Showing posts with label Dave Bennett. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dave Bennett. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

Glatt to Meet You Paisan - Kosher 'Meats' Italian at Mollie Stone's Markets

Although the item won't be introduced until early next year, Mollie Stone's is giving Fresh & Easy Buzz and our readers the first look at the label for its Nonna Luisa brand organic tomatoes, above.

Private Brand Showcase

Central to the 26-year run of success for privately-owned Mollie Stone's Markets, which operates nine supermarkets in the San Francisco Bay Area, is its format, which combines a strong selection of everyday food, grocery and general merchandise essentials - what it calls neccessity shopping - with a healthy assortment of specialty, gourmet, ethnic, natural, organic and fresh-prepared foods, which it calls passion shopping.

In many ways the format is the brand for Mollie Stone's.

And speaking of branding, a growing and evolving aspect of the grocer's neccessity and passion shopping approach and format - the stores are neither basic supermarkets or specialty markets - is its focus on private brand development, merchandising and promotion.

For example, although Mollie Stone's has only nine-stores, the grocer, which is majority-owned by partners Mike Stone and Dave Bennett, has three private product brands of its own - Mollie Stone's, which it uses on assorted dry grocery items, fresh meats, produce and baked goods; Mollie O Organic (for organic products); and Nonna Luisa, which is the retailer's Italian foods' brand.

Earlier this year Stone and Bennett also introduced the first item in what we call their "personal brand." That brand is Mike & Dave's, taken from the partners' first names. The first product is Mike & Dave's Wing Sauce.

Mike & Dave's is technically a fourth private brand for Mollie Stone's. But we call it a "personal brand" because not only is it named after the two partners who serve as each others wingmen, but they're also marketing the brand to other retailers via wholesalers and distributors, in addition to selling it in the nine Mollie Stone's stores. Therefore it's a venture product brand for the partners in addition to one sold in their stores.

There will be additional items under the Mike & Dave's brand, according to Dave Bennett, who is the retail operations, marketing and buying/merchandising-focused half of the ownership team. Stone focuses on the overall running of the chain from a headquarters perspective, along with finance, administration, new store development and other related tasks.

Mollie Stone's, which has its headquarters office near the bay in the Marin County town of Mill Valley - its stores are in San Francisco (three units) and (one each in) Sausalito, Greenbrae, (Marin County), Burlingame, San Bruno, San Mateo (San Francisco Peninsula) and Palo Alto (Silicon Valley) - is currently beefing-up its private brand offerings as part of that neccessity shopping/passion shopping overall brand its been developing since Stone and Bennett founded the small but high-volume chain in 1985.

For example, this week the grocer is introducing a line of fresh-cut Glatt Kosher meats under its Mollie Stone's private brand in a number of its San Francisco Bay Area stores, including the three small in size but high in sales volume markets it operates in San Francisco.


The Mollie Stone's brand Glatt Kosher meat line features a selection of  in-store cut, prepared and packaged cuts of beef roasts and steaks, ground meats and other varieties, as you can see in the photos above and below.


Kosher foods are a specialty of Mollie Stone's - and a passion of co-owner Bennett, who is one of the leading kosher category mavens in the food and grocery business.

For example, earlier in Mollie Stone's history, Bennett managed the Palo Alto store in addition to being involved in running the other stores the partners' operated at the time.

Over the years Bennett and his team at the Palo Alto supermarket created one of the most extensive kosher category product assortments of any chain or store in the Bay Area.

They also focused on enhancing the kosher offering for the key Jewish holidays, which has resulted in the Palo Alto location becoming a shopping venue for many Jewish consumers from throughout the nine-county Bay Area, particularly during the key Jewish holidays like Passover. There are nearly 7 million residents in the region, many of whom are observant Jews.

But Bennett isn't a kosher-centric kind of grocer when it comes to private brands or products of any kind, nor is Mollie Stone's a on-trick food retailer when it comes to ethnic and specialty foods and its own brands.

For example, Bennett tells us Mollie Stone's is in the process of growing its Nonna Luisa Italian foods private brand, which is named after the most important member of any Italian household, not to mention the entire culture. That person, of course, is Nonna (grandmother).

