jim Sinigal,
built Costco, the scale Costco we know today. It's the same thing for Joe. He built Trader
Joe's, but he really didn't have any interest in scaling it and taking it outside of Southern
California. I kind of think reading between the lines and some of the things some of his
success said about him and some of the stuff in his obituaries and press, I think he just really
didn't want to travel. I think he wanted to be close to his family. I think he wanted all the stores
within a day's drive to and from from his house.
So when he retires in 1988, again, 10 years after he sold the company,
they're only just shy of 30 total stores.
They had just expanded to Northern California.
The first Northern California store was in San Rafael,
my wife's hometown in Marin, great little town.
I think for Joe, that's sort of what his ambition was,
was to build one of the greatest retailers of all time.
Regional chain.
But he was indifferent, whether it was regional or national.
It's so interesting how some of the entrepreneurs we study have this empire builder strain to them where they're never satisfied.
They have to build the biggest thing in the world and build something of consequence to the world.
And if there's an opportunity to do that, they must go seize it.
It's impossible to not spend their time, effort, life doing that.
And Joe just wasn't one of those people.
The Mark Zuckerberg's.
I think he kind of looked at it and thought, well, to what end?
What is the point of building something giant?
I'm the shareholder.
I like this business.
I have this great life.
I've very positively impacted all the people who work for me,
all of our customers who shopped for us.
I've helped birth the wine industry in California and America.
This is a thing I can obsessively polish.
I do like constantly making it better and making it more resilient and all these things.
But bigger wasn't necessarily the goal.
Yeah.
I can totally relate to it.
But national expansion clearly is what should happen next year with the business.
Yes.
So in 1987, as Joe's getting ready to retire, he hires an old friend from Stanford from his GSP days,
a guy named John Shields, to come in as president and COO under him for a year and then be the
anointed successor to take over. John, after GSP, had gone and worked at Macy's and then at
Mervyn's, the huge retailer that got acquired by Target. So John, new retail, new national
expansion and operations. And most importantly, Joe had known him for a long time going all the
way back to Stanford and trusted him. So on January 1st, 1989, John takes over as CEO.
from Joe, second CEO in Trader Joe's history.
It's crazy. This is 36 years ago.
The modern Trader Joe's is all formed after the sale.
After this. Joe lays down the strategy.
Yes.
And all of the execution happens after, with some tweaks along the way, as we'll talk about.
John does as expected, you know, what he was hired to do, basically.
He does national expansion.
So he takes Trader Joe's from, I think, as best as I can tell, I think it was 27.
stores to 175 over the next 12, 13 years that he's CEO.
And importantly, he made the jump across the country.
Yes.
Let's hop all the way to the East Coast.
So they decided to start in Boston and build out a set of stores in the 500-mile corridor
from Boston to D.C.
At this point, you should be able to go, I know why they did that.
It is the most dense population of universities in America all along that corridor.
And it's kind of crazy.
Dan Bain, who would take over as the third CEO of Trader Joe's in 2001.
He did a podcast just recently.
He actually talked about it.
He's like, yeah, I probably wouldn't have made that decision if I were CEO at the time.
Really?
You're taking a regional Southern California company where all the culture, all the DNA, all the learning, it's all there.
And you're saying...
The Northeast seems like a good place.
Yeah, yeah.
So that's really the strategy for the 90s and the John Shields.
Sarah, it's all about taking the strategy, the retail concept that Joe built, and just scaling it up across the country.
That and fully realizing the private label plan, that took a decade, decades to shift everything that they were selling to Trader Joe's branded.
So the third Trader Joe's CEO, Dan Bain, comes into the company in 1990, first as president of the West Coast operation.
and he previously had been the CFO of a grocery wholesale business
and like John Shields, new Joe and Trader Joe's intimately over a long period of time
because his wife was the company's auditor for like 20 years, like tax auditor and accountant.
So what Dan really does is create the Trader Joe's that we all know today.
And it's the same core strategy that Joe had developed,
especially with the focus on private label, the value to customers,
the same target audience, but Dan expands it to all categories of grocery.
So here's the thing.
When Dan started at the company in the late 90s,
we've alluded to this a little bit throughout the episode.
Trader Joe's was actually a pretty different store than it is today.
The average Trader Joe's customer came in once per month.
And Dan says in a podcast interview about when he started,
At the time, we weren't really a grocery store.
We were that store that sold wine, cheese, and nuts.
We were sort of a party store.
And this is about the late 90s?
Yeah, party is in like when you are throwing a party, you go to Trader Joe's.
So Dan comes in and he says, hey, there's actually a pretty obvious opportunity for us here to really grow same store sales.
And it's people love us.
We're such a great fit for our target customer base.
We just need to give them the right product assortment to keep coming back more often.
We need to be more of a grocery store and less of a party store.
And this is quite different than Joe's strategy.
So Joe actually writes in his autobiography,
we made no effort to have a complete assortment, no sugar, no salt, no flour, etc.,
unless we could be outstanding in it and make a sufficient number.
of dollars from it. Obviously, that is very different than Trader Joe's today. It's funny. I still think
about them as they're not a complete grocery store. Like, I kind of have to go to Trader Joe's in addition
to my normal grocery store run. But they're a lot closer now. You can buy sugar. You can buy flour.
You can buy salt, exactly. Yeah. Joe had no interest in being in those categories. He was really
all about that end of one. Every product must be differentiated. Dan came in and said,
we can still have that ethos, and most of our products can be that way, but we can also serve our
customers in their weekly grocery needs. Now, you can look at this as, that's a great insight,
and he was right, because he massively increased the frequency that people come to the store,
or you could look at it as that is the first little chipping away at the foundation of what makes
Trader Joe special, and we might see great revenue growth and all the numbers taking up in the near term,
but does it take a bite out of their soul
in a way that will catch up to them eventually
when they become just like everyone else?
Yep.
And we don't know, but that is the continuum
that that choice exists on.
Yes.
Given that he started down this path 24 years ago
and people still really love Trader Joe's,
I think they're doing pretty good.
Yes.
So before Dan took over,
Trader Joe's stores carried about 1,500 skews.
Wow, that's really few.
really few. He takes that up to about 4,000. So that's what this is. It's the sugar, the flour,
the salt. It's more than doubling the number of skews. But importantly, he says, we're not going to
become a supermarket. So A, 4,000 skews is still way, way, way less than the average supermarket
again has 50,000 skews. The average Walmart has like 150,000. Right. He says the way we're going to
do this is we are not going to change the footprint of the stores. Same square footage.
same concept. We need to re-merchandise the stores to serve our customers and give them what they need on a weekly basis without changing the nature of what the store is.
So we're going to fit two and a half times the amount of stuff in the same square footage.
Yes. And we're going to do it such that every product on every shelf in every aisle passes the five-foot test.
For every customer who is at least five feet tall, they should be able to reach every aisle.
So we can't just stack to the ceiling like Costco.
Fascinating.
And so when you go into Trader Joe's, it really is very dense.
Oh, it's unbelievably dense.
I mean, that's my complaint, too, is that whenever I'm reaching for something,
there's like a guy behind me trying to get it.
There's a woman in front of me trying to, like, back out of that area.
It's funny, I've stopped thinking about Trader Joe's as the wine and cheese shop
and more as the, it's defined to me by that one diagonal aisle down the middle
with the open freezer chests that has an amazing.
assortment of glorified TV dinners.
Yes.
But also on top of the glorified TV dinners,
there's like the shelves with all the amazing nuts and chocolate snacks.
And then there's like the thin ribbon in between the shelves and the open freezers
where they have one more inventory area for all the little things.
There's so much in that aisle.
And there's always like 40 people in it.
Also, how genius is it?
The freezers are open.
So I'm sure it's very costly wasting the cold air, but think about how much more likely you are to just reach in and grab some Indian food or some mandarin orange chicken or whatever.
