Oct. 23, 2024

Walmart Same-Day Rx Delivery, Bed Bath’s Return & WTF Is Amazon’s Grocery Strategy

Walmart Same-Day Rx Delivery, Bed Bath’s Return & WTF Is Amazon’s Grocery Strategy
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Walmart Same-Day Rx Delivery, Bed Bath’s Return & WTF Is Amazon’s Grocery Strategy

In this week’s Omni Talk Retail Fast Five news roundup, sponsored by the A&M Consumer and Retail GroupOwnit AIAvalaraMirakl, and Ocampo Capital, A&M’s Lakshman Lakshmanan and Chris Creyts, joined Chris and Anne to discuss:

  • The wide-ranging significance of Walmart offering same-day prescription delivery and making it free for Walmart+ members (Source)
  • Amazon’s new “Amazon Grocery” store in Chicago and how it fits into Amazon’s growing ever more confusing grocery strategy (Source)
  • If U.S. consumers really need a new, smaller incarnation of a Bed Bath & Beyond store (Source)
  • BuyBuy Baby shuttering all its stores and whether going it alone via online is a good long-term solution (Source)
  • And closed with an examination of why in the world Chick-fil-A would launch a new entertainment app (Source)

There’s all that, plus we rank Halloween candy, discuss which food we would most like to bring with us into space, and pay homage to the LinkedIn Lunatics subreddit!

P.S. Join us at Manifest: The Future of Supply Chain & Logistics conference in February where 300+ thought leaders will share their insights in over 130 engaging sessions! View the just announced agenda & SAVE $200 on the current registration rate ($800 off the on-site rate!) by visiting ManifestVegas.com/SaveWithOmniTalk

P.P.S. Be sure to check out all our other podcasts from the past week here, too: https://omnitalk.blog/category/podcast/

P.P.P.S. Also be sure to check out our podcast rankings on Apple Podcasts and on Feedspot

Music by hooksounds.com

00:00 - Untitled

00:05 - Intro to Yammetalk Fast Five

00:09 - Introducing A&M Consumer and Retail Group

00:19 - Avalara and Miracle Partnerships

07:20 - Walmart's Same Day Prescription Delivery

13:25 - Amazon's New Grocery Store Concept

23:04 - Bed Bath & Beyond's Small Format Stores

33:41 - Bye Bye Baby Transitions to Digital-Only

44:23 - Chick-fil-A Launches Family-Friendly App

56:43 - Outro and Closing Thoughts

Ann Mazenga

Yammetalk Fast five is brought to you in association with the A and M Consumer and retail group.


Ann Mazenga

The A and M Consumer and Retail Group is a management consulting firm that tackles the most complex challenges and advances its clients, people and communities toward their maximum potential.


Ann Mazenga

CRG brings the experience, tools and operator like pragmatism to help retailers and consumer products companies be on the right side of disruption and Avalara Avalara makes tax compliance faster, easier, more accurate and more reliable.


Ann Mazenga

For 30,000 plus business and government customers in over 90 countries, Avalara leverages 1200 plus signed partner integrations to power tax calculations, document management, tax return filing and tax content access.


Ann Mazenga

Visit avalara.com to improve your compliance journey and miracle Miracle is the global leader in platform business innovation for e commerce.


Ann Mazenga

Companies like Macy's, Nordstrom and Kroger use miracle to build disruptive growth and profitability through marketplace dropship and retail media.


Ann Mazenga

For more, visit miracle.com, that's mirakl.com and ownit AI.


Ann Mazenga

Ownit AI helps the world's leading retailers advance their e commerce shopping experience with AI.


Ann Mazenga

To learn more, visit Ownit Co.


Ann Mazenga

And finally, Ocampo Capital Ocampo Capital is a venture capital firm founded by retail executives with the aim of helping early stage consumer businesses succeed through investment and operational support.


Ann Mazenga

Learn more@ocampocapital.com dot hello.


Ann Mazenga

You are listening to Omnitalk's retail fast five, ranked in the top 10% of all podcasts globally and currently the only retail podcast ranked in the top 100 of all business podcasts on Apple podcasts.


Ann Mazenga

The retail fast five is the podcast that we hope makes you feel a little smarter, but most importantly, a little happier each week, too.


Ann Mazenga

And the Fast five is just one of the many great podcasts you can find from the Omnitalk Retail podcast network alongside our retail daily minute, which brings you a curated selection of the most important retail headlines every morning, and our retail technology spotlight series, which goes deep each week on the latest retail technology trends.


Ann Mazenga

Today is October 23, 2024.


Ann Mazenga

I'm one of your hosts, Ann Mazenga.


Chris Walton

And I'm Stanford bound for his 25th college reunion, Chris Walton.


Ann Mazenga

Oh my God.


Ann Mazenga

And we are here once again to discuss all the top headlines from the past week making waves in the world of omnichannel retailing.


Ann Mazenga

Chris, you mentioned your college reunion.


Ann Mazenga

How could we get past it?


Ann Mazenga

You've got every piece of Stanford gear that you own on right now.


Ann Mazenga

Everyone knows you went to Stanford, but what are you so excited about for this weekend for your reunion?


Chris Walton

Oh man, I just can't wait to get back there.


Chris Walton

First of all, it's in sunny California, which is always a plus.


Chris Walton

And.


Chris Walton

And second, the thing I'm most excited about, which I know you're going to call me a major geek for, is there is a reunion of our freshman humanities course, which is a course that we took, all 90 of us, we lived in the same dormitory together.


Chris Walton

We took all our classes together.


Chris Walton

And I'm excited to reconnect with those people, which were all, honestly, we were kind of the dorks on campus, which isn't a surprise, but I'm excited to reunite with them.


Ann Mazenga

Oh, I'm actually not.


Ann Mazenga

I think that is nice like that.


Ann Mazenga

That makes sense to me.


Ann Mazenga

That's a reason to, like, you had this intimate experience with the.


Ann Mazenga

Well, hopefully not too intimate all in one dorm, but you had this very close experience together, and that makes sense to go back for, I don't know, the.


Ann Mazenga

The cardinals, though your cardinal game is strong right now.


Ann Mazenga

You got a lot.


Ann Mazenga

You got a lot going for you.


Ann Mazenga

So I hope.


Chris Walton

For me.


Ann Mazenga

I hope.


Chris Walton

Thank you.


Chris Walton

And yes, we'll actually be doing an hour long session on Plato as part of the reunion, too.


Chris Walton

So that gives you an idea of just how Doordash group is.


Ann Mazenga

That's where you lost me.


Ann Mazenga

Okay.


Ann Mazenga

Well, Chris, we have also been working very hard at the shops.


Ann Mazenga

I've just started to condense it to the shops conferences the last two weeks.


Ann Mazenga

We were at grocery shop.


Ann Mazenga

We were at shop talk fall last week, and so we have to call in some reinforcements for this week's.


Ann Mazenga

So joining us today for their regularly scheduled monthly appearance, we have the Alvarez Marcel consumer and retail groups Lakshman, Lakshman and Chris Kreitz here to help us break down the week's headlines.


Ann Mazenga

Chris and Lakshman, thank you so much for your bearing with us as we have this introduction and cover all of Chris's past college experiences.


Ann Mazenga

But I'd love for you both to reintroduce yourself to our audience.


Ann Mazenga

And, Chris, start with you.


Chris Kreitz

Hey, guys.


Chris Kreitz

Chris Kreitz with a and M CRG live over here in Charlotte, North Carolina.


Chris Kreitz

It's a beautiful day out here.


Chris Kreitz

Specialize in working with clients on the merchandising side, answering questions around space, assortment, pricing, things like that.


Chris Kreitz

Really excited.


Chris Kreitz

And hope we'll be following the Socratic method today.