The grocer, according to Bennett, is in the process of adding two new items to its small but growing Nonna Luisa private brand line, both imported from Italy - shelf-stable Gnocchi and Organic San Marzano tomatoes. The label for the tomatoes is pictured at the top of this story.

Bennett tells Fresh & Easy Buzz the new items are will be introduced in the nine Mollie Stone's stores between January-March of next year. There are currently pasta, oils and vinegars under the Nona Luisa brand.

We aren't surprised Mollie Stone's has decided to grow its Nonna Luisa Italian foods' brand because, just as Bennett is the in-house kosher foods maven, the grocer also has its own in-house Italian foods maven, who's also a mensch, and has been with Stone and Bennett since nearly the beginning in 1985, when Mollie Stone's Markets' was founded.

That mavenmensch and Italophile, all rolled up into one, is Angelo Demante, who's managed the Sausalito Mollie Stone's grocery market  since it opened in 1988.

Demante, who's worked in the food and grocery retailing business for over a half century, not only is and speaks Italian, he knows the Italian foods' category inside-out, and regularly creates in the Sausalito store some of the best-looking Italian food product displays we've seen, particularly during holidays such as Columbus Day, Easter and Christmas, when many Italian specialty foods are popular and in demand.

In fact, we're told by a source we're only identifying as Deep Clerk that Demante, who may be the oldest-in-age but youngest-in-spirit - particularly when it comes to the Italian foods category - supermarket store manager in America, may already have an end-cap picked out in the Sausalito store for the new Nonna Luisa brand Gnocchi and canned tomatoes set to be introduced early next year.

If Mollie Stone's can make the launch happen in January, the timing could be perfect: Angelo Demante, the grocer's Italian foods' maven and mensch, can simply replace boss and kosher category maven Dave Bennett's current holiday kosher foods end-cap with his own, featuring the two new Nonna Luisa items imported from Italy, which would be another great way for kosher to meet Italian at Mollie Stone's Markets'.

Related Stories

May 16, 2011: 'Wing Man-to-Wing Man' - Mollie Stone's Markets' 'Mike & Dave' Create, Set to Launch 'Personal Brand' Wing Sauce

June 23, 2011: Mollie Stone's Markets' Owners' Eponymous Mike & Dave's Wing Sauce Grows Display Wings

July 14, 2011: Mollie Stone's Markets' Takes Next Step in its Social Media Journey By Hiring First In-House Manager

August 4, 2011: Mollie Stone's Markets' Year of Passionate Improvement Continues With Launch of New Website Tomorrow; But There's Also More In-Store

Read additional stories about Mollie Stone's Market here.

You can view all the stories in our Private Brand Showcase feature, including our most recent about Safeway Store's new private brand and Fresh & Easy's new burrito bowls, here.

Thursday, August 4, 2011

Mollie Stone's Markets' Year of Passionate Improvement Continues With Launch of New Website Tomorrow; But There's Also More In-Store


Northern California Market Region

Mollie Stone's Markets' uses the slogan "The Best of Both Worlds" to describe its retail format and approach to food and grocery retailing, which is to offer basic necessities - what it calls necessity shopping - along with specialty, natural, organic and gourmet foods - passion shopping - under the same roof.

But the theme or slogan also aptly describes 2011 for the privately-held, nine-store San Francisco Bay Area grocer, in that so far this year Mollie Stone's has been passionately focusing on the necessity of continuous improvement in what today have become the two worlds of food retailing - a grocer's stores and its use of cyberspace and social media to communicate with shoppers.

Mollie Stone's Markets' year of passionate improvement takes another step tomorrow when the Mill Valley (Marin County), California-based food retailer launches its brand new website, which according to co-owner Dave Bennett will not only look good but will also be filled with added features, along with being a work of continuous improvement in and of itself.

The website is at: http://www.molliestones.com/. If the new website isn't working right away on Friday it's probably because it's being tweaked by the designers.

The launching of the new website tomorrow comes on the heels of Mollie Stone's hiring of its first social media manager, which we reported exclusively on in this July 14, 2011 story: Mollie Stone's Markets' Takes Next Step in its Social Media Journey By Hiring First In-House Manager.

