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tesco jacks
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"Don't like the name or branding. Like most people, I just use the closest place to me. I'm not driving 5 miles to save 61p. "
It’s not just 61p.. over the months and year it adds up. Most people shop weekly. I myself shop online |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"I'm not sure. I'm hope it'll be a good thing but I don't know why they have to have a whole new supermarket. Why not just run the Jacks products next to the standard Tesco ones?"
Because that will undermine the Tesco brand |
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"I'm not sure. I'm hope it'll be a good thing but I don't know why they have to have a whole new supermarket. Why not just run the Jacks products next to the standard Tesco ones?
Because that will undermine the Tesco brand "
I could understand that if they weren't planning on opening some stores next to existing Tesco stores. |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"Just means they now sell us even cheaper shit.
Makes you wonder why they don’t just drop their prices in their main stores and save the overheads.
P.s. we don’t shop at Tesco"
It undermines the brand name.. Burberry and the other big brands burn their stuff and not sell it on discount |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"Just means they now sell us even cheaper shit.
Makes you wonder why they don’t just drop their prices in their main stores and save the overheads.
P.s. we don’t shop at Tesco"
Because the cheap shit is cheap shit. |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"Just means they now sell us even cheaper shit.
Makes you wonder why they don’t just drop their prices in their main stores and save the overheads.
P.s. we don’t shop at Tesco
It undermines the brand name.. Burberry and the other big brands burn their stuff and not sell it on discount "
They could at least give it to charity. |
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I like Lidl and Aldi because the quality is actually good in most products. I especially love the cheeses and meats. If Jacks can provide a comparable quality and not the crap they push as their budget range then it may be a serious competitor. |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"Just means they now sell us even cheaper shit.
Makes you wonder why they don’t just drop their prices in their main stores and save the overheads.
P.s. we don’t shop at Tesco
It undermines the brand name.. Burberry and the other big brands burn their stuff and not sell it on discount
They could at least give it to charity."
No, they burn end of line stuff |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"Is this Tesco trying to put Aldi and Lidl out of business."
Yes they don't like the competition so they are funding Jacks to undercut them then when Aldi and Lidl are gone they will close Jacks. |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"Is this Tesco trying to put Aldi and Lidl out of business.
Yep.
In fairness Aldi and Lidl have begun to move in to Tescos market a bit."
13% market cap in geocery industry |
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"Don't like the name or branding. Like most people, I just use the closest place to me. I'm not driving 5 miles to save 61p.
It’s not just 61p.. over the months and year it adds up. Most people shop weekly. I myself shop online "
Depends how much value to think your time is worth. I'm not fucking around worrying if I could buy some sausages 20p cheaper in Tesco. Frankly I'd pay not to go to a shop like Lidl and be around the walking dead. |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"Just means they now sell us even cheaper shit.
Makes you wonder why they don’t just drop their prices in their main stores and save the overheads.
P.s. we don’t shop at Tesco
It undermines the brand name.. Burberry and the other big brands burn their stuff and not sell it on discount
They could at least give it to charity."
they used to give the food away then some low life sued them said it made them ill, guess it wasn't the ten cans he drank first, so now most placed find it easier to bin the stuff |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"Don't like the name or branding. Like most people, I just use the closest place to me. I'm not driving 5 miles to save 61p.
It’s not just 61p.. over the months and year it adds up. Most people shop weekly. I myself shop online
Depends how much value to think your time is worth. I'm not fucking around worrying if I could buy some sausages 20p cheaper in Tesco. Frankly I'd pay not to go to a shop like Lidl and be around the walking dead. "
Okay fancy pants |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"Is this Tesco trying to put Aldi and Lidl out of business.
Yep.
In fairness Aldi and Lidl have begun to move in to Tescos market a bit.
13% market cap in geocery industry
Aldi and Lidl?"
Yup |
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"Lidl and Aldi have now got a loyal customer base, not sure if there's room for Jack's.
Jacks may struggle as Lidl and Aldi's quality is pretty good"
It is. We use Aldi for things like fruit, cheese, rice etc |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"Lidl and Aldi have now got a loyal customer base, not sure if there's room for Jack's.
Jacks may struggle as Lidl and Aldi's quality is pretty good
It is. We use Aldi for things like fruit, cheese, rice etc "
Thank you for sharing.. their chicken is decent too |
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"Is this Tesco trying to put Aldi and Lidl out of business.
