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词条 Nugget Markets
释义

  1. History

  2. Branding

      "Price Challenge"  

  3. Points of Difference

  4. Vallejo store controversy

  5. Accolades

  6. Locations

     Active Nugget Market stores  Active Food-4-Less warehouses  Defunct stores   Unfinished stores  

  7. References

  8. External links

{{Multiple issues|{{POV|date=March 2016}}{{Advert|date=March 2016}}
}}{{Infobox company
| name = Nugget Markets, Inc.
| logo = Nugget Markets logo.svg
| type = Private
| key_people = Gene Stille, Chairman
Eric Stille, CEO/President
Chris Carpenter, COO/Vice-President
| industry = Retail (Grocery)
| products = Grocery
| revenue = 400 million USD (2017)
| num_employees = 2,000
| homepage = nuggetmarket.com
| foundation = 1926
| location = Woodland, California
| locations = 16
}}

Nugget Markets is a family-owned upscale supermarket chain operating within the greater Sacramento metropolitan area. It is headquartered in Woodland, California. As of October 2009, the company operates nine of its flagship Nugget-brand stores, as well as three Food 4 Less franchises.

History

In 1926, Nugget Market opened its first store in Woodland, California by the father-and-son team of William and Mack Stille. Mack Stille ran most of the day-to-day operations and introduced many unconventional policies to the store, such as incorporating meat departments, installing refrigerated produce cases and employing checkout stands equipped with power belts. Their decision to provide employees with wage and benefit packages that were unusually high for the industry gained them notoriety for the time.{{Citation needed|date=August 2016}}

In the late 1970s, under the leadership of Mack's son, Gene, and grandson, Eric, the company began its expansion outside the local Woodland community by opening a Nugget store in neighboring Davis. In 1984, Nugget acquired a pair of Sacramento Alpha Beta grocery stores and converted them into Nuggets, one in the Greenhaven-Pocket neighborhood, the other in Foothill Farms on hillsdale blvd. All Alpha Beta associates were invited to join the company, and many continue to work with Nugget today. In the early 90s, Nugget opened its first Food 4 Less franchise in Vallejo, California.

In the late 1990s, Nugget developed their new Fresh to Market concept, pairing European-style open-air marketing with higher-end products and specialty departments, such as their Cheese Concierge, Pastry Chefs in a full-range Bakery, Full-Service Kitchen, Healthy Living Department, dedicated Seafood butcher and a Juice & Espresso Bar.

In 2001, the company built its first Fresh to Market store in Vacaville's Browns Valley Marketplace and then at Oak Tree Plaza in East Davis.

In 2008, Nugget sold its in-store pharmacies to Longs Drugs.

Branding

Unique to Nugget Markets is their architectural feature at the entrance of new stores, which include a tower and/or a robed woman with a basket of food above her head. The robed woman, in particular, became the corporate logo and mascot of the company.

"Price Challenge"

Since 1926 Nugget Markets has allowed their customers to pick up price comparison-survey at their stores. With this form, they can survey prices on up to 25 items between Nugget and one conventional competitor. Nugget claims to win at least 80% of item-to-item price comparisons with other full-service markets.{{Citation needed|date=August 2016}} The results of their customer's surveys is aggregated and displayed on a scoreboard within their Nugget Market stores.

Points of Difference

Nugget continues to struggle against its image as an exclusive upscale grocer due to its specialty products and upscale store decor. Nugget identifies dominant local grocery chain Raley's & Bel-Air, as well as national chains Safeway and Whole Foods, as its primary competition.

To differentiate themselves from the local competition, Nugget Markets are the major regional distributor of several high quality specialty brands, such as Boars Head Deli Meats, Harris Ranch Beef, and Equator Coffees. Nugget supports local produce growers with its partnership with NorCal Produce of West Sacramento, California. Signs throughout their stores tout these partnerships and the quality of the products as key points of difference to shop at Nugget.

Nugget has also continued its stance on provided quality employee benefits, with wages and benefits meeting or exceeding those of its competition. Strong benefits coupled with a positive work environment and responsive leadership have allowed Nugget to remain a union-free workplace. Fortune has recognized Nugget Markets for the past three years as one of the 100 Best Companies to Work For. In 2008, the company placed 12th,[1] in 2009, Nugget reached the No. 10 spot,[2] and in 2010, they moved up to number 5, placing just behind Google.[3]

Nugget continues its push to open new stores in the Sacramento and North Bay regions. Recently opened locations are in Elk Grove and El Dorado Hills. There are also tentative plans for Nugget to build a unique, significantly smaller size store under the K Street Mall revitalization proposal of Hank Fischer/Evergreen Developments. The K Street location would likely be half the size of a traditional Nugget store and, given the nature of the proposal, more focused on their Full Service Kitchen, Bakery, and Juice Bar.[4]

Vallejo store controversy

In 2003, Nugget began plans to open a Nugget in Vallejo. The company sought assurances from the city that a supercenter store would not enter Vallejo.