As we noted in the story, Mollie Stone's Markets' has been growing its use of social media significantly. As part of that growth the new website will over time integrate the grocer's social media sites with features on the website, according to Elizabeth Milks, the retailer's social media project manager.

Speaking of integration, Mollie Stone's isn't letting its passion for cyberspace and social media take its focus off the nuts and bolts of food retailing - its stores.

In fact the opposite is true. Since January of this year the retailer has been waist-deep in various store remodeling projects as well as acquiring its ninth store in late January in San Francisco's Castro District and opening it less than two months later, on March 9.

Along with opening the new store in San Francisco's Castro District, which is Mollie Stone's third store in the city, the grocer has remodeled the produce, bakery and deli departments in its Burlingame, California supermarket, a project it started in January and completed in April. (You can see a photo here.)


Additionally, Mollie Stone's has just completed the remodeling of the produce department (pictured above) in its Sausalito, California store, along with doing major resets of the in-store bakery and cheese shop.

As part of the produce department remodeling project, the store's manager and the Mollie Stone's team heading it up decided to extend the fresh fruit and vegetable-filled department outside, adding the merchandising feature pictured below in front of the store.

The concept fits the outside of the store well because Sausalito, which is just over the Golden Gate Bridge from San Francisco, is a European-style village community located on the water and its residents are very healthy food and foodie-oriented. The fresh produce outside therefore makes a very locally relevant message, as well as lending itself to impulse purchases and thus added sales for the store, which is exactly what happened last week as the fresh fruits featured in the tropical-themed display below were selling briskly.


Next up for Mollie Stone's Markets, which is co-owned by Mike Stone and Dave Bennett who founded the chain together in 1985, is a remodeling of the deli-prepared foods department in its Greenbrae (Marin County) supermarket. The store's produce department was remodeled in December 2010.

Stone and Bennett have also channeled some of their passion for the grocery business and specialty foods into a new brand of products called "Mike & Dave's." The first product under the eponymous brand, Mike & Dave's Wing Sauce, was launched in May of this year (see our stories linked at the end of this piece). Additional "Mike & Dave's" products are in development, Bennett tells Fresh & Easy Buzz.

Back in cyberspace, Mollie Stone's has launched a new "Secret Sales" promotion on its Facebook site. The promotion works this way: Each Tuesday the grocer posts a deal item along with a promotional code which allows shoppers to get the product at the special Facebook-only price. Customers note the promotional code number and give it to the checker at a Mollie Stone's store in order to get the "secret sale" item at the special price.

The promotion, although brand new has, based on our observation and research, been driving shoppers to the Facebook site and in-turn is driving users of the site into the stores for the deals, depending of course on the specific product and how good the deal is.

Social media project manager Milks' tells us it's the first of what will be many social media site-based promotions Mollie Stone's Markets will be doing in the coming months.

In addition to Facebook, Mollie Stone's has a very active Twitter feed, and also uses the location-based site Foursquare. It also has a YouTube channel where it posts videos.

The launching of the brand new website on Friday will tie-in Mollie Stone's Market's eight month year of passionate improvement - and neither are over yet - in a solid way in our analysis because it will be a bigger and better central place online where the grocer can showcase all it's been doing to improve its stores (and open a new one), along with its growing social media efforts, allowing it to better communicate to shoppers its focus on both the necessities and passions of food and grocery retailing in the San Francisco Bay Area.

Mollie Stone's Year of Passionate Improvement: Follow the Story Below

July 14, 2011: Mollie Stone's Markets' Takes Next Step in its Social Media Journey By Hiring First In-House Manager

June 23, 2011: Mollie Stone's Markets' Owners' Eponymous Mike & Dave's Wing Sauce Grows Display Wings

May 16, 2011: 'Wing Man-to-Wing Man' - Mollie Stone's Markets' 'Mike & Dave' Create, Set to Launch 'Personal Brand' Wing Sauce

March 7, 2011: Fresh & Easy Neighborhood Market, Superior Grocers, Mollie Stone's All Opening New Stores in California Wednesday

March 1, 2011: Mollie Stone's Markets Will Open its New Store in San Francisco's Castro District On March 9