Yep.
In fairness Aldi and Lidl have begun to move in to Tescos market a bit.
13% market cap in geocery industry
Aldi and Lidl?
Yup"
That leaves plenty for the others surely. |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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If Jack's stock is good and most important the shops are small and close then I may use it, find working my way through the superstore tiresome.
I suspect that a lot of Tesco express stores will switch over to the new brand then it will be parted from Tesco and sold as an established nstional chain. |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"Is this Tesco trying to put Aldi and Lidl out of business.
Yep.
In fairness Aldi and Lidl have begun to move in to Tescos market a bit.
13% market cap in geocery industry
Aldi and Lidl?
Yup
That leaves plenty for the others surely."
Waiting for Amazon to jump in the grocery market.. |
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"Is this Tesco trying to put Aldi and Lidl out of business.
Yep.
In fairness Aldi and Lidl have begun to move in to Tescos market a bit.
13% market cap in geocery industry
Aldi and Lidl?
Yup
That leaves plenty for the others surely.
Waiting for Amazon to jump in the grocery market.. "
They have. We get our coffee from them |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"Is this Tesco trying to put Aldi and Lidl out of business.
Yep.
In fairness Aldi and Lidl have begun to move in to Tescos market a bit.
13% market cap in geocery industry
Aldi and Lidl?
Yup
That leaves plenty for the others surely.
Waiting for Amazon to jump in the grocery market..
They have. We get our coffee from them"
I try not to purchase things from Amazon |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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Tesco tried introducing a budget range within their stores and it didn't work.
Jacks will be a direct competitor for the likes of Aldi and Lidl.
They will use it in the same way as you would a "loss leader" then when the competition has been eradicated, close it and take the market share. |
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"Is this Tesco trying to put Aldi and Lidl out of business.
Yep.
In fairness Aldi and Lidl have begun to move in to Tescos market a bit.
13% market cap in geocery industry
Aldi and Lidl?
Yup
That leaves plenty for the others surely.
Waiting for Amazon to jump in the grocery market..
They have. We get our coffee from them
I try not to purchase things from Amazon "
Do you succeed? |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"Is this Tesco trying to put Aldi and Lidl out of business.
Yep.
In fairness Aldi and Lidl have begun to move in to Tescos market a bit.
13% market cap in geocery industry
Aldi and Lidl?
Yup
That leaves plenty for the others surely.
Waiting for Amazon to jump in the grocery market..
They have. We get our coffee from them
I try not to purchase things from Amazon
Do you succeed?"
Yes, about 80% of the time |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"Tesco tried introducing a budget range within their stores and it didn't work.
Jacks will be a direct competitor for the likes of Aldi and Lidl.
They will use it in the same way as you would a "loss leader" then when the competition has been eradicated, close it and take the market share."
Same to what Amazon did to Flipkart in India |
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"Lidl and Aldi have now got a loyal customer base, not sure if there's room for Jack's.
Jacks may struggle as Lidl and Aldi's quality is pretty good
It is. We use Aldi for things like fruit, cheese, rice etc
Thank you for sharing.. their chicken is decent too "
Booker / makro for chicken bro, |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"Lidl and Aldi have now got a loyal customer base, not sure if there's room for Jack's.
Jacks may struggle as Lidl and Aldi's quality is pretty good
It is. We use Aldi for things like fruit, cheese, rice etc
Thank you for sharing.. their chicken is decent too
Booker / makro for chicken bro, "
And how do you know that? |
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"Lidl and Aldi have now got a loyal customer base, not sure if there's room for Jack's.
Jacks may struggle as Lidl and Aldi's quality is pretty good
It is. We use Aldi for things like fruit, cheese, rice etc
Thank you for sharing.. their chicken is decent too
Booker / makro for chicken bro,
And how do you know that? "
Because when you buy 20kg of steak and 20kg of chicken at a time, one does not do it at Waitrose. |
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"Frankly I'd pay not to go to a shop like Lidl and be around the walking dead. "
You've misunderstood the real appeal of Lidl, which isn't simply the low prices, it's the sense of chaos and wonder one feels as a customer. The ever-changing wtf items like arc welders next to golf umbrellas next to pistachio macaroons next to frikadellen and knock-off Peperami. That's before you even get to the exclusively forrin never seen that before stuff that if it didn't have a picture on the front you wouldn't know whether to peel it roast it or leave it in the toilet pan overnight |
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"Frankly I'd pay not to go to a shop like Lidl and be around the walking dead.
