Costco Case Paper Blessed Mensah UMUC Introduction Costco Wholesale Corporation was founded by James Sinegal and Jeffrey Brotman in September of 1983 (Thompson, 2008 p. c-32). Costco is one of the largest retail stores in the wholesale industry. Costco mission is to offer their customers low prices on both private and limited selection of nationally branded products in a wide range of merchandise categories. Businesses and families rely on Costco to offer them high quality products and services at everyday low prices. As stated in the 2006 Annual Report: “rapid inventory turnover, high sales volume per warehouse, leveraging an efficient operating structure, …show more content…
We found that by compensating employees generously to motivate and retain good workers, one-fifth of whom are unionizes, Costco gets lower turnover and higher productivity. Combined with a smart business strategy that sells a mix of higher-margin products to more affluent customers, Costco actually keeps its labor costs lower than Wal-Mart’s as a percentage of sales, and its 68, 000 hourly workers in the U.S. sell more per square foot. Put another way, the 102, 000 Sam’s employees in the U.S. generated some $35 billion in sales last year, while Costco did $34 billion with one-third fewer employees” (Holmes and Zellner, 2004). Costco Generic Strategy Costco generic strategy is the Low-Cost Provider Strategy. According to Thompson, Strickland, and Gamble, “low-cost provider strategy is striving to achieve lower overall costs than rivals and appealing to a broad spectrum of customers, usually by under-pricing rivals”. (Thompson et al., 2008). Costco was successful in has successfully implemented low-cost strategy by driving costs out of their businesses, through low pricing, limited product selection, and a treasure hunt shopping environment. Pricing is Costco key element of their low-cost strategy. They implement their pricing strategy by capping its markup on-brand-name merchandise at 14% and markups on their private label items can be no higher than 15%. This strategy has kept Costco customers
Both the family, and the Wal-Mart acknowledge that the family was detained. The Wal-Mart associates believed that they had the right to stop the family based on the assumption of shoplifting, although they should not have physically restrained the family from advancing out of the store, nor denied Debra McCann’s offer of verifying the family’s identity.
Costco's mission is to “continually provide our members with quality goods and services at the lowest possible prices (Costco Wholesale Mission Statement - Profits and Prices Revolve Around Ethics, 2013)
Costco’s business model is called a subscription business model. This is a business model where customer must pay a subscription price to have access to the product/service. Customers who want to shop at Costco must buy a membership with the promise of lower prices to make up for the initial upfront cost; the current membership cost is $55 in the US. The service that Costco provides is its ability to use economies of scale to bulk buy a large amount of foods at low prices and then to pass these savings onto its customers.
From the company's inception, Jeffrey H. Brotman has served as chairman of Costco, and James D. Sinegal has been president. While Sinegal had a background in membership warehouses and retail chains (having been mentored by Sol Price, the founder of Fed Mart and Price Club), Brotman was an executive of an oil exploration company and cofounder of a group that operated a chain of apparel stores. In 1985 Costco became a publicly owned company, and in 1993, Costco merged with Price Club to
Some of the areas that get affected by global economic circumstances include investment, access to supplies, compensation of employees, hiring of employees, operations, social issues, labor practices, output, marketing, and expansion to new markets. This paper examines the impact of the current global economic and financial conditions on staffing, compensation, operations management, social issues, and labor practices of Costco. The business reality is that the current global economic and financial conditions have not led to cuts in compensation of employees and the slimming down of some of Costco’s outlets as it is the case with other stores such as Wal-Mart. Hiring has also not stalled and labor practices are now being carefully observed to minimize litigation costs. Additionally, contentious cultural and social issues are steered clear of as a way of avoiding any disturbances to an already unpredictable business climate. Costco’s operations management has assumed a leaner outlook with emphasis on quality services from smaller workforces.
Due to the market; bargains were more important to consumers. Fifty-six of Costco warehouses exceeded $200 million in sales in fiscal 2010, and two of these units each did more than $300 million. This rate of revenue is highly attributable to the strong entrepreneurial culture that encourages its employees and management’s teams to be creative and contribute new ideas to allow the company to constantly evolve and improve. It has been well publicized that Costco rewards and compensates its employees well. It is a well oiled machine that reciprocates its success with its customers and employees.
According to Deloitte’s 2014 Global Powers of Retailing Report, it identifies the 250 largest retailers around the world based on publicly available data for fiscal 2012 encompassing companies’ fiscal years ended through to June 2013; however, here mainly focuses on the Top 10 retailers’ analysis.