February 17, 2011: Mollie Stones Markets Planning to Open Newest Store in San Francisco First Week in March

January 28, 2011 Mollie Stone's Markets Confirms Our January 13 Report; Announces New San Francisco Store Via Twitter & Facebook

January 13, 2011: Mollie Stone's Markets Taking Over Closed 18th Street Delano's IGA Market in San Francisco's Castro District

November 30, 2010: DeLano's IGA Markets Closing Five Stores in San Francisco & Marin County; Fairfax, Davis Units to Remain Open (For Now)

November 29, 2010: Veteran Grocer Harley DeLano's 'DeLano's IGA Markets' Chain On the Verge of Closure in San Francisco Bay Area

Also see  for related stories.

Thursday, July 14, 2011

Mollie Stone's Markets Takes Next Step in its Social Media Journey By Hiring First In-House Manager

Two very different ways to drive business. But both are social: One of the many ways Mollie Stone's Markets uses its Facebook, Twitter and YouTube sites is as a way to help "drive" food and grocery shoppers into its nine stores in the San Francisco Bay Area. The grocer also uses stickers like the one pictured above, which it put in the window of its newest store in San Francisco's Castro district in January 2011 in advance of the store's opening in March, to alert and "drive" customer traffic to its social media sites...

But Mollie Stone's doesn't rely on social media alone to "drive" business, particularly not in the case of its three stores in San Francisco. Instead, the grocer literally drives shoppers who live anywhere in the city to the stores, picking them up at home and returning them back with their groceries in tow, in its Mollie Bus (pictured above at the March 9 grand opening of its newest store in San Francisco's Castro District), as long as the customers buy at least $30 worth of groceries.

Food & Grocery Retailing in the 21rst Century: Social Media

Social media is for people of all shapes, sizes and ages (although not too young).

It's also something grocers of all sizes - not just the big chains - should be taking advantage of because in our experience and analysis it offers itself up to smaller (and not so small) regional grocery chains and independents as a potential "great equalizer" in their ever-increasing challenge of competing against the growing power of nationally focused chains like Walmart Stores, Target, Safeway, Supervalu, Inc., Whole Foods Market, Trader Joe's and numerous others, which continue to spread throughout the U.S., opening new stores in existing markets as well as launching into new ones.

Regardless if the operation is a chain of 250, 100, 50, five or just a single store, a grocer can create an account on Facebook and Twitter for zero cost, for example, and find someone with some talent and experience in using social media to coordinate and be in charge of it. From there, the grocer has a potentially whole new world of opportunity opened up to it to talk with customers and potential customers, to create added awareness, promote, and most of all to build, enhance and strengthen customer relationships as part of its overall customer service experience and process.

We use "potentially" above for a very good reason: Social media alone isn't a panacea for grocers, regardless of size. Instead it's a potentially powerful platform that if used regularly and used well - like a plant it must be given regular attention and care - can over time become a powerful communications and customer relationship-building tool for grocers of all sizes, along with that potentially "great equalizer" for smaller chains and independents.

Mollie Stone's social media journey

One independent grocer that's recognized both the overall potential power as well as the "great equalizer" aspect of social media is Mill Valley, California-based Mollie Stone's Markets, which operates nine stores in the San Francisco Bay Area and is majority-owned by partners Mike Stone and Dave Bennett.

Mollie Stone's joined the social media world in late 2010 (Facebook, Twitter and YouTube sites) with some very important help from San Francisco, California-based Reasonate Social Media, which was founded by Eric Harr, who's also the CEO of the firm.

Harr and his team took a comprehensive approach with Mollie Stone's Markets' in partnership with co-owner Dave Bennett, who splits the running of the food and grocery chain with Mike Stone, his partner of  25 years, having founded Mollie Stone's together in 1985.

Harr, Bennett and Stone brought all of Mollie Stone's headquarters office employees together - buyers and merchandisers, finance folks, human resources people and more - together for a number of social media training sessions, so that not only would the process be department and company-wide, but also because they realized that in order to make social media an integrated part of the grocer's overall customer service, marketing and community outreach efforts it had to be something shared by everybody, instead of ending up as a social media ghetto at the company, which often is the case at organizations of all kinds.