Well, also, they got to be when you've got 50 or 100 people in that same aisle all reaching in, you can't have people opening and closing doors all the time.
Right. So I'm sure the psychological thing of, oh, just go grab that little box of food.
plus how many more people they can jam in that aisle
makes the open freezer chest totally worth it.
So you are absolutely hitting on
the other part of the Trader Joe's tapestry.
Trader Joe's is a social experience.
Whether you like it or not.
But for their target customers, this is what they want.
So if you think about the grocery,
retail landscape. It's predicated on basically two things. Efficiency and convenience,
which means lots of skews, real efficient to get in and out of the stores. You want e-commerce?
We got e-commerce. Omni-channel, baby. You want to drive? We got a big parking lot for you.
All these things. And then the other side of that coin is our target customer is families.
We want the American family to shop.
here because you got a big whole hunk of buying power and you're buying a lot of stuff.
Yep. That's not Trader Joe's. No, it's not. Trader Joe's is the opposite of that on every
dimension. It's not efficient to shop here. Our parking lots are a mess. You're going to be packed
into these much smaller stores with a whole lot of other people. It's going to be unpleasant if you
have a toddler with you. Oh, yeah, you don't want to bring your kids here. I mean, sure, yeah,
they've got the treasure hunt thing and people do bring their kids.
to Trader Joe's, but I really had this emotional and mental struggle throughout this whole
episode research process because I'm reading all about how great Trader Joe's is. I have so
much admiration for this company. Of course I love it. And I'm just thinking about my own life.
I'm like, I used to shop at Trader Joe's all the time. I was a Trader Joe's customer and then
something happened in the last couple of years and I never shopped there anymore. What could have
happened? I'm racking my brain. Is it like acquired as been too?
successful. Is that the problem? Am I now like, what are those people? And then I read this other
book for research called Build a Brand like Trader Joe's by this guy, Mark Gardner. Oh, is he the
guy that got the job at Trader Joe's? So Mark was an advertising executive and he always wondered
how Trader Joe's had built this incredible brand. And so he was like, oh, what the hell? I'll just go
work at Trader Joe's. I'm going to find out. I'm going to be an employee. I'll be a man on the inside
and see what it's like. So he did it and he wrote a book about it. And I'm reading this book and
I'm like, oh my God, this is why I stopped being a Trader Joe's customer. It's not for
families. I had kids. That's what happened. So everything about the Trader Joe's experience
naturally lends itself to young professionals and retirees. In the Dan Bain era, they go all in on
this. So intentionally, the experience there,
is to socialize with other people and the crew members of the store. They hire specifically for
extroversion in the people that they hire. Part of the reason why all the employees in Trader Joe's
work every part of the store and everybody does the cash register and everybody does bagging
is to maximize interaction with customers. Wow. There's a bunch of Reddit comments around,
hey, was this Trader Joe's employee hitting on me? It's like, no, they're just that friendly.
They are screening for this in the hiring process.
They're looking for former theater kids, basically.
Yeah.
I would argue on this not-for-families thing.
I was actually talking to my friend who's a mom of two,
and she pointed out that it is so tiring making food for kids every night.
And Trader Joe's, while the shopping experience is not optimized to bring your family in,
it's actually amazing to just go and get pretty healthy, totally ready to eat,
grab it out of the freezer, throw it the microwave meals. And there's a pretty big variety of it,
and you can mix and match and get different ideas. So it's like, even though that's not the target,
it can work really well. They're not intentionally trying to alienate, but this extends to the product
strategy, too. The frozen meals, which are such a part of Treasure Joe's today, they're individually
packaged, individual serving sizes. Oh, yeah. This is the exact opposite of the supermarkets,
family size. We ran out of Beef Bulgogi last night, made it, and it was like, well, I guess that's all
is. You're not finding family size at Trader Joe's. Right. Once I realized this, I was like,
oh my God, this is genius. They're doing what Joe's always done. They're differentiating
versus other retailers. Every other grocer out there, it's all about the families. Right. Bring
your big car, bring your whole family. Bring your kids. We'll get you in and out. Not Trader Joe's.
We should move on. I am a skeptic on the whole social thing. I don't talk to.
people when I go there. I don't want to talk to people when I go there. Most people that are in there
don't seem to want to talk to anyone. We're all just in close quarters. But the stuff that we want is
there, so we're all there. I think most people don't care that much about the other shoppers there.
They do actually care about the employees, though. You have a store that you're going to every week
with a very low turnover employee base. Trader Joe's employee turnover, I think, is five or six percent
annually so super low unbelievably low the average tenure of a crew member is like 10 to 12 years you're
really going to get to know those people like i mean imagine especially if you're a retiree which is a
core part of the demographic here you really want the social experience yep anyway dan really
puts all this into strategy at the company makes sense well david i know there's one more big
chapter that you've been uh holding back from telling the story ready to uncork here so
So the crowning product achievement of the Dan Bain era of Trader Joe's starts pretty early in his tenure in 2002.
I'm sure you have all been waiting for it.
Two buck chuck, baby.
Not a private label product, interestingly enough.
So interesting.
For the volume that they do, it's unbelievable.
But is an exclusive product.
So the story is wild.
But first I'm going to open my bottle of Charles Shaw here that I've been saving the whole episode.
So I got a Sauvignon Blanc.
I assumed the red blend would be the cheapest.
Amazingly, all the Charles Shaw are the same price.
And at Seattle Trader Joe's, it was $3.99, which, come on.
It's supposed to be $2, Chuck, but inflation kills you.
Been a lot of inflation since 2002, Ben.
I'm curious what you are opening.
I am opening a California cab, 2023.
Nice.
Beautiful label.
with a beautiful-looking gazebo here in the image, established 1979.
Really, I guess there must be a story behind all this.
Why is there a gazebo?
This whole thing looks very generic to me.
Amazingly, it is not.
Really?
That is part of what makes the story so incredible.
Who is Charles Shaw?
So, as I pour my cab here.
Cheers, by the way.
To 10 years of acquired.
To 10 years of acquired.
What better way to celebrate 10 years of acquired
than with a glass of two buck chuck
as we are recording an episode on Trader Joe's.
So there is a real Charles Shaw
and Charles Shaw founded a winery in Napa
in 1974.
Right at the very beginning of the Bottleshock era,
the come-up of Napa,
changing wine in America.
And Charles and the eponymous Charles Shaw winery and label
was a high-end winemaker right there with Heights and Freemark and all the other.
He was like a real player in the Napa ecosystem.
This is wild.
And that was all through the 70s and the 80s.
Well, I mean, he's still the biggest player in the Napa ecosystem by volume.
Well, unfortunately for Charles, he's not.
I see.
His name is.
So then in the 90s, he has a series of missteps, and the winery, Charles Shaw, ends up going bankrupt.
Now, this is not a uncommon story.
The list of bankrupt wineries in Napa and Sonoma is long.
Have you ever heard that aphorism?
How do you become a millionaire winemaker?
Start as a billionaire?
Yes.
Exactly.
So he's part of the first wave of wealthy people that get into the wine business,
have success, and then have some missteps and lose it all.
Yep.
So he goes bankrupt in 1995, and the label, the brand name and the trade name, Charles Shaw,
and literally the label with the gazebo and the font and the design and everything,
gets bought out of bankruptcy in 1995, not the winery, separate, not the real estate, not the grapes, not the nothing, just the label, by an entity called Bronco Wines for $27,000.
Ben, have you ever heard of Bronco Wines? No, I've never heard of Bronco Wines. At least, there's like something in the back of my head that makes me feel like it's the parent company of something I have heard of, though.
Well, let me tell you about Bronco Wines. It is short.
for brothers and cousin.
And it was founded in 1973,
same era as all of this stuff,
by one Fred Francia
and his brother, Joe,
and his cousin, John,
all named Francia.