Chris Walton

Chris, for your play doh throwback, that's awesome, man.


Chris Walton

That is kind of the vibe of our show, actually, that we get a little Socratic in terms of how we approach this show.


Chris Walton

That's wonderful.


Ann Mazenga

I know no one's going to be surprised that I was in honors English in high school and read the cliff's notes for every one of those books.


Ann Mazenga

So that is something that I will not be participating in, Chris.


Ann Mazenga

But we'll give it the old college try.


Ann Mazenga

Lakshman, why don't you introduce yourself to the audience?


Lakshman

Hey, everyone, I'm Lakshman.


Lakshman

Lakshman and the other newly minted lacs here, who probably is having a longer shelf life than the other lacks.


Lakshman

But all jokes aside, very excited to be here.


Lakshman

Been part of a and M CRG for about four years now.


Lakshman

Do specialize in consumer goods and retail, specifically in the areas of supply chain analytics and technology.


Lakshman

And in the spirit of keeping the reunion spirit alive, Washington, target guy.


Lakshman

And go bullseye.


Ann Mazenga

Chris and Ann, so excited to have you both.


Ann Mazenga

Thank you.


Ann Mazenga

Thank you so much for being up for today's fast five.


Ann Mazenga

All right, Chris, should we do the headlines?


Chris Walton

Ann, this is always my favorite show every month because I love when these guys are on because they help carry the show and provide new insights that we don't always think of.


Chris Walton

So let's do it.


Chris Walton

Today's fast five headlines are brought to you by manifest.


Chris Walton

Manifest.


Chris Walton

The future of supply chain and logistics agenda is now live.


Chris Walton

What's in store, you may ask.


Chris Walton

And 300 plus speakers, 130 plus sessions, 50 plus sea level supply chain executives, and 100 plus startups.


Chris Walton

If interested, you can take a first look at the agenda and save dollar 200 on the current registration rate, which is dollar 800 off the onsite rate by visiting manifest vegas.com.


Chris Walton

save with Omnitalk.


Chris Walton

That's manifest vegas.com.


Chris Walton

save with Omnitalk.


Chris Walton

In this week's Fast five, we've got news on Amazon testing yet another grocery concept in Chicago, the return of bed, Bath and beyond stores, and conversely, bye bye babies plants to shutter all of its stores and chick fil A's release of its own family friendly entertainment app.


Chris Walton

But we begin today with news that could shake up the pharmacy industry.


Ann Mazenga

And shake that up is right.


Ann Mazenga

Headline number one, Walmart has added same day prescription delivery service.


Ann Mazenga

According to Seeking Alpha, the retail giant will begin to deliver prescriptions to households in the US in as little as 30 minutes.


Ann Mazenga

30.


Ann Mazenga

That's right, 30 minutes.


Ann Mazenga

Customers have the ability to add prescriptions and medication refills to their orders for groceries and other products, and the service will be free for Walmart plus members.


Ann Mazenga

Walmart aims to have prescription delivery available in 49 states by the end of January, with coverage across more than 86% of us households.


Ann Mazenga

Chris we're going to you first here.


Ann Mazenga

How big of a move is same day prescription delivery from Walmart?


Ann Mazenga

There's a lot of perks in that announcement.


Chris Kreitz

Yeah, I mean, I think it's definitely a big move.


Chris Kreitz

I think it's scarier if you're CV's Walgreens sitting there.


Chris Kreitz

It's obviously quite a, quite an intimidating move.


Chris Kreitz

But I don't think of it as some people have been saying, this is the critical death of pharmacy and drug.


Chris Kreitz

I look at it more as a million cuts that are going to a contributing factor that's going to lead to continued decline in drug.


Chris Kreitz

Today, 90% of households are within 10 miles of a Walmart pharmacy.


Chris Kreitz

But actually Walmart only has 5% of the market share for prescriptions, Walgreens and CV's 40 50%.


Chris Kreitz

So right out of the gate, will they start to steal some market share away?


Chris Kreitz

Probably, but their overall penetration in the pharmacy is relatively low.


Chris Kreitz

It starts to get more interesting.


Chris Kreitz

Amazon's doing the same thing.


Chris Kreitz

I think Walmart's targeting 90% coverage by January.


Chris Kreitz

Amazon's opening new pharmacies.


Chris Kreitz

I think they're trying to reach 50% of households with same day over the next year.


Chris Kreitz

So you start to have more and more competitors in the space.


Chris Kreitz

And I think it does beg the question of what is the future for pharmacies like Walgreens and CV's that have 8000 locations.


Chris Kreitz

They're continuing to evaluate their footprints.


Chris Kreitz

I think the bigger thing here for them is that Walmart doesn't really have to make money on their pharmacy, whereas they really do.


Chris Kreitz

So I think it's just another cut that's going to start amping up the pressure.


Chris Kreitz

And it really shows how other players who are competing for those same scripts and the same front end baskets have a lot more levers to innovate than your cvs is in your Walgreens of the world.


Ann Mazenga

Yeah, absolutely.


Ann Mazenga

And, and then you throw in grocery delivery in there, too, which is something that Walgreens CV's can't compete with, for sure.


Ann Mazenga

Um, all right, Chris Walton, you are so excited about this.


Ann Mazenga

I know.


Ann Mazenga

What are your thoughts here?


Chris Walton

Yeah, I mean, Chris brought up some great points there.


Chris Walton

Like, I didn't realize the underpenetration of Walmart's pharmacy business.


Chris Walton

So that means to me, this is just all a massive growth opportunity.


Chris Walton

Me.


Chris Walton

The other thing that I'm reminded of is the great MC Hammer song and of can't touch this because Chris mentioned it a little bit.


Chris Walton

But like, the Walgreens and CV's is the world.


Chris Walton

They can't really do this at the same scale, particularly because of the dynamics of the other items you can ship with your pharmacy orders that Walmart can.


Chris Walton

And then I look at their biggest competitors, Target, particularly Target can't touch this at all because of their CV's relationship.


Chris Walton

They've subcontracted out their pharmacy business to CV's.


Chris Walton

So think about the coordination that's going to be involved in that.


Chris Walton

And CV's has a ton of other problems, namely they just named a new CEO in the last week.


Chris Walton

So they're not going to be focused on trying to do that and figuring out how to make that happen at a target, particularly.


Chris Walton

And then Amazon just doesn't have the physical presence.


Chris Walton

So I don't know.


Chris Walton

The thing I love most about this is that it shows the beauty of how Walmart is also thinking about Walmart plus.


Chris Walton

It's taking the beauty of, of what Walmart does best, which is its physical stores by way of gas discounts, scan and go activations, and now pharmacy and creating differentiation through digital by way of that subscription, which is just going to be so powerful.


Chris Walton

And to Chris's point, with under penetration, a massive gross opportunity here potentially, too.


Ann Mazenga

Zachary?


Ann Mazenga

Yeah, Chris, I think it's really important what you highlight, too, about the Walmart plus membership, too.


Ann Mazenga

Holden Bale, he was sharing with me some research at shop talk last week where he said that, you know, of the, of these retailers that they studied, the most surprising thing that he found was that so many of the retailers are just looking at what their competitors are doing and trying to do that versus what their customers are telling them that they want.


Ann Mazenga

And I think this is a perfect example of Walmart doing the opposite here.


Ann Mazenga

Walmart listened to what their customers said.


Ann Mazenga

They said the number one thing they wanted with their Walmart plus membership was the ability to combine grocery delivery and prescription delivery.


Ann Mazenga

And Walmart delivered.


Ann Mazenga

It's the single most asked for service.


Ann Mazenga

And them listening to their customers instead of just saying like, what's Amazon doing?


Ann Mazenga

What's target doing?


Ann Mazenga

What's, you know, what are CV's and Walgreens doing?