Mollie Stone's Markets is now humming on multiple cyber-cylinders when it comes to social media - and most importantly, in our analysis, using it as an integrated part of its overall operations, marketing and customer service functions, which even includes signs in the stores and on store windows inviting shoppers to join the grocer on Twitter and Facebook, for example.

Those multiple cyber-cylinders include very active Facebook, Twitter and Foursquare sites and campaigns, along with active and regular participation on review sites like Yelp, in which Mollie Stone's responds to both criticism and praise (and in-between) of its stores, including aspects like product pricing and customer service.


Reasonate Social Media, which has operated Mollie Stone's various social media sites as part of its consulting relationship with the grocery chain until now, also encouraged co-owner Dave Bennett to step out and become the "face" of Mollie Stone's Markets by appearing in a few videos (like the one above) the firm has produced for the grocery chain, which feature Bennett, who's latest venture, along with partner and fellow wingman Mike Stone, is a specialty foods brand, "Mike and Dave's," the first product being Mike & Dave's Wing Sauce, which we wrote about here in May and again in June.

Elizabeth Milks hired as in-house social media manager

Mollie Stone's Markets has now taken a next big big step in its social media evolutionary process, hiring its first-ever social media project manager, Elizabeth Milks, who is working in-house at the grocer's headquarters in Mill Valley, California (Marin County) and will be using that day-to-day vantage point to increase the amount and variety of social media content Mollie Stone's produces, and to do so in a real time way.

The grocer and Reasonate Social Media are currently in the process of transitioning the day-to-day social media tasks and responsibilities from the firm to in-house at Mollie Stone's Markets, Elizabeth Milks told Fresh & Easy Buzz yesterday.

Mollie Stone's Markets has not publicly announced the hiring of its new social media project manager. Therefore you're reading it here first.

Ms. Milks, who graduated from the University of California at Berkeley in 2006 with a BA Degree in Public Health, worked as a marketing assistant (2008-2011) for VR Research, which is a public records-oriented research firm in Oakland, California. Prior to that she worked in the legal services industry in the Bay Area, following graduation from U.S. Berkeley.

Grocers and social media

Ms. Milks starts her new position at Mollie Stone's with a good base.

For example, Bennett, the chain's head grocery and produce buyers, and a number of other employees regularly use social media sites such as Twitter and Facebook, having established their own accounts.

Additionally, the fact  Reasonate Social Media worked so closely with Mollie Stone's on a chainwide basis is also a big plus because there exists a strong buy-in for the use of social media throughout the grocery chain, from it's headquarters office to the stores, based on our reporting, research and answers we've received from Dave Bennet, Eric Harr and others at the chain.

Such buy-ins are key in order for a grocer to make social media more than a mere promotional vehicle, instead using it as part of the overall customer-relationship building experience, which includes face-to-face interaction where it counts most, in the stores, enhanced by using social media as a cyber-storefront of sorts, harnessing the potential power of many along with the immediacy factor.

For example, think about product recalls in terms of the power of the immediacy factor. Before Twitter or Facebook, a grocer really had no way to let customers know that the FDA or USDA were recalling this or that product for this or that reason except to post signs in all of its stores and alerting the local media, hoping they old report something about it sooner rather than later.

But today, a grocer's social media coordinator can go on Facebook and Twitter, along with a host of other sites, and communicate to followers that a food product has been recalled literally the moment it's found out. There's no longer a need to rely on third parties like the media. Instead the grocer can communicate directly to its followers (the power of many) on the social media sites. And nearly always those followers will tell others using their Facebook pages, Twitter feeds and other social media sites, which harnesses the power of many even further.

This way sound simple (or "so what") because we're already so used to social media despite its young age. But this ability to communicate immediately and directly is revolutionary for food retailers, as are many of the other ways in which social media can be harnessed by grocers who put an effort into doing so. And effort is required, because like those plants, which need attention, care and watering - along with re-potting at times - so too does the use of social media by grocers.