You've misunderstood the real appeal of Lidl, which isn't simply the low prices, it's the sense of chaos and wonder one feels as a customer. The ever-changing wtf items like arc welders next to golf umbrellas next to pistachio macaroons next to frikadellen and knock-off Peperami. That's before you even get to the exclusively forrin never seen that before stuff that if it didn't have a picture on the front you wouldn't know whether to peel it roast it or leave it in the toilet pan overnight"
I went to one when I was about 13 and I just remember it because deathly quiet. For some strange reason there was a rumour that the checkout operators earned like £2 an hour more then other supermarkets because they had to memorize some shit and the highest paying graduate job on offer when I graduated was trainee regional manager, £40k a year + car in 2008. Weird place. |
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"Frankly I'd pay not to go to a shop like Lidl and be around the walking dead.
You've misunderstood the real appeal of Lidl, which isn't simply the low prices, it's the sense of chaos and wonder one feels as a customer. The ever-changing wtf items like arc welders next to golf umbrellas next to pistachio macaroons next to frikadellen and knock-off Peperami. That's before you even get to the exclusively forrin never seen that before stuff that if it didn't have a picture on the front you wouldn't know whether to peel it roast it or leave it in the toilet pan overnight
I went to one when I was about 13 and I just remember it because deathly quiet. For some strange reason there was a rumour that the checkout operators earned like £2 an hour more then other supermarkets because they had to memorize some shit and the highest paying graduate job on offer when I graduated was trainee regional manager, £40k a year + car in 2008. Weird place. "
I went for a job in Aldi when it first started being a thing over here. Staff were expected to know the cost of all items and the tills didn't tell you how much change to give of the customer paid with cash. The interview consisted of a lot of metal arithmetic questions. Also stock taking was done by coining the layers and multiplying by the number of units on a layer plus any extra.
Think it's a bit different now but it's probably the hardest interview I've done in my lifetime lol |
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"Frankly I'd pay not to go to a shop like Lidl and be around the walking dead.
You've misunderstood the real appeal of Lidl, which isn't simply the low prices, it's the sense of chaos and wonder one feels as a customer. The ever-changing wtf items like arc welders next to golf umbrellas next to pistachio macaroons next to frikadellen and knock-off Peperami. That's before you even get to the exclusively forrin never seen that before stuff that if it didn't have a picture on the front you wouldn't know whether to peel it roast it or leave it in the toilet pan overnight
I went to one when I was about 13 and I just remember it because deathly quiet. For some strange reason there was a rumour that the checkout operators earned like £2 an hour more then other supermarkets because they had to memorize some shit and the highest paying graduate job on offer when I graduated was trainee regional manager, £40k a year + car in 2008. Weird place.
I went for a job in Aldi when it first started being a thing over here. Staff were expected to know the cost of all items and the tills didn't tell you how much change to give of the customer paid with cash. The interview consisted of a lot of metal arithmetic questions. Also stock taking was done by coining the layers and multiplying by the number of units on a layer plus any extra.
Think it's a bit different now but it's probably the hardest interview I've done in my lifetime lol "
Thank you! I wanted to say that the staff were expected to know the price of all the items but it sounded ridiculous in my head. Imagine the day after a change in the rate of VAT |
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"Frankly I'd pay not to go to a shop like Lidl and be around the walking dead.
You've misunderstood the real appeal of Lidl, which isn't simply the low prices, it's the sense of chaos and wonder one feels as a customer. The ever-changing wtf items like arc welders next to golf umbrellas next to pistachio macaroons next to frikadellen and knock-off Peperami. That's before you even get to the exclusively forrin never seen that before stuff that if it didn't have a picture on the front you wouldn't know whether to peel it roast it or leave it in the toilet pan overnight
I went to one when I was about 13 and I just remember it because deathly quiet. For some strange reason there was a rumour that the checkout operators earned like £2 an hour more then other supermarkets because they had to memorize some shit and the highest paying graduate job on offer when I graduated was trainee regional manager, £40k a year + car in 2008. Weird place.
