Becoming Trader Joe How I did business my way and still beat the big guys

Joe Coulombe, 1930-2020

Book - 2021

Build an iconic shopping experience that your customers love--and a work environment that your employees love being a part of--using this blueprint from Trader Joe's visionary founder, Joe Coulombe.

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658.4/Coulombe
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Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 658.4/Coulombe Due May 6, 2024
Subjects
Published
Nashville : HarperCollins Leadership 2021.
Language
English
Main Author
Joe Coulombe, 1930-2020 (author)
Other Authors
Patty Civalleri (author)
Item Description
Includes index.
Physical Description
xxiv, 264 pages, 8 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (chiefly color) ; 22 cm
ISBN
9781400225439
  • Foreword
  • Preface: What's in a Name?
  • Coauthor's Note
  • A Trader Joe's Sampler
  • Before we get into the details, here are some Trader Joe's products that have especially interesting stories
  • Section 1. How We Got There
  • 1. The Milk Train Doesn't Stop Here Anymore
  • In 1965, I was forced by competitive pressures to convert a convenience store chain, Pronto Markets, into Trader Joe's
  • 2. The God of Fair Beginnings
  • How I got started with Pronto Markets as a subsidiary of the giant Rexall Drug Co. in the 1950s
  • 3. The Guns of August, the Wages of Success
  • I bought Pronto Markets in September 1962 and made the most important decision of my career: pay high wages
  • 4. On the Road to Trader Joe's
  • Those high wages force me into merchandising moves, which led to Trader Joe's
  • 5. How I Love Lucy Homogenized America
  • I smelled a chance to be different
  • 6. Good Time Charley
  • Aloha! The first version of Trader Joe's, 1967, was the fun-leisure-party store
  • 7. Uncorked!
  • How we managed to break price on wine despite the Fair Trade Laws
  • 8. Whole Earth Harry
  • A serious recession forces me to marry the health food store to the party store, and I got Whole Earth religion in the process
  • 9. Promise, Large Promise
  • Fearlessly advertising Trader Joe's
  • 10. Hairballs
  • Section 2. Mac The Knife
  • 11. Mac The Knife
  • End of Fair Trade on milk and alcohol in 1977 leads to the third and final version, which I called "Mac the Knife"*93
  • 12. Intensive Buying
  • Honest, we love middlemen
  • 13. Virtual Distribution
  • Outsourcing? So that's what you call it!
  • 14. Private Label Products
  • Academic jokes for the overeducated and underpaid
  • 15. From Discrete to Indiscretions
  • Standards are okay, up to a point
  • 16. Too, Too Solid Stores
  • "Nymph, in thy orisons be all my sins remember'd!"
  • 17. Skunks in the Office
  • Tom Peters runs amok in the organization chart
  • 18. Double Entry Retailing
  • 3-D tennis in the check stand
  • 19. Demand Side Retailing
  • Geometry, Advantageous, but not necessarily true
  • 20. Supply Side Retailing
  • Government Intrusion, a supply-side opportunity?
  • 21. The Last Five Year Plans
  • Russia and Coulombe give up Five Year Plans in the same year, 1988
  • Section 3. First I Sell, Then I Leave
  • 22. Employee Ownership
  • Founders yah, too bad. And that it led to ...
  • 23. The Sale of Trader Joe's
  • Money talks
  • 24. Goodbye to All That
  • Auf Wiedersehen
  • Addendum
  • Post De-Partum
  • Or my ten years as a consultant
  • List of Companies
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Trader Joe's founder Coulombe details the company's rise from a plucky grocery operation to industry heavyweight with legions of loyal customers in his inspiring and revealing debut. He largely focuses on the often-surprising decisions behind the company's success, covering the company's strategies for buying, advertising, distributing, and day-to-day operations since opening in 1967. Unconventional decisions about minor facets of the business paid big rewards, he demonstrates: in the 1980s, Coulombe used the enterprise's increasingly powerful brand, for example, to popularize the previously little-known pilchard as a low-cost alternative to tuna. Coulombe shares his thoughts on his hiring process (and why he's made it a point to hire people over 55) and his fondness for left-handed employees (they "see the world differently"), and details how he capitalized on such trends as the homogenization of American culture and the emergence of a well-educated, well-traveled consumer demographic. Coulombe also offers an excellent road map for success in life more generally, showing how determination and a willingness to try new things can save the day. Readers interested in the fascinating history behind a beloved brand--and entrepreneurs looking for guidance on how to think out of the box--need look no further. (June)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

The founder of the popular grocery store chain delivers a memoir wrapped in a handbook for would-be entrepreneurs. Coulombe (1930-2020) was a born wheeler-dealer, turning a 1958 partnership with Rexall Drugs in Los Angeles into a small grocery chain called Pronto Markets. The chain flourished for lack of competition, with market leader 7-Eleven effectively held back from the region until California laws changed and barriers to entry fell. Annual sales at Pronto and its successor, Trader Joe's, "grew at a compound rate of 19 percent per year" from the founding until Coulombe left the company in 1988; he reckons sales and net worth growth to be about that today. Success in a business with historically tight margins came from an ability to pivot nimbly, drop products that didn't work (including, in Southern California, bullets until the assassination of Robert Kennedy), and procure products wisely from suppliers with as few middlemen as possible. "The fundamental job of a retailer is to buy goods whole, cut them into pieces, and sell the pieces to the ultimate consumers," he writes, going on to gloss each of those mandates. Unusually for the sector, Coulombe also offered high rates of pay, which kept turnover--a huge hidden cost--low. The author, who takes a gruffly scholarly approach to many business problems, keyed Trader Joe's to demographic changes that recognized the anti--mass-market sentiments of the counterculture and the rise in international travel that led Americans to appreciate such things as high-quality coffee and wine. Any student of social trends, logistics, and supply chains will learn much from Coulombe's pages and the stern dicta they contain, as, for example, when he offers this formula: "my preference is to have a few stores, as far apart as possible, and to make them as high-volume as possible." Sure to be required reading in business school--and for fans of Coulombe's creation as well. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.