by eric_b » Mon 14 Jul 2008, 16:05:05
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('pstarr', 'I') believe the reason Costco is so successful is they only stock one SKU under each food category. One brand of toothpaste, one kind of frozen potatoes, etc. They buy the most quantity at the lowest price and pass savings on to the consumer.
Modern supermarkets stock 10,000's of products when people need only meat, pasta and bread, veggies and some canned goods. And toilet paper and toothpaste.
These monster stores are expensive to heat and cool and require miles to drive. They are dinosaurs.
Large supermarket/grocery store is an interesting place.
It's full of food, yet strangely sterile. Well lit, yet shadowless. Full of products with very colorful labels. It used to be with certain products, such as cereals, more money was spent on the packaging and full color printing than on the grains inside. People, especially women, have a deep seated need to forage. The grocery store is where people can now do their foraging in climate controlled comfort. Perhaps all those colorful labels are meant to approximate a garden in bloom, or just countless millennia picking fruit from trees.
There certainly are more than 10,000 redundant products. A few that stand out from memory. Salad dressings: strange oily goos, all amounting to substantially the same thing with slight flavor variations. Meant to be dumped on vegetables. Sooo many processed tomato products - jarred/canned spaghetti sauces, stewed and steamed and diced and flavored canned tomatoes. Zillions of salsas, Catsup and the like. The Campbells' soup empire, for those that need their RDA of MSG. Jello - a nightmare to stock and face all those little boxes. Sugar and ground up horse toenails for desert, with fake colorings. I hated stocking baby food. Even for someone like me with skinny hands/wrists it was a huge PITA.
Other things I HATED stocking - water & juice. A huge waste of energy to ship and stock the stuff, for minimal calories. Frozen concentrated juices are better, but then there's the electricity consumed to keep them frozen. 'The cleaning isle' - soap, laundry detergent, etc. - wow, talk about an olfactory assault, stocking that stuff would leave your sense of smell decimated. And the boxes were hard to break down.
SO they're dinosaurs, however even a person doing all their own
cooking and eating very little processed food requires a certain minimum. It might be possible to reduce trucking by a factor of 2-3x and feed the same number of people if certain sacrifices are made. Even so our JIT food and grocery store setup is very dependent on cheap energy, and no supply interruptions.