I went for a job in Aldi when it first started being a thing over here. Staff were expected to know the cost of all items and the tills didn't tell you how much change to give of the customer paid with cash. The interview consisted of a lot of metal arithmetic questions. Also stock taking was done by coining the layers and multiplying by the number of units on a layer plus any extra.
Think it's a bit different now but it's probably the hardest interview I've done in my lifetime lol "
When I worked in shops in the school and college holidays no till told you how much change to give. I know they do now but it's really simple to give change accurately.
Knowing the price of every item in the shop must have been a nearly impossible task though. |
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"Frankly I'd pay not to go to a shop like Lidl and be around the walking dead.
You've misunderstood the real appeal of Lidl, which isn't simply the low prices, it's the sense of chaos and wonder one feels as a customer. The ever-changing wtf items like arc welders next to golf umbrellas next to pistachio macaroons next to frikadellen and knock-off Peperami. That's before you even get to the exclusively forrin never seen that before stuff that if it didn't have a picture on the front you wouldn't know whether to peel it roast it or leave it in the toilet pan overnight
I went to one when I was about 13 and I just remember it because deathly quiet. For some strange reason there was a rumour that the checkout operators earned like £2 an hour more then other supermarkets because they had to memorize some shit and the highest paying graduate job on offer when I graduated was trainee regional manager, £40k a year + car in 2008. Weird place.
I went for a job in Aldi when it first started being a thing over here. Staff were expected to know the cost of all items and the tills didn't tell you how much change to give of the customer paid with cash. The interview consisted of a lot of metal arithmetic questions. Also stock taking was done by coining the layers and multiplying by the number of units on a layer plus any extra.
Think it's a bit different now but it's probably the hardest interview I've done in my lifetime lol
When I worked in shops in the school and college holidays no till told you how much change to give. I know they do now but it's really simple to give change accurately.
Knowing the price of every item in the shop must have been a nearly impossible task though."
Half the checkout operators must have been high functioning autism to pull that off!? |
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"Frankly I'd pay not to go to a shop like Lidl and be around the walking dead.
You've misunderstood the real appeal of Lidl, which isn't simply the low prices, it's the sense of chaos and wonder one feels as a customer. The ever-changing wtf items like arc welders next to golf umbrellas next to pistachio macaroons next to frikadellen and knock-off Peperami. That's before you even get to the exclusively forrin never seen that before stuff that if it didn't have a picture on the front you wouldn't know whether to peel it roast it or leave it in the toilet pan overnight
I went to one when I was about 13 and I just remember it because deathly quiet. For some strange reason there was a rumour that the checkout operators earned like £2 an hour more then other supermarkets because they had to memorize some shit and the highest paying graduate job on offer when I graduated was trainee regional manager, £40k a year + car in 2008. Weird place.
I went for a job in Aldi when it first started being a thing over here. Staff were expected to know the cost of all items and the tills didn't tell you how much change to give of the customer paid with cash. The interview consisted of a lot of metal arithmetic questions. Also stock taking was done by coining the layers and multiplying by the number of units on a layer plus any extra.
Think it's a bit different now but it's probably the hardest interview I've done in my lifetime lol
When I worked in shops in the school and college holidays no till told you how much change to give. I know they do now but it's really simple to give change accurately.
Knowing the price of every item in the shop must have been a nearly impossible task though.
Half the checkout operators must have been high functioning autism to pull that off!? "
When I did bar work in the seventies to pay for my vodka and cigarettes while at college we had to know the price of all the drinks and keep a running total in our head while serving the round. There wasn't the quantity of products that Aldi would have had though.
I do think the human mind's capacity is underestimated nowadays. |
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"Have you noticed the frozen food meals they introduced a few weeks back.. pizza's and ready meals for 67p?
The nutritional value in those things must be absolutely amazing "
It can be increased by eating the packaging thinly spread with lard... |
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"Have you noticed the frozen food meals they introduced a few weeks back.. pizza's and ready meals for 67p?
The nutritional value in those things must be absolutely amazing
It can be increased by eating the packaging thinly spread with lard..."
I doubt yer far wrong there |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"When I did bar work in the seventies to pay for my vodka and cigarettes while at college we had to know the price of all the drinks and keep a running total in our head while serving the round. There wasn't the quantity of products that Aldi would have had though.