The name Francia
might mean something to people.
Ben, I see you lighting up here.
To anyone who's ever been a college student.
So the Fransia,
The Fransias, the story goes deeper, not what you would expect.
Have you ever done a tour de Franzia?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
We used to do that at Princeton.
That was an Ohio State thing, too.
Yes.
Must be just a general American college experience thing.
I'm glad we opened the wine for this section of the story.
So, like I said, it goes deeper.
The franzias, it turns out, were nephews of Ernest Gallo.
That name might also mean something to you.
The franzias are part of the Gallo family?
It's almost more like the gala is a part of the franzia family, but you could argue either way. Wow. So the franzias, completely separate from the gallows, had their own big-time California wine business in the era before Bottleshock and Napa and Sonoba coming up and then during and after. The franzia business, the older generation, so the generation above Fred and John and Joe, sold out.
in 1973, right as wines are starting to have their moment in America, to none other than
Coca-Cola.
Wow.
So Francis were making real wine at this point.
Francia, as you know, at the boxed wine, does not exist yet.
Coca-Cola operates it for a few years and then decides, you know what, we don't actually
want to be in the wine business.
They sell Francia to an entity called the Wine Group, and the wine group is then what makes
the boxed wine franzia here in the U.S.
So the franzer that you know is the same family,
but two business owners later.
Okay.
There's the theme here, though,
of taking a brand name
and repurposing it for a more mass market, shall we say.
So when the older generation of the franzias
sell the business to Coke,
Fred and his generation,
his brother and his cousin, like, they're pissed.
They're like, screw you guys.
Like, we wanted to run the business.
We want to be in the wine business.
Why didn't you sell the company?
were going to take this thing over. So they're like, F it, we're just going to go out and start our own
wine company and recreate the family business, and that's Bronco wines. But it's going to be
informed by everything that's happened since. So this first generation of the rich people that come
to Napa and Sonoma, start these wineries, lose their shirts, go bankrupt, of which Charles Shaw is
part, Fred and the new Bronco wines develop a business plan. They are essentially going to become
a distressed winery buyout shop.
They are just going to vacuum up.
This is what Bronco Wines is.
This is what Bronco Wines is.
Okay.
And that's how they end up buying Charles Shaw.
That's how they end up buying Charles Shaw
among hundreds of other wineries and brands.
Sometimes they buy the grapes.
Sometimes they buy the wineries.
Sometimes they buy the vineyards.
Sometimes they just buy the labels and the brands,
which is what they do with Charles Shaw in 1995 for $27,000.
Listeners, just so you know, there have been a billion bottles sold of Charles Shaw.
Well over a billion, yeah.
There were a billion sold like probably 10-ish years ago, so probably at least two, if not three billion by now.
$27,000.
$27,000.
So as you would imagine, this doesn't make the younger franzi as popular characters in Napa, shall we say.
I bet.
A lot of resentment from the rich, snotty folks that were building these wineries and then going
out of business. And Fred and his brother and cousin are vacuuming them up for pennies and trading on their
brands. But this actually is the other part of the story of wine becoming big in America.
You've got all the great wineries and the great awards that they're winning and Napa and Sonoma becoming real players.
And it is crazy. I don't think most people know this, that Trader Joe's gets a lot of the
credit for bringing California wines to people, to the masses in the U.S.
And here's where these two parts of the market intersect.
So what Fred and Franzea and Bronco are doing is they're bringing it to the beer
drinking population.
They saw what happened to the family name with the box wine with Francia.
They saw what their cousins over at Gallo were doing.
And they're like, well, shoot, we can do this too.
Like, why should wine just be for snobs? F that.
Amazing.
Fred's perspective on this is like, hey, look, there's a huge opportunity to make wine the new beer.
And you people in Napa are completely missing the boat on this.
He was once asked in an interview how he could sell wine for less than the price of bottled water.
And his reply was, don't you get it?
They're overcharging for the water.
So a couple of years into two bottles.
Chuck here. The New Yorker interviews him and runs this big profile. I'm like, what is Charles
Shaw? Who is Fred Francia? Where did it come from? What is this phenomenon? Fred starts off
the interview by saying, take that and shove it, Napa, when asked about the success of Charles Shaw.
He's a real Maverick.
10% of Trader Joe's 40 million bottles of wine that they sell every year is Charles Shaw.
It's amazing.
I mean, we didn't tee up this section enough for how meaningful this is.
We both just kind of like opened our Charles Shaw bottles and cheers.
But 10% of the time when someone walks in to get some wine from Trader Joe's, they walk out with this.
Yes.
Often a giant case or two of this.
Yes.
Okay.
So it was 1995 when Bronco buys the Charles Shaw label for $27,000.
I had a bankruptcy.
Two-Buck Chuck doesn't actually launch until 2002. What happens?
Well, they got to somehow go grow a ton of grapes, right, and have a giant processing facility and...
You are not thinking like Fred Francia. So he's vacuuming up this whole portfolio of assets that he figures he will find a use for eventually.
So fast forward to 2001, there is a huge overproduction surplus of...
wine in California. I think both it was a bumper year for grapes and then demand was way down
in 2001, a major misjudgment. So there's lots of surplus wine out there. And a lot of paper
rich people in San Francisco are not rich, just 50 miles south. Exactly. So Fred sees the opportunity
of a lifetime, really. He and Bronco come in and they buy up basically all of this surplus
finished, already-made, produced wine at dirt cheap below the cost of production.
What, do they just, like, mix it all together?
I think they kept it separate.
But he's got this huge, huge amount of unbranded surplus wine on his hands.
That is good wine from a lot of different wineries.
And he needs an outlet and a vehicle, a vessel, you might say.
Wait, but aren't they all going to taste different?
Sure.
Who cares?
And this is when he hooks up with Dan Bain and Trader Joe's.
Wow.
It is the perfect wine for Trader Joe's.
It is the perfect marriage here.
So they take this glut of mostly genuinely good wine.
They bottle it up.
They use the Charles Shaw label.
They pull it out of the portfolio, dust it off the bin, and they throw it up in Trader Joe's for a buck 99.
I'm going to read a few quotes here from this amazing oral history of Two Buck Chuck
that ran in Thrillist a couple years ago and was the main source for all this.
Franzia used the exact same name and the exact same label on the bottle as the old Charles Shaw back when it was a real winery.
Even the same original artwork, a picture of a little pagoda.
It's funny that the thrillist article calls it a pagoda.
Listeners, we reached out to Elizabeth Shaw, the daughter of Charles.
Charles Shaw to fact-check this section, and she informed us it was not a pagoda, but a gazebo.
Yes, thank you, Elizabeth. The thrillist quote continues, that used to sit by the tennis court
on Charles Shaw's Napa property. He being Fred Francia, shocked the world by slapping a
$1.99 label on it. Everybody in the industry thought it was impossible. He had the testicles
that nobody else had to sell wine at that price. He'd shoot over to
Portugal or France and knock on the door of a cork or glass producer and say, if I write you a check for
$2 million today, will you fill up this boat with cork? I don't care about quality. It gets better.
People went ape shit. This was around 2002. Articles were saying this wine is amazing and actually
drinkable. It was a fad, the macarena of wine. I would always hear about it from
college students, and it was this blue-collar pride thing. People thought, this bottle is just
as good as the one that's $20. Screw those snobs. Together, Fred Francia and Bronco and Trader
Joe's unlock replacing beer, not replacing, but, you know, wrestling in on beer as the alcoholic
drink of the masses. Amazing. Okay, so what grapes go into it now? Because there's not this glut
anymore. Can't find that information. Yeah, classic Trader Joe's. Yeah. Bronco isn't saying and Trader
Joe's isn't saying either. But at least for those first few years, and this really helps establish
the brand and the product, it's genuinely really good wine that just was surplus on the market
that was going into two buck check. So obviously this becomes a like grand slam home run success
for everybody. As you noted Ben, prices have increased with inflation. Two buck
Chuck is now generally somewhere between $2.99 and $3.99. But yeah, completely revolutionizes
mass consumption of wine. You know, before that, yes, franzia and boxed wine existed, but this is
real wine. Right. In a bottle, priced it two bucks. Yeah. In The Secret Life of Groceries,
he calls it essentially unquenchable demand. So here are the stats that I could find.