Mollie Stone's Markets is a good example of how grocer's of any size - but particularly those regional chains and independents we mentioned at the start of this story because of the potential "great equalizer" effect - can, if they make a commitment to it, harness the low-cost, high-impact power of social media and use it in an integrated way to enhance what they are already doing at store-level, along with using it to open new doors that previously didn't exist for food and grocery retailers in the pre-cyberspace and pre-social media eras, which seems like it was ages ago but really was only a few years ago, particularly in the case of social media.

Related Stories

June 23, 2011: Mollie Stone's Markets' Owners' Eponymous Mike & Dave's Wing Sauce Grows Display Wings

May 16, 2011: 'Wing Man-to-Wing Man' - Mollie Stone's Markets' 'Mike & Dave' Create, Set to Launch 'Personal Brand' Wing Sauce

March 7, 2011: Fresh & Easy Neighborhood Market, Superior Grocers, Mollie Stone's All Opening New Stores in California Wednesday

March 1, 2011: Mollie Stone's Markets Will Open its New Store in San Francisco's Castro District On March 9

February 17, 2011: Mollie Stone's Markets Planning to Open Newest Store in San Francisco First Week in March

January 13, 2011: Mollie Stone's Markets Taking Over Closed 18th Street Delano's IGA Market in San Francisco's Castro District

January 28, 2011: Mollie Stone's Markets Confirms Our January 13 Report; Announces New San Francisco Store Via Twitter & Facebook

November 30, 2010: DeLano's IGA Markets Closing Five Stores in San Francisco & Marin County; Fairfax, Davis Units to Remain Open (For Now)

November 29, 2010: Veteran Grocer Harley DeLano's 'DeLano IGA Markets' Chain On the Verge of Closure in San Francisco Bay Area

Thursday, June 23, 2011

Mollie Stone's Markets' Owners' Eponymous Mike & Dave's Wing Sauce Grows Display Wings


Private Brand Showcase

Mike & Dave's Wing Sauce, the eponymous first-in-brand food product created and launched in May by Mike Stone and Dave Bennett, the co-owners of Mill Valley, California-based Mollie Stone's Markets, has sprouted wings of a display kind in one of the grocer's nine stores in the San Francisco Bay Area.

The attractive display (pictured above), in the Mollie Stone's supermarket in San Bruno near San Francisco, is all about summer - A big "wing-style" display of Mike & Dave's Wing Sauce, cross-merchandised with beer and displayed in front of the store's meat department, where the fresh chicken wings are available nearby.

And for many people, summertime and chicken wings go together like, well ... a chicken and its wings.

We wrote about the partner's new brand and first product in this May 16, 2011 story: Wing Man-to-Wing Man' - Mollie Stone's Markets' 'Mike & Dave' Create, Set to Launch 'Personal Brand' Wing Sauce

In addition to offering their wing sauce in the nine Mollie Stone's stores in the San Francisco Bay Area, Stone and Bennett, partners since 1987, are looking for distributors and retailers throughout the U.S. who are interested in taking the product on.

A management member of Unified Grocer's specialty and natural foods distribution division, who also happens to be regular reader of Fresh & Easy Buzz, recently told us the City of Commerce, (Southern) California-based cooperative, which is the largest grocery wholesaler in the Western U.S., is interested in distributing Mike & Dave's Wing Sauce to its chain and independent customers throughout the west.

Unified also has an office in Livermore, in Northern California, along with a distribution center in Stockton, as well as distribution facilities in the Pacific Northwest.

Mollie Stone's Markets is a longtime member of the Unified Grocers cooperative.

Left-to-Right: Partners and wingmen Dave Bennett and Mike Stone.
Strategy Session: Extending the Mike & Dave's brand

Every so often we offer retailers we write about a suggestion or two regarding their private brands - or in the case of Mike & Dave's Wing Sauce what we call a "personal brand." We call this aspect of Private Brand Showcase the "Strategy Session."

Here's our suggestion for the wingmen, Mike Stone and Dave Bennett, as it pertains to their Mike and Dave's Wing Sauce.

One of the hottest fresh-prepared foods items in grocery stores at present is fully-prepared (including the sauce) and cooked ready-to-eat and ready-to-heat chicken wings.