Ann Mazenga

They are uniquely positioned to give the customers what they want.


Ann Mazenga

I think it's so brilliant here.


Ann Mazenga

Lakshman, I'd love for you to close us out.


Ann Mazenga

What do you think of this move?


Ann Mazenga

How big is Walmart's same day prescription delivery?


Lakshman

Yeah, we know the demographic curve that's coming up, right.


Lakshman

We know that the baby boomers and the next, the next wave are coming up to age now.


Lakshman

It's a great they want convenience, they want speed, they want security, they want reliability.


Lakshman

Who best to deliver that than Walmart?


Ann Mazenga

100%.


Chris Walton

That's a great point too, because the demographics of who shops where at what pharmacies is also going to shift because as you get older is when you start needing medication.


Chris Walton

So that 50% roughly, I think you said, Chris, that shop at Walgreens and CV's, that's going to change naturally, too.


Chris Walton

So it's a really interesting point.


Chris Walton

Lakshman.


Chris Walton

All right.


Chris Walton

And we just interviewed Vanessa Yates, the SVP of Walmart.


Chris Walton

Plus, she's got the best poker face in the world.


Chris Walton

We interviewed her ten days ago.


Chris Walton

We asked her like, what's coming with Walmart?


Chris Walton

Plus, she didn't give us any indication that this bombshell was on the doorstep.


Ann Mazenga

I can only imagine what's in store still.


Ann Mazenga

Like, that's not the end of this.


Ann Mazenga

They just, they're moving at lightning speed right now.


Ann Mazenga

It's remarkable.


Chris Walton

A hundred percent.


Chris Walton

All right.


Chris Walton

Now, what is quite possibly, even though I love that last headline, this is quite possibly my favorite headline to get into a discussion about today, which is that headline number two, Amazon is testing a new small format grocery store concept in Chicago.


Chris Walton

According to Chain storage, the company has opened a 3800 square foot small format grocery store concept in downtown Chicago in a building that also houses a Whole foods market.


Chris Walton

An Amazon spokesman spokesperson confirmed the new store, called Amazon Grocery.


Chris Walton

Got to love that name.


Chris Walton

Amazon Grocery.


Chris Walton

And not to be confused with Amazon Fresh or Amazon Go, features a selection of approximately 3500 products and is located in the one Chicago building.


Chris Walton

The new store allows customers to complete quick trips like grocery top ups, coffee and grab and go meals all during their regular trip to whole foods.


Chris Walton

It also offers national grocery bands or household essentials that are not available at Whole Foods.


Chris Walton

Lakshman, I'm going to go to you first on this.


Chris Walton

What in the heck is Amazon's grocery strategy?


Chris Walton

Like, I just cannot put my finger on it at all.


Chris Walton

Like, WTF?


Chris Walton

What are they doing here?


Chris Walton

And what do you think of this new concept?


Chris Walton

Does it help things at all or does it just muddy the waters?


Lakshman

Yeah, let's add another banner under the grocery experiments that are happening right now with Amazon.


Lakshman

Listen, this is a walled garden.


Lakshman

You cannot have, it's a small store format, 3500 skus, very limited national brands.


Lakshman

They do not allow the customer to go and transact between the two.


Lakshman

They cannot have one single cart that moves up and down.


Lakshman

So from a, it is going to be a walled garden because the private labels, they cannot place it they cannot increase the penetration of their own products.


Lakshman

They have to rely on trade funds and everything that's coming from the national brands to fund their marketing expense for this particular channel, which is quite expensive.


Lakshman

Shall I say?


Lakshman

The name of the game here is convenience.


Lakshman

Looking at the age group of about 25 to 35 people living in the series with an income of 80 to 120k, who just need to go and buy or get that one small item that they forgot to get, whether it's coke or it's a packed sandwich, that's a convenience thing.


Lakshman

Play here.


Lakshman

It squarely goes against what 711 is trying to do, which is upscale their convenience format and make it more interesting.


Lakshman

I think it's got very limited shelf life.


Lakshman

It is an experiment.


Lakshman

I feel like they probably are going to try a couple of other huge city centers locations and likely it will saturate at that point.


Chris Walton

Is it a good experiment though?


Chris Walton

Is it an experiment worth running just by the fact that you have to put it next to Whole Foods?


Chris Walton

And the whole strategic premise that you're pitching in this article is that it's next to a Whole Foods.


Lakshman

Yeah.


Lakshman

And think about the cost delta between the two.


Lakshman

You have to have a separation of at least 20% to 40%.


Lakshman

If not, the customer is not going to walk in.


Lakshman

And the other thing is you're likely cannibalizing your own sales.


Lakshman

If there is an equivalent national brand, same quality price point is 20% higher, then you are competing against your own private label in some ways, and you are competing against your higher end whole food products themselves.


Lakshman

It's a very interesting Swartman tiering problem, which is why this is very baffling for me to co locate it in the same spot.


Lakshman

If it were at least a mile away and there was some separation between the two, it makes a ton of sense that they're trying to get entry into this particular fast moving segment.


Lakshman

But to co locate it is what is really the baffler here.


Chris Walton

Interesting.


Chris Walton

Chris, I saw you shaking your head.


Chris Walton

What's your points that you'd add here?


Chris Kreitz

No, I mean, I actually just had a different take on.


Chris Kreitz

I thought Lakshman's take was really interesting.


Chris Kreitz

I thought about it differently.


Chris Walton

Okay.


Chris Kreitz

I think the whole point was co locating it.


Chris Kreitz

Or what I wonder is, is the whole point co locating it?


Chris Kreitz

I agree with Lakshman.


Chris Kreitz

It's not a concept that's designed to scale.


Chris Kreitz

I kind of see this one as a data gathering experiment, a pet project from someone there.


Chris Kreitz

And I think it's all about exploring like the whole Amazon Whole Foods piece where you can't have national brands in the store.


Chris Kreitz

There's a big customer problem that that customer now has to make two shopping trips to do their grocery shopping.


Chris Kreitz

So I think it's an experiment to place national brands in close proximity without violating that wall and see how many of those customers you can actually get to shop in Whole foods.


Chris Kreitz

Then buy national brands right next door on the same shopping trip because Amazon's actually experimenting with other concepts that are similar.


Chris Kreitz

So in Pennsylvania, they have like a micro fulfillment center tied to a whole foods where the idea is you place your Amazon order on your phone and you can get your national brand products right outside the door of the whole food so you can do one trip.


Chris Kreitz

So I kind of see it as more of like a similar, very small scale test concept to further discussions and test data on how do you integrate national brands within the Whole Foods channel.


Chris Kreitz

But, you know, I could be wrong.


Chris Kreitz

It's a weird spot to do it, too, because, tilaksha, like the one Chicago, it's a residential building.


Chris Kreitz

Uh, and you have to imagine a lot of those 3500 skus are just convenience focused, like quick grab and go stuff.


Chris Kreitz

So that's the part that doesn't quite tie for me.


Chris Walton

Yeah.


Chris Walton

Yeah.


Chris Walton

Okay, so.


Chris Walton

So you're kind of liking it.


Chris Walton

Lakshman's a little more baffled by it.


Chris Walton

And what do you think here?


Ann Mazenga

Yeah, I mean, I agree with Chris.


Ann Mazenga

I think this is just another version of the test that is happening in Pennsylvania right now.


Ann Mazenga

Like, what's the threshold?


Ann Mazenga

Ultimately, what do I think is going to happen?


Ann Mazenga

I think that this is a continuation of our conversation last week, Chris.


Ann Mazenga

I think this is the death of Whole Foods as we know it right now.


Ann Mazenga

I think that eventually Amazon's just going to see people want to get all their private brands or, sorry, all their keep saying private brands, all of their national brands and their Whole Foods brands in one place.