I do think the human mind's capacity is underestimated nowadays."
Scary thing is at the same time the £1 shop had a scanner and worked out the change. |
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"Is this Tesco trying to put Aldi and Lidl out of business.
Yes they don't like the competition so they are funding Jacks to undercut them then when Aldi and Lidl are gone they will close Jacks."
Good luck with that, they don’t have the finance to put those two out of business. |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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The new jacks store is situated in a building that was built by Tesco’s then moth balled due to costs etc.
They have let half the building to pound stretcher and opening jacks in the other half.
It’s situated within a 1 mile of a current Aldi that was a co-op.
Anyway. I will report back. I plan to pop in to have a nose in the next few days. |
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By *olgateMan
over a year ago
on the road to nowhere in particular |
Tesco tried this once before with their Victor Value Chain. They tried to compete with shoppers paradise.
It didn’t work then but that was before Aldi Lidl Keila save and Netto came along |
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By *olgateMan
over a year ago
on the road to nowhere in particular |
"Tesco tried this once before with their Victor Value Chain. They tried to compete with shoppers paradise.
It didn’t work then but that was before Aldi Lidl Keila save and Netto came along "
KWIK SAVE |
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By *uciyassMan
over a year ago
sheffield |
It’s going to be a big gamble for Tesco. They could loose a lot of Tesco customers who migrate to jacks creating less profit for Tesco as margins will be way lower. They have invested a lot into the jacks own label which basically is Tesco oen label rebranded. Whether the current Lidl , Aldi customers migrate is to be seen. The stores look good and the branding creates a sense of homeness but the people I feel sorry for are the small local convenience stores who will be hurt the most |
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"Great, another place where I can pop into on the way home from work to buy bread and milk and come out with a chainsaw, kayak, two man tent, drum kit and a set of Lycra cycle shorts"
You forgot the cat tree and the riding helmet |
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"Tesco tried this once before with their Victor Value Chain. They tried to compete with shoppers paradise.
It didn’t work then but that was before Aldi Lidl Keila save and Netto came along
KWIK SAVE"
FarmFoods are still going, it looks like the Jack incarnation is more an experiment in self service tills and low head count than chipping at Lidl/Aldi. |
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By *olgateMan
over a year ago
on the road to nowhere in particular |
"Tesco tried this once before with their Victor Value Chain. They tried to compete with shoppers paradise.
It didn’t work then but that was before Aldi Lidl Keila save and Netto came along
KWIK SAVE
FarmFoods are still going, it looks like the Jack incarnation is more an experiment in self service tills and low head count than chipping at Lidl/Aldi."
Farm foods are more competition for Iceland than the big four |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"People were queuing from 3am this morning and had travelled from as far as Manchester.
The area is grid lock . "
Entertainment is sparse north of Derby! |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"People were queuing from 3am this morning and had travelled from as far as Manchester.
The area is grid lock .
Entertainment is sparse north of Derby!"
It’s more east |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"People were queuing from 3am this morning and had travelled from as far as Manchester.
The area is grid lock .
Entertainment is sparse north of Derby!
It’s more east "
Manchester is west in my atlas |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"Don't like the name or branding. Like most people, I just use the closest place to me. I'm not driving 5 miles to save 61p.
It’s not just 61p.. over the months and year it adds up. Most people shop weekly. I myself shop online "
Most people don't shop weekly. |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"Have you noticed the frozen food meals they introduced a few weeks back.. pizza's and ready meals for 67p?
The nutritional value in those things must be absolutely amazing "
I read the ingredients on the cottage pie and it was around 10% beef.. I bet 90% of that is gristle |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"Guarantee it fails big time, why would you buy poor quality at Aldi prices."
I have no idea what the quality will be like, but I find a lot of Lidl quality to be very poor, things like so called free range eggs with fragile shells which is down to poor diet for the chickens, possibly because they are not free in a field, and duck breast that is 90% fat. Some products are good, but a lot are poor quality or not as cheap as the main stores.
As mentioned above cottage pie with 10% beef etc. Pizza with artificial cheese and other marketing tricks to sell inferior product in good packaging.
I am lucky enough not to care about cost, but do like time, so small supermarkets with limited choice suit me but the quality is dropping which doesn't. |
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