2009, so seven years after the launch, they pass 400 million bottles sold.
Three years after that, they pass 800 million bottles sold.
Bronco slash Trader Joe's have confirmed out there that over a billion bottles have been sold.
I'm sure that is grossly underestimating how many have been sold, several billions, I'm sure.
So if they're selling 150 million a year, which,
might be a little low on the estimate. That's 250,000 bottles per store. That's nuts.
Which would put it at 600 bottles per day per store. What did you say a minute ago? Unquenchable
demand for this? Unquenchable demand. I mean, but where else are you going to go and get a
legitimate bottle of wine for three bucks? Four bucks. Nowhere. Nowhere. So Fred Franzia dies in
2022, and the New York Times runs a big obituary about him, in which they quote
Zach Gabale, who's a Somalier and host of the Vine Pear podcast, has been in the industry
for a long time. He says, I looked at stuff like Charles Shaw with a lot of condescension,
but it really helped create in this country what had long existed in Europe, this very
affordable, very accessible, widely available wine that people who wanted to drink wine
and essentially daily could afford to do so no matter what their income. It's incredible.
And you've got to wonder, how often are people walking into Trader Joe's to get a bottle of two-buck chuck
and walking out with 50 bucks of other stuff?
Yes.
Of high dollar density items that are sprinkled all over the store.
I would love to have some nuts to go with my two-buck check.
Yes.
All right, David. Should I catch us up to the business today?
600 stores.
600 stores.
Well, it's worth saying Trader Joe's has been.
become a little less differentiated today. As you said, the stores are bigger. And actually, some of this
is a quote from Joe before he passed away to Benjamin Lur as he's writing this book. He says,
the stores are bigger. The skew count is higher than in the old days. You really can't do the
limited batches of amazing deals anymore because, you know, they really are at scale. It's not like
they're just going to be like, oh, great, you got this one pile of obscure nuts that we just need to
unload in the next couple weeks, great, no problem, we'll take that. They really do need to be
able to distribute at scale. They try to keep that ethos with the sort of seasonal stuff. Like right
now, I'm enjoying the mini Hold the Cones that are the holiday themed, but this is very planned
and seasonal. It's harder to find suppliers that can manufacture at this scale, so they're constrained
to a certain set of suppliers they can work with. But clearly, it's still working, and it's working
better than ever. So perhaps the lesson is you can't be too precious. Once you establish your
differentiation, there are ways to take advantage of your scale, but still keep the soul of what made
you different, even though you're not living it to the extreme, the way that you had to when you were
younger. So by revenue, David, you found this. There are lots of incorrect sources around the
internet estimating their revenue. You found a podcast with Dan Bain where he throws
out a significantly higher revenue figure than the rest of the internet thinks.
Yeah, so he says on this podcast that when he retired in 2023, they were doing north of
$20 billion a year in revenue, and they had just hit $1 billion when he joined the company
in the late 90s. The estimates that had been going around the internet and are still out there
if you search are what more like 16, 17. We know in 2023 it was over 20. Yes. How did you find that
podcast. A lot of Googling. We'll link to it in our sources. It's a really obscure leadership
podcast that Dan randomly went on in January of this year in 2025. So north of 20 billion in revenue
two years ago, so we can kind of extrapolate when we get to growth rate where that is today.
Earnings, we truly have no idea other than knowing that every year they've generated more
absolute dollars of profit than the previous year. On growth, since selling to the Albrecht family,
they've grown stores at about 10% each year, and over the last 20 years or so, they've grown
revenue at a little over 11% per year. So that puts us in the 24, 25 billion of revenue this
year ballpark. Yep. Again, way higher than I saw anywhere reported on the rest of the internet.
Yep. The really interesting stat, though, is sales per square foot. So the sales per square foot
is estimated to be over $2,000 today.
That is the single highest sales per foot
of any grocery store
and twice its nearest competitor in Whole Foods.
Yeah.
It's over 4X the industry average.
Even Costco, who we extolled on the Costco episode,
is 1,200 a foot.
Yeah.
Costco's have really big stores.
Trader Joe's has really small stores
that are densely, densely packed
with high revenue items.
I mean, this is really incredible.
They are twice as good by this metric,
which is really like the key metric in the retail industry.
It's efficiency.
I mean, it doesn't include everything in your overhead,
but rent is a giant part of your costs,
so your efficiency on your rent
is effectively the sales per foot.
If you look at margins,
people estimate their gross margins
are in the low to mid 20%,
which again, we should underscore
all this brilliant business strategy, customers are getting a great deal. Their gross margins are
only low to mid 20%. Most of the grocery industry is in the kind of 27, 28, 29, 30%. But Trader Joe's just
doesn't need as much margin since they have lower overhead and lower operating costs compared to
those bigger stores. In terms of geography where they are, they're in 43 states. They now have
608 stores, they have 70,000 employees, and 100% of their captains, this is the store
manager, were promoted from the first mate role, or the mate role, which is effectively
the number two, and 80% of those came from crew members. So it is a 70,000 person organization,
most of which is promoted internally, which is amazing. And as best as I could tell, I don't know
about you, I think headquarters staff, like corporate staff, is still pretty tiny.
I think that at least as a goal.
I think that's a value of theirs is to do that.
You know, they get all kinds of great benefits and stuff.
For grocery store workers, they get 15% put into a retirement plan.
They have health care benefits, dental, all that stuff.
But the real kicker, they get a 20% discount at Trader Joe's,
which no one gets because they never have any sort of discounts.
The one way to get a sale at Trader Joe's is to work at Trader Joe's.
Yes.
But it is crazy.
like this whole thing about the employees is a belief that if you pay more, you can get better people who will retain longer, that lower your new employee training costs, that lower your overhead. Each employee be more productive, be able to do higher quality work. And most importantly, they'll be happy employees that are there to delight customers. Yes. And as I was talking about earlier, this plays into the social aspect and the extroversion. And that's really important for the customer base. I do really genuinely believe that's true. The biggest thing here, though, is the
turnover. So grocery store employee turnover. It's got to be like 50 plus percent per year is some of the
highest in the entire labor market. I think it might be like 65, maybe even 70 percent. Trader Joe's is
one-tenth of that compared to industry average. Yep. I mean, that means that for your average
grocery store, you are turning over your entire store workforce every year and a half. The answer of
how you run a business like that is you don't actually run the business. You are a real estate company
and you hire the brands to go do everything.
Yep.
And you make money from the brands.
Trader Joe's has this philosophy of we only make money one way,
and that's when someone checks out an item and pays money to us.
We don't make money from our suppliers.
Whereas those other grocery stores,
they actually make a lot of money from the suppliers.
They make a lot of money in slotting fees and in advertising,
and it sets up a bad incentive where you are happy to put stuff on your shelves
that doesn't sell as long as they're going to pay you a lot in slotting fees and in advertising.
Because you're not really making your profits from selling the goods.
Right. And you might be making some, but you can also make money another way. And Trader Joe's is like, no, this way we're only putting stuff on our shelves that people actually want.
Now, the real question, before we sort of wind this home, is if they were publicly traded, what would they be worth?
And this is an exercise I always like to do every time we do private companies.
This is a fascinating one because grocery industry revenue multiples of publicly traded companies are extremely low.
They're like 1x, maybe 1.5x.