Ann Mazenga

But I'm wondering and I think that this store, Whole Foods, is going to go away and eventually it's just going to be called Amazon grocery because I think it's just going to be easier to put all those brands side by side inside the whole Foods.


Ann Mazenga

Now, yes, you lose this coveted Whole Foods, you know, experience.


Ann Mazenga

But I honestly am wondering if this is the only opportunity that Amazon has in grocery if it seems like it may be the winningest strategy where, you know, yes, you have other competition from some of these nicer, upscale groceries where that have this access to some of the organic foods.


Ann Mazenga

But will Amazon be able to offer some of these brands at a more affordable price because of the scale that they have with delivery.


Ann Mazenga

With grocery like, to me it seems like this could be the only chance that Amazon has a success in grocery, which is is combining everything, the whole foods, the national brands and him having this Amazon grocery experience.


Ann Mazenga

But wow, you are not in the camp.


Chris Walton

No, I mean, I think if, I think if you play that out, you know who wins in that game?


Chris Walton

Sprouts.


Chris Walton

Because all the whole food shoppers start going to sprouts and sprouts explodes nationally.


Ann Mazenga

Because in the sprouts have the national brands though, to the effect.


Chris Walton

But that's why I'm saying that those people don't want that.


Chris Walton

So sprouts gets it because if you stop back and you look at grocery from a mass market perspective, the mass market already determines what products are going into.


Chris Walton

Kroger, Target, Walmart, Safeway, Albertsons, they're already doing that.


Chris Walton

So Amazon's got to come in with an entirely new concept to make this work.


Chris Walton

So that's why, that's why I think this idea is.


Chris Walton

This test particularly is the dumbest idea I've heard in a long time.


Chris Walton

To your point, if people want, if you, if you really think people want to buy, you know, general national brand products next to whole foods, just put them in freaking whole foods and run that experiment.


Chris Walton

Like what's the point of doing this?


Chris Walton

The small format is going to give you fake false positives or false negatives too because it's a separate location.


Chris Walton

And like why, if I need to make another trip, I already go to Whole Foods and most of the time I have to compliment my trip by going to another store?


Chris Walton

Why would I go to a store that has 3500 items when I can go to my local grocery store that has a broad assortment and all the other options that have it that are available to me that I can't get at a Whole Foods.


Chris Walton

So this just makes no sense to me from a testing perspective and why you would waste your time on it.


Chris Walton

But I don't know, somebody else take the last word on it because I got on my soapbox pretty quickly on this one.


Chris Walton

Well.


Ann Mazenga

I just questioned then like does Amazon grocery really just become Amazon, the mass retailer where they, like, is that where they are successful?


Ann Mazenga

You don't think so?


Ann Mazenga

Yeah, I mean, good luck.


Chris Walton

I mean, people are trying to do that all the time.


Chris Walton

Good.


Chris Walton

I mean, I just think that's a, that's, that's a tough, tough game and they've shown that they haven't been able to create their own grocery concept, which, if, correct me if I'm wrong, but Amazon Fresh has some of the, I don't remember, but doesn't it have some of the Whole Foods elements inside of it already?


Chris Walton

So they've kind of been running this experiment, too.


Chris Walton

And that's not blowing the doors off anyone from a consumer love standpoint, either.


Chris Walton

So I don't, I don't know.


Chris Walton

I just don't get it.


Ann Mazenga

Well, let's go into headline number three and talk more about going into physical retail.


Ann Mazenga

Guess what, guys?


Ann Mazenga

Bed bath and beyond stores could soon return.


Ann Mazenga

Yay.


Ann Mazenga

According to retail Dive, Kirkland's home and beyond have entered a strategic partnership that includes the pilot opening of up to five neighborhood small format bed, bath and beyond stores.


Ann Mazenga

The company said Monday, you won't need the whole Saturday to go to bed Bath and beyond, Home Depot and others, you will just need a short amount of time because they're just tiny, little cute bed bath and beyond good friend to take reference and nice, subtle Kirklands is beyond beyond exclusive operator and licensee for the new stores bed Bath and Beyond shop and shops may also be opened inside of Kirkland's locations, but that's yet to be determined.


Ann Mazenga

Beyond is providing $17 million in debt financing to Kirklands.


Ann Mazenga

Under the deals financial terms.


Ann Mazenga

Eight and a half million of that is a convertible note that will convert to Kirkland's common stock at $1.85 per share upon stockholder approval.


Ann Mazenga

Beyond will also buy $8 million of Kirkland stock in a subscription agreement.


Ann Mazenga

The company's also entered a seven year collaboration agreement starting in q one of 2025.


Ann Mazenga

Beyond will earn a collaboration fee equal to 0.25% on all of Kirkland's quarterly retail and e commerce revenue, an incentive fee equal to 1.5% of Kirkland's incremental growth in e commerce revenue and a trademark license agreement where beyond will earn a store royalty fee equal to 3% of net store sales generated under the bed bath and beyond banner.


Ann Mazenga

I hope you were taking notes there.


Ann Mazenga

There is a lot of data that I just threw out you, but my question is simpler.


Ann Mazenga

Does the market need a smaller incarnation of bed, bath and beyond, or is this an example of two wrongs that won't likely make a right?


Lakshman

If you step back and think about what beyond is trying to do here, which is trying to have a broader play in home home improvement, home services, decor, furniture, I think that makes sense.


Lakshman

Zulily they have bought bed Bath and beyond the ip of it over stock, and now they are forging a partnership with container store.


Lakshman

So they're moving more towards this home centered around home concept.


Lakshman

And Marcus is a phenomenally well proven leader, so he has a plan to execute against it.


Lakshman

Now, it's a small test that they are trying to get into.


Lakshman

May likely be that Kirklands is not penetrated as much in the brick and mortar space as opposed to online.


Lakshman

Probably their sales are a lot more lopsided towards online and e commerce, especially coming out of COVID And they have about $60 million in net sales.


Lakshman

And likely the revenue is going to be.


Lakshman

They are expecting probably the vicinity of 200 to 500 range in terms of revenue from a store from this particular format, which is not huge expectation from a small, tightly controlled and well placed the retail location.


Lakshman

That's the key.


Lakshman

If they put it in the right set of semi urban, highly populated strip mall location, then you have low labor, low rentals, low reeses, so it has some legs.


Lakshman

You can make the economics work.


Lakshman

Bed Bath and beyond still has a wonderful brand recall, but it's a more promotion oriented.


Lakshman

Coupons, discounts, smart downs, so they'll have to price it properly.


Lakshman

The biggest thing that led to chapter eleven for Bed Bath and beyond was that the costs were not in control and a lot of the merchandise choices that were made were competing with the national brands and were targeted with Walmart, especially in the home improvement category, home improvement and decor.


Lakshman

And now this is a very particular category.


Lakshman

Furniture that they can probably reach more, lean more into, and have very clear merchandising, supply chain procurement cogs, gross margin play from Kirkland, that they probably have a good team already in place and they can lift and shift.


Lakshman

So if you read the press release, Marcus is very clearly pointing that out, that they have a proven track record and he has confidence in the leadership team.


Lakshman

So I think if you tie all this together, I think there is something here that they can start this experiment in a small format and then assess, and I believe that the right location and the right investments will likely be, will help them shape this strategy and the pilots.


Ann Mazenga

Okay.


Ann Mazenga

All right, Chris Kreitz, what do you say about this?


Chris Kreitz

I'm going to go off on the rails here and just go a totally different direction and answer, oh, boy.


Chris Kreitz

I think the whole history of beyond is so the new beyond is so interesting, right?


Chris Walton

Yeah.


Chris Kreitz

They buy the bed bath and beyond ip for $20 million.


Chris Kreitz

Right.


Chris Kreitz

Then they close overstock.com dot.