For example, Safeway Stores, which Mollie Stone's Markets competes against in the San Francisco Bay Area, offers a couple varieties of ready-to-eat wings under its Signature Cafe brand. The items are selling extremely well in the grocery chain's stores

Tesco's Fresh & Easy Neighborhood Market also recently introduces a couple varieties of wings to its stores,as we reported on and wrote about in this June 11, 2011 story: Sliders, Meatballs and More - Fresh & Easy Neighborhood Market Introducing Six New Heat & Serve Food Items.

Branding the products also adds value (which for a grocer means a higher gross margin), compared to merely offering the wings as generic prepared foods items. This is particularly true is one has a good hook on which to hang that branding. And we think Mike & Dave do - their "personal brand," Mike & Dave's Wing Sauce.

Our suggestion for the Mollie Stone's wingmen: Create a fully-prepared, ready-to-eat chicken wing item (SKU or two), using the Mike & Dave's Wing Sauce. Brand it as "Mike & Dave's Chicken Wings," using the same graphic design on the label as is on the shelf-stable wing sauce product label, and offer it for sale in the in-stores' deli-prepared foods departments. in the nine Mollie Stone's stores.

Mollie Stone's is well known in the Bay Area for its fresh-prepared foods offerings, so the item is a natural.

The wingmen can also use the ready-to-eat "Mike & Dave's Chicken Wings" product package, merchandised in the store deli departments, to cross-promote the shelf stable Mike & Dave's Wing Sauce, by simply putting a instantly redeemable (IRC) cents-off coupon (say for at least 50-cents) for the bottle of sauce on the outside of the packages. Or tuck a coupon inside to be used later by the customer after they eat the prepare wings. Or do both.

And in good wingman fashion, one hand helping the other, the bottles of Mike & Dave's Wing Sauce can also be used to promote the new ready-to-eat chicken wings under the brand by simply putting a coupon for the product in the deli case on the bottles, a sticker or bottle neck coupon) of the existing wing sauce.

Traditionally it's called cross-promotion or cross-couponing. But in this case we call it "Wingman product marketing." After all, products just like people, can always use a wingman.

Related Stories

Click on this link -  - for related stories about Mollie Stone's Markets.

Click here -  - for past stories in our Private Brand Showcase feature.

Monday, May 16, 2011

'Wing Man-to-Wing Man' - Mollie Stone's Markets' 'Mike & Dave' Create, Set to Launch 'Personal Brand' Wing Sauce

Dave Bennett (left) and Mike Stone, who we've nicknamed the "Wingmen."

Private Brand Showcase

Mill Valley, California-based Mollie Stone's Markets, which is majority-owned by partners Mike Stone and Dave Bennett who founded the local chain in 1985, offers a number of private brands in its nine supermarkets in the San Francisco Bay Area, including a selection of items under its own three brand names - "Mollie Stone's," "Mollie O Organic" and "Nonna Luisa" - which is something that's not all that common for a chain its size to do.

The privately-held, upscale-oriented grocer is a member of the Unified Grocers retailer-owned cooperative and offers its two major private brands - "Western Family" (mainstream food, grocery, perishable, frozen and general merchandise items) and "Natural Selections," the wholesaler's natural and organic products brand - in its nine stores, the newest unit being the store in San Francisco's Castro District, opened on March 9.

Unified, which is the largest retailer-owned wholesale grocer in the Western United States based on annual sales volume ($3.921 billion in 2010), is headquartered in Southern California. It has a Northern California distribution  center in Stockton, in the Northern Central Valley, and a buying-merchandising office in the East Bay Area city of Livermore.

But the focus of this story isn't on the grocer's existing three private brands or the store brands from Unified Grocers it merchandises in its stores.

Instead it's a product branding story of a more personal nature, involving Mollie Stone's Markets' and its owner-partners, Stone and Bennett - Mike and Dave, the "Wingmen."

In fact, if we had a special feature called "Personal Brand Showcase" that's where we'd prefer to put this story. But, and we know our readers will understand, we aren't going to create such a feature because there aren't many stories like this we could put in it.

Stone and Bennett, both veteran grocers in Northern California's San Francisco Bay Area, have created and are preparing to launch in their stores not a new private brand but what we're calling a "personal brand," as a way to distinguish between the two, although there are more similarities between a private brand and "personal brand" (in our usage) than there are differences.

