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Exploring H-E-B: Market Share and Banners

joe v smart shop

When it comes to market share, H. E. Butt Grocery Company BB #:106490 dominates in 11 South and Central Texas markets, according to figures from Metro Market Studies, and continues to extend its reach.

In Corpus Christi, the retailer maintains a 60-percent share of market, compared to number-two Walmart with 25.6 percent.

In Laredo, H-E-B has a 51.9-percent share versus 30.1 percent for Walmart, and a share between 40 and 50 percent in San Antonio, McAllen, Waco, Austin, and Bryan-College Station. It also holds the top spot in Odessa, Victoria, and Houston, although with a less substantial lead.

In addition to its flagship banner, positioned as a community hub, the company also operates H-E-B plus!, a superstore format; Joe V’s Smart Shop, a small-footprint concept focused on low prices; Mi Tienda, with two stores in the Houston area tailored to Hispanic shoppers; and Central Market, an upscale format known for its wide variety of local and global choices.

“The company’s multi-format, multi-banner approach goes beyond just placing a name on a sign,” says retail expert Carol Spieckerman, president of Spieckerman Retail in Bentonville, AR. “Each banner has its own point of view and strategically resonates with clearly defined customer segments.”

In June 2020, the retailer opened a new format, H-E-B Spring Green Market, in Richmond. The 101,000-square-foot store focuses on fresh and local products including citrus, greens, and tomatoes; a “Healthy Living” department with bulk nuts, grains, and dried fruits; private label H-E-B Organics and H-E-B Select products; in-store produced juices and guacamole; and a bakery and tortilleria.

Spring Green Market is also focused on service, offering one of the chain’s largest curbside operations. In 2020, in addition to Richmond, it opened new stores in Kerrville, Lubbock (a new market), San Antonio, and South Austin, as well as a pharmacy in Austin. Leander is among the markets planned for 2021.

One area of current interest is Austin, where H-E-B has been operating since 1994. In December 2019, the company announced it would invest $200 million in South Austin, creating more than 1,000 new jobs.

It had previously said it would open three new stores, as well as embarking on a major remodel. H-E-B already has two dozen stores in the Austin area.

The company has moved as far north as Dallas-Fort Worth, including Waxahachie and Corsicana in the southern Metroplex and a Central Market in Plano to the north. There are also an H-E-B plus! and a Central Market in Fort Worth. H-E-B announced plans for two additional Metroplex stores this year.

But it has not entered this important market in a big way, reflecting the retailer’s conservative nature when it comes to expanding into new regions. Industry observers note that would require a significant investment in about 15 to 25 stores to make an impact in the face of strong competition.

H-E-B made one foray into another state, opening a store in Lake Charles, LA, in 1996 under the 1990s-era Pantry Foods banner. The store closed in 2003.

This is a feature from the Texas Supplement to the March/April 2021 issue of Produce Blueprints Magazine. Click here to read the full supplement.

CORRECTION: We’ve updated the store plan in the Dallas-Ft. Worth metro area from an earlier version of this story.

 

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When it comes to market share, H. E. Butt Grocery Company BB #:106490 dominates in 11 South and Central Texas markets, according to figures from Metro Market Studies, and continues to extend its reach.

In Corpus Christi, the retailer maintains a 60-percent share of market, compared to number-two Walmart with 25.6 percent.

In Laredo, H-E-B has a 51.9-percent share versus 30.1 percent for Walmart, and a share between 40 and 50 percent in San Antonio, McAllen, Waco, Austin, and Bryan-College Station. It also holds the top spot in Odessa, Victoria, and Houston, although with a less substantial lead.

In addition to its flagship banner, positioned as a community hub, the company also operates H-E-B plus!, a superstore format; Joe V’s Smart Shop, a small-footprint concept focused on low prices; Mi Tienda, with two stores in the Houston area tailored to Hispanic shoppers; and Central Market, an upscale format known for its wide variety of local and global choices.

“The company’s multi-format, multi-banner approach goes beyond just placing a name on a sign,” says retail expert Carol Spieckerman, president of Spieckerman Retail in Bentonville, AR. “Each banner has its own point of view and strategically resonates with clearly defined customer segments.”

In June 2020, the retailer opened a new format, H-E-B Spring Green Market, in Richmond. The 101,000-square-foot store focuses on fresh and local products including citrus, greens, and tomatoes; a “Healthy Living” department with bulk nuts, grains, and dried fruits; private label H-E-B Organics and H-E-B Select products; in-store produced juices and guacamole; and a bakery and tortilleria.

Spring Green Market is also focused on service, offering one of the chain’s largest curbside operations. In 2020, in addition to Richmond, it opened new stores in Kerrville, Lubbock (a new market), San Antonio, and South Austin, as well as a pharmacy in Austin. Leander is among the markets planned for 2021.

One area of current interest is Austin, where H-E-B has been operating since 1994. In December 2019, the company announced it would invest $200 million in South Austin, creating more than 1,000 new jobs.

It had previously said it would open three new stores, as well as embarking on a major remodel. H-E-B already has two dozen stores in the Austin area.

The company has moved as far north as Dallas-Fort Worth, including Waxahachie and Corsicana in the southern Metroplex and a Central Market in Plano to the north. There are also an H-E-B plus! and a Central Market in Fort Worth. H-E-B announced plans for two additional Metroplex stores this year.

But it has not entered this important market in a big way, reflecting the retailer’s conservative nature when it comes to expanding into new regions. Industry observers note that would require a significant investment in about 15 to 25 stores to make an impact in the face of strong competition.

H-E-B made one foray into another state, opening a store in Lake Charles, LA, in 1996 under the 1990s-era Pantry Foods banner. The store closed in 2003.

This is a feature from the Texas Supplement to the March/April 2021 issue of Produce Blueprints Magazine. Click here to read the full supplement.

CORRECTION: We’ve updated the store plan in the Dallas-Ft. Worth metro area from an earlier version of this story.

 

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