Chris Kreitz

Theyve now reopened overstock.com dot.


Chris Kreitz

They did a $40 million deal with the container store.


Chris Kreitz

They did this $17 million deal with Kirklands, they said were never going to open physical retail stores again.


Chris Kreitz

A year later, theyve opened physical retail stores again.


Chris Kreitz

At the, from the outside, it looks like the most scattered retailing strategy you can possibly imagine, and then just dumping money into failing brands or struggling brands.


Chris Kreitz

If I step back and say it's either a very scattered strategy or there's something brilliant going on here, I thought Lakshman had a really good point.


Chris Kreitz

The beyond brand has extremely high rankings on search and customer recall.


Chris Kreitz

They know the name.


Chris Kreitz

One of the things that's interesting in all the releases of the deals that they've done with Kirklands, with the container store, there's a small snippet that's hidden where they say all the companies are going to join beyond global data platform, which means my curiosity is, are they just making these investments to get access to the customer lists?


Chris Kreitz

To Lakshman's point, to use their brand recall and search prominence to be able to funnel customers towards these brands, I think it could be overall just a large marketing play.


Chris Kreitz

The other interesting piece is they all say that theyre going to adopt the loyalty program and then it looks like theyre going to start selling payment solutions and insurance and those ancillary financial products.


Chris Kreitz

Now that beyond is going to own, to me, theres some sort of marketing data play there where theyre just making these investments into smaller, in decline retailers that used to have billion dollars of sales.


Chris Kreitz

And now you have access to all of that customer data and you can figure out ways to funnel that data towards your future platform or brand.


Chris Kreitz

So I think its really interesting from that perspective too.


Ann Mazenga

So its a data play, you think, Chris Walton, this is your wheelhouse.


Ann Mazenga

You worked in home furnishings for a long time with target.


Ann Mazenga

What do you make of this?


Chris Walton

Yeah, I mean, God, there's a lot here.


Chris Walton

I think both the two gentlemen before me summed it up pretty well.


Chris Walton

My biggest takeaway from this is, I got to say, great job, Marcus.


Chris Walton

He's doing what the entrepreneur does, which is offloading all the risk onto two other companies.


Chris Walton

We brought up the container store, but in this case he's offloading it to Kirklands.


Chris Walton

Like, you know, that basically the money is just going to float to beyond.


Chris Walton

You know, if Kirklands tries to do anything and bedbeth beyond doesnt even really have to do anything to make that happen.


Chris Walton

So from a, from a cash flow perspective, I got to think thats good for beyonds business.


Chris Walton

But net net, when I step back from it, I struggle seeing why a new, smaller incarnation of bed bath and beyond is going to amount to anything because I just dont know the why.


Chris Walton

Like what is the why in terms of why Im going to that store over any other option.


Chris Walton

Like I just don't get it.


Chris Walton

The space is so crowded already.


Chris Walton

And you know when I go back to like why, why bed Bath beyond failed initially, it's because bed Bath and beyond was done better by Amazon.


Chris Walton

It was all the beyond stuff that you could get now through Amazon just delivered to you.


Chris Walton

So especially with all the other competition.


Chris Walton

So I.


Chris Walton

Good luck.


Chris Walton

Kirkland's trying to do this.


Chris Walton

I think he might have gotten hoodwinked a little bit on this one.


Ann Mazenga

Yeah, I agree Chris.


Ann Mazenga

I don't understand the new small format ones.


Ann Mazenga

I'm a little softer on the collaborations, the going inside the container store or going inside of a Kirklands.


Ann Mazenga

I don't hate that idea.


Ann Mazenga

I think that's an easier thing for them to test and they have the data, like Chris was saying, collected from shoppers across the platform, what they're interested in, what people are buying in those locations.


Ann Mazenga

And I think the thing that we haven't talked about is from a customer perspective, I do like the potential option to use these Kirklands locations, these container store locations.


Ann Mazenga

As you know, returns drop off points for these retailers.


Ann Mazenga

Like, there is some benefit there, especially when you're buying home products.


Ann Mazenga

I think that it's just like apparel in my mind, where it's like you could be trying a different color pillow or comforter or something and so you might be ordering three or four.


Ann Mazenga

Like, I think that from a customer standpoint it could be worth the test.


Ann Mazenga

But does it have the long term support?


Ann Mazenga

I think from an organizational perspective and from an ROI perspective, I really, I don't see that happening.


Chris Walton

But yeah, and I don't know, I think, like, while Bed Bath and beyond has good recall nationally as a brand, I don't see like what products are driving me into a shop and shop in either instance.


Chris Walton

Like, you know, like, oh, I'm going to go to the container store to check out bed bath and beyond.


Chris Walton

What?


Chris Walton

You know?


Ann Mazenga

Well, I mean, I think it's more of like a vignette.


Ann Mazenga

Like when you go into the container store, like, are you able to make purchases?


Ann Mazenga

Like, do you buy a rug at that same point in time?


Ann Mazenga

Or are there certain items that maybe make sense that, you know, it's just saving their customers a trip?


Chris Walton

But brands, brands don't matter.


Chris Walton

In home furnishings, though, like we've talked about, what people care about is the style, design and the quality of the product.


Chris Walton

So the brands of home furnishings are almost obsolete at this point, you know, so I don't know, but all right, let's keep moving because this one is related, the next one's related.


Chris Walton

Headline number four, Bye Bye Baby plans to close all of its stores less than a year after its launch, according to retail dive bye Bye baby plans to close its entire physical store footprint by the end of this year, quote, transforming into a digital first brand, end quote.


Chris Walton

And allowing it to focus, quote, all our energy on providing an exceptional online experience.


Chris Walton

Also, another end quote, store closing sales began on Friday and the banner will transition to an online only business, the company said in an faq on website Omni talk.


Chris Walton

Fans will remember that the New Jersey based dream on me won the Bye bye baby brand intellectual property and digital assets at auction for 15 and a half million dollars and then bought eleven store leases in seven states for $1.17 million in a separate auction and relaunched the company in eleven stores last fall ahead of the store launch.


Chris Walton

Bye bye baby CEO Pete Dalidin said in a statement that the retailer sought to position itself as a go to destination for all parents, caregivers and families seeking thoughtfully designed and quality baby and child focused products and exceptional customer service.


Chris Walton

End quote.


Chris Walton

Lakshman, let's go back to you on this one.


Chris Walton

Can a successful baby business exist in the long term without a store footprint?


Lakshman

Well, I'd like to connect three disparate data points and probably try to make the connection.


Lakshman

So first is the birth rates, second is influencers and third is quality.


Lakshman

I mean, we are currently at 1.6 birth rate, which is well below the 2.1 replacement.


Lakshman

So much so that the likely huge billionaires and leaders of the society and politicians are, are talking about this consistently now.


Lakshman

Then it's gotten national press, including Wall Street Journal and other shining a light on this particular problem.


Lakshman

So industry itself has a population headwind that is fundamental and structural.


Lakshman

So there is that particular pressure that is kind of building up for it or against it.


Lakshman

Then you have the second part of this is influencers.


Lakshman

Over the last three to five years, since the time of COVID if you go to YouTube or Instagram, one of the highest group of influencers belong to this young mothers and or expectant mothers.


Lakshman

They are publishing so much content and material on how to have safe, high quality products access to them.


Lakshman

Where can you find it?


Lakshman

How can you use it?


Lakshman

How can you install it?


Lakshman

All of that has become such a big, big driver of that group of small group of influencers that are very, very vocal and influential the third is the commoditization of some of these products themselves where you wanted to test drive, you wanted to go look and feel touch.


Lakshman

But since COVID what has happened is, I mean interestingly the quality of the product, again, time to influencers and all of the ratings out there, you have almost commoditized something as complex as a stroller into a very simple scorecard that clearly lays out does it have, you know, harmful chemicals in it?


