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Supermarket & Grocery Industry News

  • Albertsons To Standardize Product Data

    BOISE, Idaho - Albertsons Inc. and Trigo Technologies announced that the supermarket chain will standardize with Trigo Product Center, the product information management software application, for more than one million grocery and pharmaceutical items sold by Albertsons' 2,300 retail stores in 31 states.
  • Supermarket GROCERY Business: Regional champs

    In the dog-eat-dog world of beer marketing, hometown regionals are brewing up a storm.
  • COVER STORY: The people gap

    Retailers continue to prize efficiencies more than employees, and experts predict the payback will be a shortage of management talent in just a few years.
  • Supermarket NONFOODS Business: Beyond back-to-school

    Grocers can boost year-round sales of school and office supplies simply by regaining focus on the category and using creative promotions.
  • Wild Oats Releases 3rd-Quarter Results, Announces Change in Distributor

    BOULDER, Colo. - Wild Oats Markets, Inc. today released its preliminary third-quarter 2003 sales and earnings results. The national natural and organic foods retailer also announced that it has reached a decision with distributor Tree of Life, Inc. that mutual expectations under the two companies' primary distribution agreement were unlikely to be met and that Tree of Life would relinquish the primary distribution role.
  • Lowes Foods Licenses ADC's InterScale System

    TAMPA, Fla. - ADC, Inc., a provider of data communication technology to the supermarket industry, said today it has licensed its InterScale scales management system to Lowes Foods, a 106-store supermarket chain based in Winston-Salem, N.C.
  • New $20 Bill Causes Problems in Machines

    WICHITA, Kan. - As colorful new $20 bills circulate around the nation, more consumers are finding out that the notes don't work on automated payment machines like those found in self-service checkout counters at grocery stores.
  • USDA Issues COOL Regulations; Industry Responds

    WASHINGTON - After presiding over numerous fact-finding discussions with more than 70 different trade and producer groups, the U.S. Agriculture Department yesterday issued its proposed rules for the congressionally mandated country-of-origin labeling (COOL) program that was required by the 2002 Farm Bill.
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