It's much worse than that.
So first let's look at Costco, the most similar business in some ways.
Costco is growing about 8% per year, so probably a little slower than Trader Joe's by most estimates, and has a 3% net income margin.
Costco trades at 1.6x revenue, sky high.
And that is the jewel of the industry.
Yes.
For a second comp, Walmart, which isn't all grocery, but a lot of it is grocery, has similar net income margins, similar growth.
Maybe it grows a little slower than Costco.
Walmart trades at 1.3x revenue.
Okay.
What does Kroger trade at?
Kroger trades at 0.3x revenue and Albertson's at 0.1x revenue.
Oh.
Those are much slower growth businesses, and Kroger is actually shrinking with razor's.
thin net income margins between one and two percent. But the question then is, where do you put
Trader Joe's in this? Trader Joe's probably trades at north of 1x, but probably not all the way
at Costco 1.6x. I don't know, maybe around there. So on that $23, $24 billion in revenue that
we estimated, call it a $32 to $34 billion company, maybe a $35 billion company, which delightfully
puts them worth slightly more than 7-Eleven.
That's good.
So here's what I think is really interesting about that.
We don't cover many $30 billion, $40 billion companies unacquired these days.
I literally have in my notes, this might be the smallest company we've covered in recent memory by value.
So if the takeaway from that is, wow, this is really an outlier and it's a much smaller business than they usually cover unacquired,
I think that's actually the wrong takeaway.
Yeah.
Trader Joe's first Joe, and now under the ownership of the Albrick Foundations, is willing to play such a long game.
In the fullness of time, I bet Trader Joe's will be worth at least TEDx that.
Ooh, what a stock pick.
Well, okay.
Simply because they have nearly infinite expansion potential ahead of them.
internationally. They are only in the U.S. And maybe management has decided we will only ever be in
the U.S. Is Kroger International? Is Safeway International? Aldi works internationally. Costco works
internationally. Walmart works internationally. Yeah. 7-11 works internationally. There is no
reason why Trader Joe's wouldn't work in other geographies around the world and work just as well.
They could sell American food as exotic, like cheeseburgers.
Okay, so just to prove my point on this, I have a whole list of miscellaneous fun stuff about Trader Joe's that didn't make it into the rest of the episode.
My number one thing is Pirate Joe's, which is a native Canadian who was living in the U.S., decided there would be an opportunity to bring Trader Joe's products to Canada.
He went all up and down the West Coast, buying Trader Joe's products out of stores, set up a warehouse in,
Vancouver and sold Trader Joe's products, and there was like infinite demand. It created this
whole international legal incident. There is demand in other countries for Trader Joe's.
I think on that alone, in the fullness of time, can be worth at least 10x.
Interesting. And the question is, does the concept work, let's say they're even just
scope to America, where they haven't fully saturated yet, does the concept work to address
a larger audience than the current audience we've talked about all episode?
Hmm, interesting. I'm not sure if it does, but I also don't think it matters. San Francisco is a perfect case study for this. There were already several Trader Joe's in San Francisco and recently one opened in Hayes Valley. It's nuts. The lines are ridiculous. Right. That's the Costco thing, where they keep actually being able to open way more Costco's anywhere than they thought they could.
They could probably open three or four more Trader Joe's in San Francisco with the same target audience and still not be able to serve all the demand.
Yeah, it's funny. My takeaway on the market cap, on it being small in value, is grocery as a category is so much more important than it is valuable. It's almost like the Lockheed Martin episode that we did. It's not a super valuable company by the standards of what we typically cover on acquired. It is one of the most important companies in the world. And grocery is sort of the same way in any given community. You're in a food desert without it. It's essential for life. We need oxygen, water, and grocery stores.
And Trader Joe's happens to have built one of the most, or probably the most culturally relevant brand in an essential category, even if it ends up financially not being as valuable as these other companies we cover.
Yep.
I totally agree with that.
The cultural relevance really is crazy, though.
Have you seen the prices of these limited edition tote bags on the resale markets?
Oh, yeah.
They're like fashion items in Europe.
I almost was like stocking up at the story yesterday.
we were there. You can start a Pirate Joe's for us. Amazing. All right, well, you were pitching me
before we started on when we wind down the story, we should lay out the entire ballet with
what is the way that all these puzzle pieces fit together and what sort of drives the flywheel.
Great. Let's do it. So I would throw out, it all starts with this insight that we don't need to
stock everything. People just need to trust us that they'll find great stuff when they come
here. And if you have that, then you can flip all the assumptions of the grocery business on
its head. Yep. I totally agree. You should always remember that Trader Joe's started as a wine
merchant and they merchandise everything like wines. And that's exactly how you would behave
as a wine merchant. There's no way you could ever stock every wine in the world. You need to
be a merchant and have an assortment. Yes. So you need to be a merchant.
You need high dollar density items, avoid taking up large amounts of space for things like paper towels, and a corollary to that.
They aren't focused on the margin percentage of each item.
We didn't talk about this yet, but they actually don't apply a consistent markup.
They focus on the absolute dollars of margin in each item.
So if something is $20 and you only make a couple bucks of margin on it, that's actually not bad as long as it doesn't take up too much shelf space.
You'd much rather have that than sell something for $4, where you're only making.
like a dollar of margin, even though on a percentage basis, it sounds better.
Trader Joe's is like, no, no, no, the scarce thing is the square inches on the shelf.
You then get very quickly into, okay, so they've got this low skew count, not as low as the old
days, but still only like 4,000 skews.
And if you keep this constraint really aggressively, it means that you're not wasting money
on your less productive square feet.
Every square foot is sort of being used to its highest capacity.
everybody, of course, wishes they could do this.
Why doesn't everybody else just do this?
Trader Joe's has spent decades
making every customer comfortable
with the idea that you won't find everything there.
It works with their brand promise
in a way that Walmart Mini would totally fail.
A Walmart with less stuff?
Cool, I'm not going there.
The whole premise of Walmart is all the stuff.
Yep.
And of course, the way that works is
if you're only buying relatively very few skews,
then you can consolidate your buying power,
buying a lot of that skew.
That's exactly right.
And so when you're buying a lot of any given skew from your supplier,
it means you can lower your unit prices
with economies of scale because you're a bulk buyer,
which you can then pass on to your customers.
So they get additional savings and value.
It also means you can usually avoid a middleman or a distributor
and you can go directly to the manufacturer,
again, cutting out random margin that gets made
that ends up costing more to your customer.
And if you're going directly to the manufacturer,
I feel like this is if you give a mouse a cookie for business.
Yes.
I read that all the time.
Same.
Then you can say, well, hey, we need you to drop this off at our distribution center.
We'll take care of the distribution to our stores.
But please do not arrive at our store, which is great because then, A,
it's not clogging up your very limited parking lot space.
But B, then you actually can stock stuff in your stores with your own employees.
You don't have representatives of brands wandering around working in your stores without aligned interests,
kind of like steering the direction of your business without you realizing it.
And we didn't talk that much about all this, but theft is a huge problem.
And being able to only have your own employees in your own stores is just much better security.
So you've got all that combined with then better coordination of labor schedules because you're the one paying all the people who are showing up to your stores.
So it's this better customer experience and it lets you pass on
the discounts to your customers, but again, it all stems from that one promise of when you show up
to a Trader Joe's as a customer, I may not get everything I need, but I will get great stuff.
Yep. And this also plays into the social experience. Trader Joe's intentionally mostly does
the shelf stocking during opening hours. This is very different than other grocers that do almost all
of their stocking at night when the store is either closed or if it's a 24-hour store where
very few customers are there. Trader Joe's wants their employees doing the self-stocking
with the customers as they're shopping. Well, you kind of have to because of the rapid inventory
turnover. I mean, if you're only stocking 4,000 skews and you're doing a ton of sales in that
store, it means you're selling through that whole inventory really fast. I mean, I saw one
stat that they turn over their inventory 60 times per year.
which is more than once a week they sell through everything in the store.
