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Trader Joe’s article from Fortune Magazine August 23, 2010 <br />FORTUNE -- Apple's retail stores aren't the only place where lines form these days. It's 7:30 on a <br />July morning, and already a crowd has gathered for the opening of Trader Joe's newest outpost, in <br />Manhattan's Chelsea neighborhood. The waiting shoppers chat about their favorite Trader Joe's <br />foods, and a woman in line launches into a monologue comparing the retailer's West Coast and East <br />Coast locations. Another customer suggests that the chain will be good for Chelsea, even though the <br />area is already brimming with places to buy groceries, including Whole Foods and several upscale <br />food boutiques. <br />But Trader Joe's is no ordinary grocery chain. It's an offbeat, fun discovery zone that elevates food <br />shopping from a chore to a cultural experience. It stocks its shelves with a winning combination of <br />low-cost, yuppie-friendly staples (cage-free eggs and organic blue agave sweetener) and exotic, <br />affordable luxuries -- Belgian butter waffle cookies or Thai lime-and-chili cashews -- that you simply <br />can't find anyplace else. <br />Employees dress in goofy trademark Hawaiian shirts, hand stickers out to your squirming kids, and <br />cheerfully refund your money if you're unhappy with a purchase -- no questions asked. At the <br />Chelsea store opening, workers greeted customers with high-fives and free cookies. Try getting that <br />kind of love at the Piggly Wiggly. <br />It's little wonder that Trader Joe's is one of the hottest retailers in the U.S. It now boasts 344 stores in <br />25 states and Washington, D.C., and strip-mall operators and consumers alike aggressively lobby <br />the chain, based in Monrovia, Calif., to come to their towns. A Trader Joe's brings with it good jobs, <br />and its presence in your community is like an affirmation that you and your neighbors are worldly <br />and smart. <br />The privately held company's sales last year were roughly $8 billion, the same size as Whole Foods' <br />(WFMI,Fortune 500) and bigger than those of Bed Bath & Beyond, No. 314 on the Fortune 500 list. <br />Unlike those massive shopping emporiums, Trader Joe's has a deliberately scaled-down strategy: It <br />is opening just five more locations this year. The company selects relatively small stores with a <br />carefully curated selection of items. (Typical grocery stores can carry 50,000 stock-keeping units, or <br />SKUs; Trader Joe's sells about 4,000 SKUs, and about 80% of the stock bears the Trader Joe's <br />brand.) The result: Its stores sell an estimated $1,750 in merchandise per square foot, more than <br />double Whole Foods'. The company has no debt and funds all growth from its own coffers. <br />You'd think Trader Joe's would be eager to trumpet its success, but management is obsessively <br />secretive. There are no signs with the company's name or logo at headquarters in Monrovia, about <br />25 miles east of downtown Los Angeles. Few customers realize the chain is owned by Germany's <br />ultra-private Albrecht family, the people behind the Aldi Nord supermarket empire. (A different <br />branch of the family controls Aldi Süd, parent of the U.S. Aldi grocery chain.) Famous in Germany for <br />not talking to the press, the Albrechts have passed their tightlipped ways on to their U.S. business: <br /> <br />