Lakshman

Does it have stability, does it have balancing wheels?


Lakshman

Does it have counterpart?


Lakshman

All of these content metadata characteristics of the, of the product itself has been very widely published and there are tons and tons and tons of information and content regarding how it can be done.


Lakshman

So consumers have naturally gravitated towards the department stores and Amazon where if you think about this entire segment, about 1213 billion in size, you have Amazon, Target and Walmart dominating 80% of the market share here.


Lakshman

So it feels like a logical move from buybuy baby to kind of shutter the store because of the high operating expenses likely in the area that they were thinking about and likely exiting all of its formats and just being an online store where they can invest more into the marketing and attracting and go to the higher end of the funnel as opposed to servicing the customer in store through all of their associate experience.


Chris Walton

Okay, so interesting point.


Chris Walton

So you like this move?


Chris Walton

Okay, throw me for a loop here already.


Chris Walton

Chris, what are your thoughts on this?


Chris Kreitz

It's a good point.


Chris Kreitz

Lakshman raises.


Chris Kreitz

I guess the, the first like the counter to the question of can you survive without a physical retail store is like can anyone survive with one?


Chris Kreitz

Right?


Chris Kreitz

Like everyone in baby.


Chris Kreitz

I mean there's like 15 to 20 millionft of retail space has been vacated that used to be in baby.


Chris Kreitz

Like gymboree babies r Us.


Chris Kreitz

Carter's is closing stores.


Chris Kreitz

Buy bye baby.


Chris Kreitz

You know, now you have once upon a child is like that consignment space and local luxury boutiques.


Chris Kreitz

So most at scale, there's very few.


Chris Kreitz

I don't know of another major baby brand that has a big physical retail footprint.


Chris Kreitz

Like a lot of the people who would do try, you know, try and browse would end up going to buy online.


Chris Kreitz

To what Lakshman's point was that role that used to get traffic in the door which was like try and evaluate is now being filled in by social media and influencers.


Chris Kreitz

Then it makes sense.


Chris Kreitz

Maybe you don't have the physical retail footprint but then the question is so you're just competing to buy traffic.


Chris Kreitz

So basically they already know the product they want to buy so then you're just spending marketing, your customer acquisition cost goes up, then you're just competing against Target, Walmart to buy that traffic and then you don't have the lifetime of the customer to make that money back, that investment back.


Chris Kreitz

Whereas target, Walmart and Amazon, you can spend more to acquire a customer because your customer lifetime value is so much higher because for the next 20 years they're going to be buying product from you.


Chris Kreitz

Whereas if you're buy bye baby, you have to make enough back from that customer over the next year and a half of their baby purchases to be able to make the investment to capture that customer.


Chris Kreitz

I mean, I'm sure there's some potential here, but for me, I'm a pessimist on whether you can really survive and compete against the brands that have taken so much of your market share already without a physical footprint.


Chris Kreitz

So.


Chris Walton

Yeah, so that's interesting.


Chris Walton

So you basically just think at this point, given the saturation of the marketplace, just the baby business is just a bad business to be in.


Chris Walton

And particularly when you look at the macroeconomic factors too, in terms of the declining birth rates as well, that can't help anything too.


Chris Walton

That's your point, Chris, right.


Chris Kreitz

Totally.


Chris Kreitz

I mean it's puzzling, right?


Chris Kreitz

It's $100 billion market and it's really, really like you'd think massive market share currently only being done by Amazon, Target, Walmart really well.


Chris Kreitz

Wow, that sounds like a great opportunity for a niche brand that better connects with consumers but no ones been able to do it really successfully.


Chris Walton

Yeah.


Chris Walton

Yeah.


Chris Walton

And I 100% agree with you too.


Chris Walton

I think the idea of doing it alone on the online only side is a fools errand, honestly, because the margins, the products are all market available.


Chris Walton

Right.


Chris Walton

Theres not one thing that differentiates you from anyone else.


Chris Walton

You can get it from Amazon third party marketplace pretty easily and its really expensive to ship the gear and the cribs.


Chris Walton

The only margin in the business as the former head of this for Target is in the feeding area and the clothing area, which quite honestly are a little postnatal too, as much as they are prenatal.


Chris Walton

And so thats kind of a different business in that first time mom business as well.


Chris Walton

So its just the markets too saturated with the incumbents to make a hay at this I think, without a physical store presence in particular.


Chris Walton

But Anne, what do you think?


Ann Mazenga

Zachary, I, you know, I, I agree with what you're saying.


Ann Mazenga

I don't think that they need to have these again, like we were saying with, with beyond, like I don't think that there needs to be this baby superstore anymore.


Ann Mazenga

But I do think we have to look at what's happening with, like, babies R Us and Kohl's.


Ann Mazenga

I do think that there still is a need to go out and test and trial some of these products, especially the gear.


Ann Mazenga

So I do, I think the smart move from bye bye baby might be to look for a partner the same way that beyond is looking at container store and Kirklands, because you do get traffic from that.


Ann Mazenga

So whether or not they're ordering that stroller from you, for example, you do get people in the store to test it.


Ann Mazenga

And I think that's what Kohl's is banking on here with their strategy.


Ann Mazenga

Babies or us is like, hopefully once you're inside of a Kohl's, they're capturing you as a longer term customer.


Ann Mazenga

Like Chris was saying.


Ann Mazenga

They're, you know, they're giving you some reason to kind of be and start to stay and develop a relationship in this store.


Ann Mazenga

I just, I don't think that it needs to be the grand footprint that we're talking about.


Ann Mazenga

And if I were buy by baby, I would start looking for a similar partnership of Kohl's and Babies R Us with another retailer.


Ann Mazenga

Like especially, you know, might be far fetched, but even like an Ikea where you're like really in the furniture space or you're thinking of like a place that you're going to get people to invest in for the coming years after that in other higher margin areas potentially.


Chris Walton

But that's, that key is just, yeah, I mean, the thing thats interesting about buyback baby is they get the brands that the targets and the Walmarts dont get, too.


Chris Walton

They get the upper echelon gear brands, which is, what is the differentiation point.


Chris Walton

So thats what you have to play up.


Chris Walton

The last thing id make here, too.


Chris Walton

I think if theres a condemnation that should go out on this headline, its that they have the audacity to think they could run stores across, what was it, seven states like as an online only brand, you're going to know come in and know how to do that.


Chris Walton

That's just really hard.


Chris Walton

So, like, you just shot too hard and why didn't you just like keep one of them and make one of them really, really strong?


Chris Walton

I'm curious why that isn't part of this announcement.


Chris Walton

Why is it just shutting everything down completely?


Chris Walton

I don't know.


Chris Kreitz

You got to wonder like, how bad it was going for them for them to buy eleven leases and within, oh, my God.


Chris Kreitz

Because when you open a new retail store, you have a new presence.


Chris Kreitz

I mean, there's a ramp up time.


Chris Kreitz

Right.


Chris Kreitz

So how bad was it going that, like.


Chris Kreitz

Because that decision was probably made four or five months ago to close it all down.


Chris Kreitz

So, you know, within the first five months, they were just like, oh, my God, no.


Chris Walton

Yeah.


Chris Walton

They must have been, like, drowning.


Chris Walton

That's the only thing I can think of.


Chris Walton

They're like, what do we get ourselves into?


Chris Walton

Let's just get out of this completely.


Chris Walton

And, and, and that's what, that's what ultimately didn't work here, which is why I still think there could be a concept for the baby market, you know, at the upper end.


Ann Mazenga

All right, let's talk about what those babies are going to be doing on the phones that they're given very shortly after they're born.


Ann Mazenga

In headline number five, Chick fil A is releasing its own entertainment app, you guys, with family friendly shows and podcasts.