You found one in that podcast with Dan Bain,
where he said that there are some stores that actually sell through twice a week.
Yeah.
And that's on an average across the whole product assortment twice a week.
That's like a hundred times a year.
On a product level, this is what you were saying a minute ago,
about why you need to be stocking while customers are shopping.
For the most popular products, in the most popular stores,
you're turning multiple times a day.
Yeah, that's true.
The entire store would get emptied out every three to six days,
which means products will probably get emptied out every few hours.
Think about two buck chuck.
That display has to be replenished multiple times a day in most stores.
Such a good point.
It's funny that I've been thinking about all the ways this is similar and different to Costco,
because a lot of this will rhyme.
On that episode, we pointed out that the rapid inventory turns meant that you could
sell through your inventory before the net 30 payment was due. And the benefit there is that your
suppliers are effectively financing your entire inventory and you don't have to tie up your own
working capital in the inventory. This is amazing. I know where you're going. Complete opposite with
Trader Joe's. Trader Joe's does the opposite. Yes. They pay up front. They pay on delivery.
Yes, they pay cash on delivery. You just have cash as soon as you drop something off at their loading dock.
this gives them a huge edge of being a preferred customer for these vendors, that those companies
never have any cash flow issue or a waiting issue. As soon as they drop it off, Trader Joe's
makes good on the payment. I have never heard of any other retailer that does this. Cash on delivery
of inventory. Everybody else, Costco, Amazon, Walmart. Yeah. Oh, pay in 60 days, 90 days.
Yeah. A critical part of the business model is the cash flow that they're
are selling the items before they pay for them. Trader Joe's has said, no, we don't care about that
whole part of the industry. We would rather have the benefit that we get from paying suppliers
quickly than the benefit we get from the vendors financing our inventory. We're not worried
that we're going to sell the inventory. Yes. That is true. They actually take risk to a lot of
traditional grocery stores are kind of like a consignment basis where you still own the inventory,
even though it's sitting on the retailer's shelves,
the brands are actually still taking risk
even though it's in the store.
That's not the Trader Joe's philosophy.
That's right.
Which, of course, gets to Private Label,
which dramatically simplifies your business model
if you can get customers to be game for it.
Well, I think there are a couple things
you've got to keep in mind about Private Label at Trader Joe's,
and the most important is that the job Private Label is doing
for Trader Joe's is completely different
than the job private label is doing at every,
other retailer. Everywhere else, private label is code for same but cheaper. Right. It's generic. It's
unbranded. At Trader Joe's, private label is code for this is a differentiated product.
The other critical thing I think about private label for Trader Joe's that fits into the next
puzzle piece is the marketing strategy. Trader Joe's is built on story-based product marketing, just like a wine
merchant. Nobody else is built that way. They're built on brand-based marketing, where most of,
if not all, the marketing is being done by the brands on a mass market, often price and deal-driven
basis, whereas Trader Joe's marketing strategy is all about long-form storytelling, and that
only works because they have differentiated unique products.
Yep, totally does.
All of this really leads to low overhead.
When you need to do fewer things in your business,
you just need fewer fixed costs.
And so when you have fewer skews and smaller stores
and more narrowly scoped operations
and fewer suppliers you have to work with,
fewer media channels and marketing initiatives.
Yes, higher employee pay, or deeper product knowledge,
or just less overhead overall,
which means you can charge your customers less for items.
That, to me, is the puzzle.
I have a bunch of things they don't do in Y,
but they're all kind of obvious at this point.
No sales or coupons that just drives your customers to wait for sales.
No loyalty programs, because, again, overhead costs to administer.
They have a funny quote on this.
We're loyal to all of our customers,
rather than trying to buy loyalty through rewards or discounts.
There's also this amazing thing about Trader Joe's that's so different
than the rest of the retail industry.
As best as I or anybody else can tell,
they don't collect any data.
I know. I was trying to figure that out, too.
Every other retailer basically are, like, data operations.
Yes.
How much can we personalize a circular for you?
Trader Joe's doesn't care about any of it.
It's so true.
There's no account when I'm checking out.
They have no individual shopper data.
Like, I'm sure they have store data and product data,
but nothing about you.
And on the whole, like, we don't do technology thing, so they have no PA system in the store.
They use a bell, which is cute, and actually feels much nicer than the sort of oppressive PA system of a grocery store.
There's no screens in a store.
There's no computers on the floor.
They didn't even have price scanners until Dan Bain became CEO in 2001.
And I think they're not like anti-technology, but I think anytime they're considering a technology, they're not looking around and saying, oh, we got to do digital transfer.
because everyone else is doing it, I think they're saying, wait, why would we do that? And how does it fit into our
particular business model? Because, like, they adopted desktop publishing to be able to accomplish
the fearless flyer for a hundredth of the costs that they would have done it otherwise. But all of
this other technology they've decided doesn't suit them. And just adds overhead costs.
And they say, like, hey, we always evaluate this stuff and we compare it against investing and
opening the next door. And opening the next door is always wildly.
more profitable. So we just do that.
Yep. So true.
All right. Well, that's it for my
ballet of
how all of this reinforces each other
for why Trader Joe's works.
And what a beautiful ballet it is.
All right. With that,
let's move into analysis.
I actually did basically my whole playbook
throughout the story there.
Let's do power, though, and analyze
Seven Powers framework. So for anyone
who's new, power is what enables
a business to achieve persistent, different
returns or to be more profitable than their closest competitor and do so sustainably.
So, David, at various points in Trader Joe's, which of these do you think they had?
You've got to remember about power. It's all relative to the other players in the industry.
Yeah. So scale economies, the first one that exists in so many of the companies we cover,
Sure, of course Trader Joe's has economies of scale, but relative to their competitors in the grocery industry, they definitely don't.
They're much lower scale.
Oh, I disagree.
On a per skew basis, I think Trader Joe sells more nuts than...
Oh, okay, that's fair.
I mean, think about if it's against Safeway and Safeway has 30,000 skews and they have four, I bet it's actually pretty competitive on who moves more volume.
Yeah, okay. Or yeah, look at two buck chuck, too.
Yes. Great example. Okay. I mean, it's got to be the best selling wine in the world.
Interesting. So maybe they do have scale economies then on a skew basis. I buy that. They don't on like a real estate basis or a labor basis or anything like that.
Right. That's exactly right. But on a buying power per skew, yeah, they probably do.
They are still counter positioned. It's rare for a large company to be counter positioned. It's very easy to
see the examples of counter positioning in the early days, like stocking liquor when that was too
difficult or off strategy for 7-11 to do. But things like, we're not going to collect your data.
Safeway can't not collect your data. Or we're not going to participate in the whole shadow economy
of the CPG supermarket industrial complex. We're not going to do stocking fees,
slotting fees. We're not going to do co-op marketing. Right. I think technically no one
no slotting fees anymore. Everyone's hiding the ball and found a new way to charge their
suppliers. Yeah, that money went somewhere else for sure. Kroger can't not do that. It's part of
the business model at this point. You can't shake out of it. So I think that Trader Joe's is still
counter positioned in that way. I do really think they also have a counter positioning in their
target customer focused on non-families. Again, not that Trader Joe's can't be good for families,
but everybody else is 100% catering to families.
And Trader Joe's is saying,
crowded stores, great, small parking lots,
great, individual servings, great,
we're here for you.
Right.
Network economies, I think this is non-existent.
Yep.
Just because somebody else shops at Trader Joe's
doesn't make it better or worse for me to go there.
Switching costs?
At first I was going to say,
there's no switching costs,
but I don't know, you get used to liking some of those foods.
You don't want to shop somewhere else that doesn't have them.