On September 15,1983 the world had witness the opening of Costco the first warehouse on Seattle, Washington by James Senegal and Jeffrey H. Brotman. The owners had started in distribution their wholesale by working for Price at both FedMart and Price Club and Brotman, an attorney from an old Seattle retailing family, had also been involved in retail distribution from an early age.
Costco will increase its revenue by 15% in the next five years upgrading to the “Executive” membership existing business and qualified members. The increase in revenue provided by the upgrade is almost 100% profit, and will help to provide a strong incentive to clients to save enough through their benefits and purchases to offset the cost of membership. Given that this is a low-margin business, membership fees can account for about 50-55% of operating profits. Over the past years, the sales mix has shifted towards services and away from department store related hard lines and soft lines. While all categories have shown strong growth over the past decade, the services/other category have been the standout. During the next five years, industry revenue is estimated to increase at an average annual rate of 5.2% to $531.5 billion. Growth will occur most likely because of improving disposable incomes, consumer sentiment and business sentiment, all of which act as key drivers for the retail sector. (See Table 1.)
Chief elements of Costco’s strategy were low prices, limited selection, and a treasure-hunt shopping environment. The ultra-low pricing strategy includes a mark-up capped at 14% and Kirkland, a Costco brand designed to be of equal or better quality than national brands. Product Selection is limited to 4,000 items within a wide variety of categories. Costco does however include ancillary businesses to increase member alternatives. The loss of sales from customers who refuse to purchase large amounts is considered “Intelligent loss of sales.” Treasure-Hunt Merchandising consists of a constantly changing selection of 1,000 luxury items on the floor enticing shoppers to spend more than
Costco’s former CEO Jim Sinegal designed the Wholesale Club Notion in 1983. Stores were quickly spread throughout the United States, Canada, and Mexico. According to Michaud (2012), “By the end of 2008, there were 550 stores in 40 states and 7 countries, with 54 million members” (Para. 3). The company creates a global chain of warehouses that carry value products as per their slogan. Michaud further discussed that “Costco is also one of the largest corporation in the world with 663 stores
This theory comes from the question what makes people satisfied and what do they value. Wal-Mart’s employees express their dissatisfied with their pay and benefits package. Most employees can’t afford or aren’t eligible to receive their healthcare package. Wal-Mart continues to feel the effects and consequences by having a high turnover rate with employees. Most of Wal-Mart’s turnovers are voluntary, leaving the cost to be substantial to Wal-Mart. Wal-Mart’s turnover rate is absolutely appalling. Approximately 70% of Wal-Mart employees quit outright within the first 12 months. This could be that Wal-Mart is openly against any kind of labor union within their organization and will stop at nothing to keep collective bargaining away. (Keil, 2005)
Costco Wholesale Corporation (Costco) is a retail membership warehouse chain which was founded by Jim Sinegal and Jeff Brotman in 1983. Headquartered out of Issaquah, Washington, Costco has grown in to one of the largest wholesale giants in the industry. The company’s business model was to generate high sales volumes and rapid inventory turnover by offering members low prices on a limited selection of nationally branded and selected private-label products in a wide range of merchandise categories (Gamble & Thompson Jr., 2009, p. 217). This
A Business week article makes an interesting statement that Costco belongs to the very short list of companies with a culture so favorable to employees that it gives the company a competitive advantage, and it’s most likely to keep on rising over many decades. Costco sees workers as an asset to invest in, rather than a cost that must be reduced. In the U.S. Costco pays workers an average of nearly $21 per hour, almost three times the minimum wage and about twice as much of what most competitors pay. They receive great benefits and are part of a safe and healthy working environment as well. At Costco they are committed to providing its employees with opportunities for personal and career growth. Costco has implemented a strategy for a competitive advantage by having a mix of low-cost providers and differentiation. Company differentiates itself by providing consumers with products in bulk at a low per unit cost. Costco offering two types of memberships- the regular and executive membership. With an executive membership, Costco gives a 2% reward on annual Costco purchases. A holder of the executive membership receives incentives for shopping there, which leads to more sales and higher customer visits. This is just one of the many reasons customers keep going back to Costco. It has made itself a highly successful company by offering quality products and excellent customer service.
Trader Joe’s has great workforce management practices and its employees enjoy what they do. They have cheerful attitudes and are more than willing to assist customers with anything in the store. Trader Joe’s employees are engaged in conversation with the customers that shop in the store and make the customers aware of any new or exciting products from them to try. The positive behavior of these employees is due to the compensation and benefits each employee receives, which is far more competitive than other grocery food stores. Trader Joe’s has also created an environment where employees feel valued and know their opinions matter to the growth of the