Ann Mazenga

According to CNBC, Chick fil A plans to launch a new app on November 18 with a slate of original animated shows, scripted podcasts, games, recipes, and ebooks aimed at families.


Ann Mazenga

A preview of the app, viewed by CNBC, included the first 22 minutes episode of Legends of Evergreen Hills, which continues or protagonists Sam's adventures in the fantasy world of Evergreen Hills.


Ann Mazenga

The first installment of Hidden Island, a scripted podcast about a family that shipwrecks on a deserted island, and a step by step cooking tutorial that uses a chick fil a milkshake as a key ingredient.


Ann Mazenga

Customers can pre download the free Chick fil a play app for their phones, iPads, and Android devices ahead of the launch next month.


Ann Mazenga

Chris, I'm going to have you wrap this up.


Ann Mazenga

This is in your wheelhouse, as you said.


Ann Mazenga

Are you buying or selling the idea of Chick fil a producing and distributing its own content via a standalone app?


Ann Mazenga

I love it.


Chris Kreitz

Like, you know, disclosure bias tier, you know, major Chick fil a fan, avid.


Chris Walton

As are many of our omnitoc listeners after last week's show.


Chris Kreitz

Yeah, yeah, they, you know, I love it.


Chris Kreitz

I think it's a good idea for them, right.


Chris Kreitz

It's a brand that people already love.


Chris Kreitz

And I think, like, on the surface level, right, people are doing less dining at the restaurant.


Chris Kreitz

You know, there are places like McDonald's starting to close their playpens, et cetera.


Chris Kreitz

I think it's a fun way to have some sort of replacement engagement in the restaurant.


Chris Kreitz

And I thought you brought up a really good point at the beginning of the show of brands doing a good job listening to customers and I don't think any customers like, actually said, oh, my God, I want chick fil a streaming.


Chris Kreitz

But when you look at the release here, they talked about understanding the adjacencies and how the adjacencies to mealtime are shifting.


Chris Kreitz

And instead of having, like, the play centers, they were looking for activities and games that could be adjacent to meal time that customers are doing now.


Chris Kreitz

Parents with iPads and things at restaurants, I think it's a great idea to have a slightly different engagement in the restaurant, but then outside the restaurant, you just extend your connection to that customer into totally new environments.


Chris Kreitz

When Chick fil A was never being discussed.


Chris Kreitz

So, like, is it going to be a massive win?


Chris Kreitz

Probably not.


Chris Kreitz

Is there going to be a lot of halo effect from deepening connection with the brand?


Chris Kreitz

And, you know, can you market to kids without blatantly marketing to kids with this?


Chris Kreitz

Yeah, probably, right?


Chris Kreitz

I like it.


Ann Mazenga

Yeah.


Ann Mazenga

I mean, that's a question that they bring up in this article, too, that I thought was interesting.


Ann Mazenga

Like procter and Gamble did this with the soap opera early on.


Ann Mazenga

Like, is this the next?


Ann Mazenga

Is Chick fil a the next p and g?


Ann Mazenga

And do they have the ability to drive traffic to another destination?


Ann Mazenga

We'll see.


Ann Mazenga

Lakshman, where do you come down on this?


Lakshman

Well, if they figure out the licensing fees and all the royalties and everything with others in terms of how they're going to go to production services on this one, right.


Lakshman

If it is a low overhead and they not invested a ton into that and have lot more AI driven content generation going on here, this is a real use case for asset light model for them to develop and deliver content quite significantly.


Lakshman

And kids are always stuck to their iPads, so we can have greater engagement.


Lakshman

I think it just increases two things.


Lakshman

One is traffic, where kids have a reason to go to chick fil a now.


Lakshman

And number two, duration for which they can stay in the store.


Lakshman

So you at least have to stay for the duration of the video.


Lakshman

Likely.


Lakshman

Right.


Lakshman

And they likely, you know, give free Wi Fi and whatnot for this.


Lakshman

And eight to ten minutes will likely get extended to 15 to 20 minutes.


Lakshman

The longer you stay, the more you buy, which in case drives the basket size and the AoE.


Ann Mazenga

Yeah.


Ann Mazenga

And I mean, Chris, what are your thoughts here?


Ann Mazenga

Walton?


Ann Mazenga

Chris Walton, because it's not in the chick fil a app.


Ann Mazenga

You use the chick fil a app like no one's business.


Ann Mazenga

So I mean, do you think that they'd be better positioned putting this inside of that app experience or can they drive traffic to an entirely new app.


Chris Walton

I don't know.


Chris Walton

I'm starting to feel like this is a glass half empty podcast for me because I hate this idea, too.


Chris Walton

I mean, and for the reasons you're saying, I think the PNG analogy is a false analogy, because PNG producing that content, but distributing it through an existing content network, which is the problem here.


Chris Walton

So whether you create your own app or whether you put it in the existing chick fil a app, when people are in the entertainment seeking mood, we talk about it all, all the time on the show.


Chris Walton

Like, you're competing against TikTok, Instagram, YouTube.


Chris Walton

That's a hard hurdle to get over.


Chris Walton

And so this whole thing, I mean, it's funny.


Chris Walton

It reminds me of my old boss, Jason Goldberger, used to have this thing where he'd say, like, you remember, like, the app craze in 2010, 2011?


Chris Walton

Like, roughly, he'd be like, do you know that Lysol built an app?


Chris Walton

Like, why in the hell would Lysol build an app?


Chris Walton

But that's what they did.


Chris Walton

And I think that's what we're seeing here as well, is that a lot of companies are trying to get into this media thing, but they're not thinking about the right way to do it.


Chris Walton

And they're almost over engineering a new wheel too much.


Chris Walton

Instead of just saying, okay, yeah, we want to put content in there.


Chris Walton

We want to create attachment to our brand.


Chris Walton

What's the right distribution channels for us to do that?


Chris Walton

And that's how you should be thinking of it.


Chris Walton

But this is.


Chris Walton

This is way too souped up for my tastes.


Ann Mazenga

Yeah, I mean, and I think it actually goes a little bit against what Lakshman was saying, because they.


Ann Mazenga

It does involve a heavy amount of capital to invest to make this content and to real and to drive traffic to it early on.


Ann Mazenga

Yes, you have AI that can help make this a little bit simpler.


Ann Mazenga

But my only question here is, you know, something that really started to resonate with me when we were at shop talk fall last week, and that is just really rethinking about Gen Z and Gen Alpha.


Ann Mazenga

They are the first digital first generation that has been.


Ann Mazenga

Has started on iPads from the moment that they were coming out a bye bye baby.


Ann Mazenga

And now they are looking at content.


Ann Mazenga

They're exploring brands and experiencing brands in a digital way like they never have before.


Ann Mazenga

So is this.


Ann Mazenga

Is chick fil a really, like, doubling down and saying, this is how we're going to try to invest with the next generation of consumer?


Ann Mazenga

We know we have them.


Ann Mazenga

We know that they want to come to our stores.


Ann Mazenga

We know that the content that we're generating on the social platforms is working with them.


Ann Mazenga

How do we get them further embedded with us?


Ann Mazenga

And that's, that's the only question that I have here is, like, will they actually be able to pull this off?


Ann Mazenga

Because they're, they're really putting all of their investment in doing that in a, in a way that a lot of other retailers aren't doing anymore, especially like Walmart last year was doing, trying to do this, too, with their add to heart series that we haven't heard anything about yet this year.


Ann Mazenga

But could this be, could this be them being kind of, you know, ahead of their time?


Chris Walton

Yeah, but, and to that point, like Walmart, we haven't heard word one about that from Walmart this year.


Chris Walton

And they were doing that through YouTube, too.


Chris Walton

So, like, but net.