In fact, this is funny.
my wife rags on me all the time for this. COVID hit. We ran out of all of our snacks. And I was
sitting there thinking, I really wish I had a dark chocolate peanut butter cup from Trader Joe's.
I love those. And I eat like one a night after dinner. And it had been like a week.
You're so disciplined. One a night. Of it being completely empty, that little plastic tub.
And at some point, I was like, how am I going to get these? Because I can't go to the grocery store.
and I look on Amazon now mind you this is like a $3 product and someone's selling it for $19
and I was like I'm a buy that I'm a buy that and it arrived and of course it's in like real
jank packaging because it's someone bought it and repackaged it and my wife is just like you got to be
kidding me you bought this for $19 you paid a 7x markup or whatever on so they have switching costs
there you go apparently my willingness to pay is
Actually, 7X, what they're charging.
Amazing.
Perhaps somewhat related, they have huge, huge brand power.
You know, especially today.
They really do have differentiated products.
And a lot of the products are differentiated on something other than what the actual product is today.
Differentated on packaging.
Yeah.
And that's where I think brand is really playing a part here.
Yeah. Take the peanut butter cups. You can get peanut butter cups elsewhere.
Look, if I felt it was the same peanut butter cup that I had grown accustomed to,
I would have bought it from elsewhere, yes.
Okay, fair enough.
But yeah, I like these peanut butter pretzel nuggets more because they're the Trader Joe's one.
And I'm confident that there are grocery stores that sell something almost identical.
And to me, it's just not the same thing, even though it's probably the same thing.
Process power, this one's always a hard one to nail down. I'm sure they have some of it,
but I don't think it's the thing
that sets them apart
and cornered resource.
I guess at this point,
the supplier relationships are,
because some of these supplier relationships
make a huge amount of their only product
or largest product just for Trader Joe's.
So having those contracts locked up is cornered.
Yep.
Sounds right to me.
The scale economy is this surprising.
You're right.
They do have it.
It's just on a skew level.
It's the same thing with Costco.
When Costco buys a ski,
they really buy a skew.
It can be the largest source of revenue for that supplier.
Yep.
By the way, we should say for anyone who's wondering,
Costco is a much, much, much bigger business than Trader Joe's.
They're sort of cousins of each other in business model,
different in all the ways we've talked about,
but Costco's revenue is 10x, maybe more.
Last year, it was $275 billion.
Now, margins are a different story.
They famously only mark up 11 to 14%.
And Trader Joe's is probably,
I don't know, it seems like about twice that, but Costco is much, much more-scale business.
Yep. And to my point about international, Costco is an international business.
Totally fair point. All right, David, so you've now thought about Trader Joe's specifically for a month, but we've known we were doing this for a while.
What is your quintessence as you think about this business? Yes, I've thought about this a lot.
my quintessence for Trader Joe's is that there are no broken promises in the chain.
So every aspect of how Trader Joe's works is genuinely a promise ultimately to their customers that they are keeping.
The real estate strategy, we're in your neighborhoods.
The product strategy, we have differentiated products that are truly differentiated on some dimensions.
mention. Product nature, price, packaging, story, etc. The labor strategy, they genuinely pay their
workers way more than the industry and their labor force stays with them way longer than the
rest of the industry, meaning you will develop actual relationships with the people who work
at your Trader Joe's store. Yep. The marketing strategy, the storytelling, the merchandising,
It's the opposite of the CPG supermarket industrial complex.
It's not the, hey, flashy deal, look at this fad of the week.
It's a merchandised product.
Yep.
There's no broken promises all the way through.
I like that.
Mine is a zoomed out framing of how we've talked about all these things on the episode,
and that is it all boils down to independence and control.
Trader Joe's has built a system where they are just not that dependent on others in the ecosystem
in a way that supermarkets traditionally are. Supermarkets are effectively one half of a
partnership with CPG companies. Content is on there too because content is where all the ads are
placed on TV that then drive the people to buy the CPG products at the grocery store.
I feel like Ben Thompson used to write about this, that it was the American Holy Trinity of General Motors and the NFL and Procter & Gamble.
Yes. It's a partnership, but it's not a great partnership because as soon as the CPG product becomes so wildly differentiated, they're going to start commanding somehow squeezing more in the value chain.
Or let's say the grocery store got differentiated. They're going to start squeezing more in the value chain. Trader Joe's has been a 50-year exercise to,
ensure their independence where no one has leverage over them. Individual little things like a landlord
has leverage over them in a store negotiation or a supplier does for a given skew. But at scale
overall, Trader Joe's is really, really resilient from external things that could dramatically
shake their business. They've built, I think we talk about this a lot, stored potential energy
in their business that just make them
more resilient. And it's crazy that the internet happened
and it hasn't been bad for them. They've grown just as fast
in the internet era as the non-internet era. It's hard to imagine
things that could shock them more.
There is the perfect existence proof of this
in COVID. Pretty much the only way
that all other grocers could deal with COVID
was Instacart or doing their own delivery, which actually
Instacart powers a lot of that now as a white label service, which is
fascinating, but anyway, Trader Joe said, nope, we're just not going to do that. We're going to
find a way to operate our stores during COVID. And they didn't miss a beat. Yep. So my question
for you to close this out is, how important do you think private ownership is to making all this
work? Because on our Rolex episode, we said it's really important that they're owned by a
Foundation. In our IKEA episode, it said it really important that it's family and foundation
controlled. And on our Mars episode, we said it's really important. Is this really important
that they're not a publicly traded company? There's the fascinating other example of Costco.
Right. Which, again, of course, is very different on a lot of dimensions, but spiritually aligned.
Joe actually says in his autobiography, he looks up to them. Yeah, the one store that's out there that is
cut from the same cloth as us as Costco.
Yep.
And they're obviously doing great as a successful public company.
I think in this case, though, yeah, probably the fact that Teo Albrecht bought it when Joe needed to sell made a huge, huge, huge difference.
Okay, so play it forward.
What do you think it would have affected?
Like, in the Rolex scenario, I think they wouldn't have been able to buy the many years.
of probably bad financial returns that they had amidst the court's crisis if they were publicly
traded. What do you think management would face pressure on? Because as best we could tell,
in recent years, they've grown 11% per year, they've gotten more profitable every year,
shareholders should love that. The biggest thing to me is just steadfastly not participating
in the CPG supermarket industrial complex.
There would be so much pressure, I think,
from public markets to be like,
well, can't you just take like a little bit of co-op marketing dollars?
A perfect example.
The demos in the store.
Trader Joe's has lots of samples and lots of demos.
Oh, if you walk up to someone and say,
what does that taste like?
They rip open a bag and just let you try it.
Oh, yeah, but there's also an organized program.
Part of the store where they are showing sample.
For a while, they had the vendors do that.
That's like standard practice in the industry is the vendors,
even in private label, whoever makes the stuff,
they come to your store, they do the sampling and the demos
because they, in theory, should be more knowledgeable at the product.
And then they also finance it.
So like the free items that are given out paid for,
that cost is eaten by the vendors.
And Trader Joe's actually did this for a while.
And then they started running into problems like you might expect of customers would come up to the people that were doing the sample demos.
We're like, oh, where do I find this?
You know, what do you think about that?
And they'd have to say, sorry, I don't work here.
And this happened enough that Trader Joe is like, you know what?
It's not worth it.
We're going to do this in-house.
We're going to have our crew members do this.
We're going to train our crew members more on the new products.
We're going to have them rotate and do the sampling.