The grocer-partners have created a brand named after their first names and are launching their first item in the nine Mollie Stone's stores this week. The brand name: "Mike & Dave's." The product: "Mike and Dave's Wing Sauce," pictured below.


When we saw the new item (and brand) the name resonated well in our always brand-evaluating minds for a couple reasons.

First, sometimes the best brand names for products come, instead of from long brain-storming sessions and multiple focus group trials, from the simple and familiar - who we are, what we know and the like.

For example, Henry Ford used his last name for his auto company. Familiar. And simple.

The founders of Apple named the company after a common fruit. Simple and familiar enough; though very "out of the apple box" for what was then a revolutionary product - the personal computer.

The football team in Dallas, Texas is, what else - the Cowboys. Could it really be named after anything that's more familiar (and some might say simple) to a Texan than a cowboy?

And two guys in Vermont named Ben & Jerry decided to call their start up company and ice cream brand Ben & Jerry's. The rest, when it comes to the equity and success of the Ben & Jerry's brand today, as they say - is history.

For Stone and Bennett - Mike and Dave - who've been working together in the grocery business for decades, nothing could be more familiar to the partners than each other - and their respective first names.

Imagine, for example, how many times they've used each others first names - face-to-face (or across the way) in the office, over the phone and in e-mails?

The brand name "Mike & Dave's" also fits the product - a wing (as in chicken) sauce - in two key ways: Chicken wings, which absolutely must have plenty of sauce on them, are a personal food, eaten with our hands and usually with family and friends, or strangers who will soon become friends, while watching sports on TV or at parties, picnics and the like.

Secondly, A good business partnership requires the partners to work as a team, something Stone and Bennett are noted for, often acting as each others "wing man" when needed, meaning both understand that in order to stay in business together and maintain and grow a successful grocery chain, neither of them can always be the top banana or spread his wings too much or too often without giving the other a chance to do the same.

Instead, and this is true with the "wing men"-partners, each focuses on his key strengths - and let's the other shine at his. That's what a good "wing man" does in the grocery business.

Dave Bennett's main strengths and key areas of focus are marketing, buying and merchandising - including knowing as much about the kosher foods' category as any grocer in America. Mike Stone focuses primarily on operations, finance and new store development.

As a result of this relationship and partnership "Mike & Dave's Wing Sauce" not only is a "personal brand" in that the name is taken from the two men's first names, it also obtains brand credibility (and offers a fairly decent pun) from what we call the "wing man factor," as described above.

Stone and Bennett - the "Wingmen" - are launching their "Mike & Dave's Wing Sauce" in their nine Mollie Stone' grocery markets, where they will offer it exclusively for now.

But Dave Bennett tells Fresh & Easy Buzz exclusively that he and partner Mike Stone are already "planning [to create and launch] other 'Mike & Dave's' food product items."

Mollie Stone's Markets sells a lot of groceries - particularly specialty food-oriented products - in its nine Bay Area stores. The chain's creative merchandisers love coming up with and implementing cross-merchandising-style displays in the stores.

Therefore, although neither Stone or Bennett - Mike or Dave - or any of their "wing men" on the merchandising team or in the stores have told us this, we're going to spread our predictive wings a bit and offer this: If you happen to be near a Mollie Stone's market (store list here) in the very near future don't be surprised if you see "Mike & Dave's Wing Sauce" not only on the store's shelves but also displayed in one or more locations in the store.

We will offer four potential display opportunities for you to look for if you do happen to visit one of the stores:

>on a thematic end-cap, cross-merchandised with other compatible items;

>in the meat department, displayed near the fresh chicken wings;

>in the deli department;

>and displayed in the produce department, cross-merchandised with ranch dressing, celery, baby carrots and other fresh veggies regularly served with dipping sauces and eaten with sauce-coated chicken wings.

After all, once the store managers and department heads at the nine Mollie Stone's stores learn about the new wing sauce created by and named after their bosses, being the creative merchandisers they are, they're going to want to feature Mike and Dave's "personal brand" in places in the stores where the product is sure to get noticed - and purchased - by customers because ... that's what good wing men and women do in the grocery business.

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