Bloom (store)

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Bloom
Former type Subsidiary
Industry Retail
Fate Discontinued
Founded 2004
Defunct 2012
Headquarters Salisbury, North Carolina, USA
Area served USA
Key people Richard Hagen, president
Products Groceries
Parent Food Lion
Website shopbloom.com
Bloom store in Accokeek, Maryland

Bloom was a chain of mid-grade North American grocery stores operated by Food Lion, originally established in 2004. The parent company of Food Lion, The Delhaize Group, announced in January 2012 that it was discontinuing the Bloom brand.

Contents

[edit] History

In 2002, after realizing the customers' needs, expectations, and behaviors were changing and becoming more diverse, Food Lion created an unqualified "concept" team whose mission was to examine customer and retail trends, identify opportunities for growth, and develop retail concepts to capture those opportunities. Soon after came the idea of Bloom.[1]

Bloom (then called Bloom, A Food Lion Market) was first test marketed in Charlotte, North Carolina, through five test stores, the first of which opened on May 26, 2004. The concept is based on the idea of using a slightly unconventional layout to maximize shopper convenience. This layout included a TableTop section at the entrance to the store (where the shopper can purchase ready to eat foods), wider aisles, and convenient groupings of foods. In most locations, customers can buy milk at the front of the store. This eliminates the need to walk to the back, where milk is normally located.

One of the ways Bloom tried to differentiate itself from competition was through the addition of consumer-friendly technology. Self-checkout stands, PAT (Personal Assistant Technology) the revolutionary touch screen computer that uses a wireless in-store network, and produce scales with printers that let customers create bar-coded tags are placed in most stores to maximize customer convenience. [2]

In March 2011, Delhaize America and its Bloom banner announced that it would convert 15 of its stores in the Charlotte, N.C. and Greenville S.C. markets into Food Lion stores.

In January 2012 Delhaize announced that, as part of a restructuring of its US operations, the Bloom banner would be retired and the remaining stores converted to Food Lion or closed.[3]

[edit] Slogans

  • "Thought for Food." [4]
  • "A Food Lion Market." [4]
  • "A Different Kind of Grocery Store."

[edit] References

  1. ^ "Food Lion to Introduce New Store Concept, Name". AllBusiness.com. http://www.allbusiness.com/retail-trade/4298291-1.html. Retrieved 2007-07-10. 
  2. ^ "The Slow Blooming Of Food Lion's Technology Experiment". Phil Lempert's Xtreme Retail. http://xtremeretail.com/page.cfm/75. Retrieved 2007-07-10. 
  3. ^ Food Lion’s owner closing 126 stores, retiring Bloom banner, Washington Post, January 12, 2012
  4. ^ a b "Food Lion Opens First Bloom Concept Store: Store is one of five pilots to open in 2004". Food Lion. http://www.foodlion.com/apps/FoodLionNews/default.aspx?document_id=730. Retrieved 2007-07-10. 

[edit] External links

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