And people in the industry were like, you guys are crazy.
what are you doing? Why are you paying for this? Nobody else does this. They said, yeah,
we know, but we're going to do it anyway. Yeah. So my take on this is it was really important
for a long time, but I think if they went public any time in the last 10, 15 years, it would have
been totally fine. Really important for a while. I mean, now, yeah, totally. It could be public,
it could be fine. But in the good times, it's always fine to be public. It's about in the catastrophic
events, are you able to control your own destiny? Yep. All right, I know you've got some fun
stuff up your sleeve. Yeah. Okay, a couple fun little Trader Joe's carve-outs before we get to
our personal carve-outs. My first one was Pirate Joe's that I talked about earlier. Maybe my
favorite thing about Pirate Joe's website that used to exist, it now just redirects to the
Wikipedia article all about Pirate Joe's in the international legal incident that it caused.
It's awesome. Second was, you mentioned this, but Trader Joe's doesn't use PA systems. It uses
bells. I never knew what the bell rings meant until doing research.
One bell means come to the register.
Yep, open a new checkout line.
Two bells is, I need a manager.
Nope, that's three bells.
Two bells is a customer needs help carrying their bags to their car or whatever.
And then three bells is we need the captain or the first mate.
We need a manager.
But basically everything can be expressed through those things.
So why do you need a PA system?
Totally.
That's great.
And then my last one, I've got a little quiz for you.
so after joe retired from trader joe's he had a whole second career dabbling in doing a few like retail
turnaround jobs as you might expect lots of retailers valued joe's advice and he started eventually
just sitting on corporate boards during which he joined the board of a company that a young
entry-level employee would work at concurrently during the same time they overlap
and that young entry-level employee would go on to become a central character in the Acquired Cinematic Universe
and in modern business history.
Can you guess what company that was?
Oof.
Give me some hint.
What industry?
I'll give you a hint.
I figured you might need a hint.
This might give it away.
It is a restaurant group.
Starbucks.
Mm, good guess.
Nope.
Denny's.
Denies.
Oh.
Joe was on the board of Denny's while a young high school-aged Jensen Huang was a bus boy and waiter slinging sausages at Denny's.
Amazing. I am confident they never crossed paths.
Yes, me too. But there is a direct connection between Trader Joe's and NVIDIA.
Co-workers. You heard it here first. Trader Joe and Jensen Huang were co-workers at one point in time.
time. I was really wondering if you were going to pick up on that in the research. No, no. I'm glad I got
you. That's amazing. All right, to do our personal carve-outs? Let's do it. I, because I can't help
myself ordering every Apple product and most new tech gadgets that come out and then just having a
giant pile of them, I ordered AirPods 3 on launch day with my new phone, and they're awesome. It just is
crazy how Apple gets better and better and better iteratively each time with these things.
And I think the sound quality is better.
There's days I listen to so many audiobooks and podcasts
that I actually don't notice it as much
because I feel like any time I'm listening to something,
it's words, not music.
But the fit's amazing.
It's much more granular now.
The fit is better now.
It's much better.
The noise cancellation is insane.
I think a lot of its physical cancellation.
Maybe the algorithms are better too.
And they're more comfortable over a long period of time.
Like on long runs, I notice they just stay in my ears
and are more comfortable.
So I think they're great.
I can second that.
I got them, too.
By far are the best AirPods yet.
I still prefer the meta-glasses, though.
Like, I just have realized I really don't like having things in my ears.
Well, good thing there's a new one of those, too.
Yeah.
All right, my carve-out is an update in my ongoing carve-out saga this summer and fall.
Oh, did you buy another video game console?
We got a Swift.
Or I should say, more accurately, my older daughter had her fourth birthday last weekend, and I got her a switch.
We did it.
An original switch.
I got her an OLED switch.
This is part of my thought process.
It's like, she doesn't need the switch too, but Mario Cardi is going to be perfect.
So Mario Card 8, I've played a lot of Mario Carts over the last 25 years.
Mario Card 8, I think, is the best.
It's just amazing.
Perfect.
And get an OLED switch for her.
will be able to play together in tabletop mode.
It has been amazing.
So if I thought about it, maybe I could have predicted this.
You know, she's four, and she's obsessed with princesses and being a princess.
She doesn't actually care at all about winning.
She cares about being all the different princesses.
And so every race, she chooses a different princess.
And then, this is so fun.
what she has decided
she really loves about the game
is when you fall off the track
and the little cloud guy
comes and picks you up with the fishing pole
and toes you back onto the track
she thinks it's a fairy
and so she loves when the fairy comes
and picks up her princess
and puts her back on the track
after every race she says
I want to pick a new princess
and then I want to pick a new course
and I want a course where we fall off
and she goes
Rainbow Road every time
Yeah, is this one where we fall off? Is this one where we fall off? Is this one where we fall off?
That's so funny. And then I race as fast as I can. And then another like 10 minutes go by where she just spends the whole time driving off the road and the little cloud guy toes her, you know, incrementally forward each time. And she has a blast. It's wonderful.
That's awesome. Parenting. So unexpected. So fun. Congratulations. All right. Well, listeners, we have some thank yous. First, thank you.
to our partners this season.
JPMorgan, payments, trusted, reliable,
payments infrastructure for your business
no matter the scale.
JPMorgan.com slash acquired.
Sentry, the best way to monitor for issues
in your software and fix them before users get mad.
That's century.io slash acquired.
WorkOS, the best way to make your app enterprise ready
starting with single sign-on in just a few lines of code.
That's workos.com.
And Shopify, the best place to sell online,
whether you're a large enterprise or just a founder with a big idea, Shopify.com slash acquired.
You can click the links in the show notes to learn more about all of them.
And as always, all of our sources for this episode are linked in the show notes.
I have a huge thank you to Benjamin Lohr for writing the fantastic book,
The Secret Life of Groceries.
And as always, to Arvin Navarotnam at Worldly Partners for his amazing write-up on Trader Joe's
linked in the show notes for anyone who wants his awesome analytical.
take on why the business succeeded. David, I know you've got some too. Yeah. And then continuing on
the book front, Mark Gardner's really fun book, build a brand like Trader Joe's about his experience
going and working as a crew member at Trader Joe's for a year. So helpful in the research. A very
entertaining read, too, by the way. And then Joe Colom. Yes. Writing his autobiography,
becoming Trader Joe. It's a great book. And obviously, the main source for this episode. And then just
two specific research thank yous for this one, both to Instacart. First to Ravi Gupta of Sequoia Capital,
formerly CFO of Instacart. When we finalized that we were going to do this Trader Joe's episode,
Ravi was of course our first call because we were like, help us with grocery, please.
Yo, we don't know anybody in the grocery industry. Help us out. Robbie was incredibly helpful,
including connecting me with Chris Rogers,
the current CEO of Instacart.
And Chris was also incredibly helpful
giving me perspective on the industry
and e-commerce within it.
Thank you, Ravi and Chris,
and all the other grocery folks and resources
who you connected us with and pointed us to.
Yep.
Well, if you liked this episode,
check out our episodes, obviously, on Costco.
I also think you'll probably like IKEA.
Any others to point folks toward, David?
Walmart, of course, for sure.
Absolutely. Walmart. Perhaps Amazon Part 1 also may be of interest, since this is effectively the anti-Amazon. It's the everything store and the very few things store.
Oh, and Ben, how could we forget? We made an episode on Whole Foods back in the day. The day that Amazon bought the company.
It's a little bit embarrassing. What was that? 2016, 2017. It was a little bit amateur hour.
I didn't re-listen to it for this episode, so I don't know if it holds up or not.
But we do have an episode on Wholefeeds.
I feel good about anything basically 2020 onward.
Yeah.
After you finish this episode, come talk about it with us at Acquired.fm slash slack.
Get all the goodies, including the pictures and graphics and stuff that we talked about and corrections and help us pick the next episodes by joining our email list.
That's Acquired.com slash email.
And with that, listeners, we'll see you next time.
We'll see you next time.
And as Joe would say in his radio slots, thank you for listening.
Thank you for listening.
Who got the truth?
Is it you?
Is it you?
Who got the truth now?
Huh.