In 2005, Wal-Mart made clear its intention to build a Supercenter in the White Slough neighborhood, on the location of a former K-Mart. Given the proximity of the proposed Supercenter to Nuggets' location in American Canyon, as well as the guidelines of the neighborhood plan preventing the construction of a store of this type, the plans for the Nugget in Vallejo continued. However, Eric Stille made clear to the Vallejo City Council that the approval of the Vallejo Supercenter Wal-Mart would effectively mean the end of the Vallejo Nugget.

In November 2006, with construction underway at the Vallejo Nugget location, Stille announced the company would no longer build a Nugget in Vallejo, citing a City Council indecisiveness vote on whether to approve the Vallejo Supercenter Wal-Mart.

Stille's actions and comments that the construction of a Vallejo Supercenter Wal-Mart would result in not enough grocery dollars in Vallejo to make a Nugget financially feasible resulted in a backlash from the city residents. Supporters of the Vallejo Nugget cited the lack of upscale grocery options in the city, and the need to travel to the East Bay or up to the Vacaville Nugget for gourmet goods. Opponents derided Stille's actions as unwarranted, claiming that Nugget feared that its customer service or products would not be good enough for Vallejo consumers. Others accused the Nugget of trying to blackmail the city in order to maintain their virtual monopoly on discount grocery goods in Vallejo.[5]

Accolades

In 2016, Nugget Markets was ranked #13 on Fortune's list of "Best Companies to Work For".[6]

Locations

Active Nugget Market stores

  • Downtown Woodland – 157 Main St., Woodland, California
  • El Macero – 409 Mace Blvd., Davis, California
  • Lake Crest – 1040 Florin Rd., Sacramento, California
  • Southport – 2000 Town Center Plaza, West Sacramento, California
  • Park Plaza – 771 Pleasant Grove Blvd., Roseville, California
  • Browns Valley – 130 Browns Valley Pkwy., Vacaville, California
  • Oak Tree – 1414 E. Covell Blvd., Davis, California
  • El Dorado Hills – 4500 Post St., El Dorado Hills, California
  • Elk Grove – 7101 Elk Grove Blvd., Elk Grove, California
  • Tiburon – 1 Blackfield Drive, Tiburon, California
  • Corte Madera - 5627 Paradise Drive, Corte Madera, California
  • Novato - 470 Ignacio Boulevard, Novato, California

Active Food-4-Less warehouses

  • 451 Pioneer Rd., Woodland, California
  • 3333 Coach Ln., Cameron Park, California

Defunct stores

  • Riverside – 6419 Riverside Blvd., Sacramento, California
  • Hillsdale – 5731 Hillsdale Blvd., Sacramento, California

Unfinished stores

  • Vallejo – 5184 Sonoma Blvd., Vallejo, California Opened instead as a franchised location of Food 4 Less owned by Nugget. Closed in May 2016.

References

1. ^{{cite news|url=http://money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune/bestcompanies/2007/full_list/index.html|title=100 Best Companies to Work For 2007: Full List|accessdate=2008-12-06 | publisher=CNN}}
2. ^{{cite news|url=http://money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune/bestcompanies/2009/full_list/index.html|title=100 Best Companies to Work For 2009: Full List|accessdate=2010-09-29 | publisher=CNN}}
3. ^{{cite news|url=http://money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune/bestcompanies/2010/full_list/index.html|title=100 Best Companies to Work For 2010: Full List|accessdate=2008-12-06 | publisher=CNN}}
4. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.cityofsacramento.org/econdev/msc/pdfs/KStreetUpdate_Community051105.pdf|title=City of Sacramento - K Street Proposals|date=May 2005|pages=2|accessdate=2008-12-06}}
5. ^{{cite news |last=Johnson|first=Kelly|date=May 6, 2005|title= Nugget tells Vallejo to ban super Wal-Marts|newspaper=Sacramento Business Journal|url=http://www.bizjournals.com/sacramento/stories/2005/05/09/story7.html|accessdate=2008-12-05}}
6. ^{{Cite web|url=http://fortune.com/best-companies/nugget-market-13/|title=Nugget Market|date=2016-03-03|website=Fortune|language=en-US|access-date=2016-05-13}}

External links

  • {{official website|http://nuggetmarket.com/}}
{{Supermarkets of the United States}}

9 : Supermarkets of the United States|Food and drink companies based in California|Retail companies based in California|Companies based in Yolo County, California|Woodland, California|American companies established in 1926|Food and drink companies established in 1926|Retail companies established in 1926|1926 establishments in California

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