Chris Walton

Net, what do you, do you like this idea?


Chris Walton

And though, like, would, is this how you would advise them, trying to approach Gen Z?


Ann Mazenga

And I would do it in this way, I think I try to keep it within the chick fil a app.


Ann Mazenga

I think that makes more sense as a starting point.


Ann Mazenga

And then using clips of or content to put on the social platforms on YouTube, on TikTok, where the generation is exposing themselves or discovering content.


Ann Mazenga

And then I drive them into the app for, for long form content if that's what they want.


Ann Mazenga

All right, let's go to the Lightning round, you guys.


Ann Mazenga

Question one goes to you.


Ann Mazenga

Chris retailbrew recently released their list of the best horror movies set inside retail destinations.


Ann Mazenga

What is the best movie shot in a retail location?


Ann Mazenga

And I'll give you extra credit if it's horror or Halloween related.


Chris Kreitz

I'm going to thank you and I'm going to decline the extra credit and go.


Chris Kreitz

I'm going to lower the bar here.


Ann Mazenga

That's just fine.


Ann Mazenga

That's just fine.


Ann Mazenga

That's just fine.


Chris Kreitz

I'm going to go with bad Santa, the classic retail Santa.


Chris Kreitz

And then I'll add a fun fact to try and get back some of the extra credit that I.


Ann Mazenga

We're accepting.


Ann Mazenga

We're accepting.


Chris Kreitz

Billy Bob Thornton actually was drunk on set during that scene to play up the role of being the drunken Santa in the department store.


Chris Kreitz

So.


Ann Mazenga

Oh, my God.


Chris Kreitz

Points back.


Ann Mazenga

How do we sign up for that job?


Chris Walton

Yeah, right.


Ann Mazenga

That would be that movie in a while.


Chris Walton

Yeah.


Chris Walton

I got to find a quote from that movie for our newsletter.


Chris Walton

All right, Chris, back to you.


Chris Walton

Doritos on Monday released its first ad filmed in space, and it is filled with the sound of astronauts crunching down on the brand's first ever chips to leave the planet.


Chris Walton

If you were to take one food into space with you, what would it be?


Chris Kreitz

It's a good question.


Chris Kreitz

I'm going to go.


Chris Kreitz

There's a new chip that's very similar to Doritos.


Chris Kreitz

They're called quest protein chips.


Chris Kreitz

They're made out of whey protein.


Chris Kreitz

It's 20 grams of protein, 140 calories.


Chris Kreitz

It tastes just like a Dorito.


Chris Kreitz

They're fantastic.


Chris Kreitz

Yeah.


Chris Kreitz

Really good.


Chris Kreitz

You have to check them out.


Ann Mazenga

All right, I'm going to try it.


Ann Mazenga

I don't know.


Ann Mazenga

I don't know if I can believe that a whey protein chip is going to give me the satisfaction of Doritos, but I'll hold on.


Chris Walton

And of all the food, that's what you take into space with you, Chris.


Chris Kreitz

They're really, you love them that much?


Chris Walton

That's funny, because my answer is Doritos, too, so.


Lakshman

Okay.


Chris Walton

I can buy that.


Chris Kreitz

I guess they're that good.


Chris Walton

I got to try them.


Chris Walton

Yeah.


Chris Walton

All right.


Ann Mazenga

All right, Lakshman, we're going to you now.


Ann Mazenga

It's almost Halloween.


Ann Mazenga

Very simple.


Ann Mazenga

Rank your top three Halloween candies.


Lakshman

Oh, boy.


Lakshman

Of course, you know, there is sore patch.


Lakshman

There is skittles.


Lakshman

That is Eminem is my personal favorite of mine is Hershey's kisses.


Ann Mazenga

Hershey's, kiddos.


Lakshman

Yes.


Chris Walton

Wow.


Ann Mazenga

Okay, that's number one.


Ann Mazenga

What's two and three?


Ann Mazenga

Sour patch kids and skittles.


Lakshman

And the second would be.


Lakshman

Yeah.


Lakshman

Second would be skittles and third would be, you know, probably sour patch.


Lakshman

Yeah.


Ann Mazenga

Oh, my God.


Ann Mazenga

I love.


Ann Mazenga

I'm with you on sour patch.


Ann Mazenga

I don't know about the Hershey kiss, though, man.


Chris Walton

Wow.


Chris Walton

That's so random.


Chris Walton

One of those is not like the other two.


Chris Walton

That's so crazy that Hershey kiss leads the pack.


Chris Walton

All right, last one, Locksmith.


Chris Walton

LinkedIn lunatics.


Chris Walton

A 670,000 member Reddit community devoted to, quote, insufferable LinkedIn content has made it made it its mission to poke fun at insufferable LinkedIn posts that have no business being shared on a business to business networking site.


Chris Walton

What is the most audacious post?


Chris Walton

You recall the reading on LinkedIn that you wish was not on the platform?


Lakshman

Yeah.


Lakshman

LinkedIn is like kitchen sink.


Lakshman

I say if you don't pay attention to it, it gets like really nasty in a few weeks.


Lakshman

So you have to continuously keep cleaning it and maintaining it.


Lakshman

But for me, I think, you know, all of the advertisements around, you know, hey, here are the new products, et cetera.


Lakshman

Those are fine.


Lakshman

But teaching life lessons through memes, that is one that probably crosses the boundary for me.


Chris Walton

Got it.


Chris Walton

Yes.


Chris Walton

Got it.


Chris Walton

Yes.


Ann Mazenga

I feel like Lakshman has an example in mind that I'd love him to share with us.


Lakshman

Well, there is this one meme where there was the office, and I think they had something along the lines of, you know, how teamwork is dreamwork or some.


Lakshman

Something like that, which was completely.


Lakshman

And using that particular frame to kind of help explain was, like, weird, because we know the dysfunctions of office, so let's.


Lakshman

Yeah, we love both, but they have to live in separate universes.


Chris Walton

Yeah, 100%.


Chris Walton

Yeah, that.


Chris Walton

That's always my pet peeve, too, is the pithy, like, sayings that come out on LinkedIn which, like, apply to every leadership situation and anywhere in the world.


Chris Walton

That always drives me nuts, too.


Chris Walton

All right, well, thanks you both.


Chris Walton

That closes up.


Chris Walton

Happy birthday today to Amelia Clark, Ryan Reynolds, and to the woman who is the reason I have rewatched step up to at least half a dozen times, Brianna Evagan.


Chris Walton

And remember, if you can only read or listen to one retail blog in the business, make it Omnitonko, the only retail media outlet run by two former executives from a current top ten Us retailer.


Chris Walton

Our fast five podcast is the quickest, fastest rundown of all the week's top news.


Chris Walton

And our daily newsletter, the retail daily Minute, tells you all you need to know each day to stay on top of your game as a retail executive, and also regularly features special content that is exclusive to us and that Ann and I take a heck of a lot of pride in doing just for you.


Chris Walton

Thanks as always for listening in.


Chris Walton

Please remember to like and leave us a review wherever you happen to listen to your podcast or on YouTube.


Chris Walton

You can follow us today by simply going to YouTube.com omnitalkretail.


Chris Walton

Lakshman if people heard this conversation, they say, hey, I want to get in touch with the A and M consumer and retail group.


Chris Walton

What's the best way for them to do that?


Lakshman

Yeah, you can find us on LinkedIn.


Lakshman

We have our own page on LinkedIn.


Lakshman

Search for Alvarez and Marcel consumer and retail group on LinkedIn.


Lakshman

Or you can visit visit Alvarez and marcel crg.com online.


Chris Walton

Awesome.


Chris Walton

Awesome.


Chris Walton

So until next week, on behalf of Chris Locksman and myself and all of us at Omnitoc Retail, as always, be careful out there.