Business & Tech

Trader Joe's and Whole Foods Take Stock Before Opening Stores

Residents want to see one of the grocery chains open in East Windsor, but each company has its reasons for when and where they open.

There are more than a few vacant storefronts in East Windsor, including the empty location where Super Fresh used to be. Last week, more than a few residents said that they would be interested in having a Trader Joe’s or a Whole FoodsΒ  fill the void.

But it’s not always that simple. Each company has it’s own standards and requirements that have to be met before they expand into an area, and even then, meeting those standards doesn’t necessarily mean the companies will come.

β€œIt’s all laid out on the web,” Whole Foods spokesman Michael Sinatra said in an interview last year. β€œPeople always think it’s financially driven, they think it’s about income. But one thing we do look at is the number of college educated people in an area.”

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Sinatra said that shoppers with college degrees are often more interested in the type of food they’re putting into their body, creating a demand for natural or organic foods.

Both Whole Foods and Trader Joe’s invite people to visit their websites and suggest areas for new stores. According to the Whole Food’s site, some requirements include: having 200,000 or more people within a 20-minute drive time; a location that’s between 25,000 and 50,000 square feet; that there be a large number of college-educated residents; ample parking for the store’s exclusive use; a stand alone location preferably; easy access from roadways, lighted intersection; excellent visibility directly off the street; and that the location be in a high traffic area either by foot or vehicle.

Find out what's happening in East Windsorfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

But even if an area meets all those requirements, Whole Foods may still not come, said Sinatra. The small company is just a little over 30 years old, and only has been in the Northeast for 10 years. The slowly expanding grocery chain expects to open just 20 to 35 new locations nationwide this yearβ€”with an eventual goal of 1,000 stores nationwideβ€”with only one to four of those sites in the Tri-State area.

Sinatra said the company could consider opening a location in the area, but not necessarily in East Windsor, and for now the company is content with its locations in Princeton and the one in development in Marlboro.

β€œWe’re very selective in what we do. We don’t grow fast in that every store is custom built for the community,” said Sinatra.

Like Whole Foods, Trader Joe’s also encourages residents to suggest particular locations for new stores. However, several real estate professionals in the area who have worked with Trader Joe's say they are forbidden to speak to the press about the grocery store chain.

The chain has about 375 stores and was founded in in the late 1950s. Supermarket News, ranked the chain No. 21 in its list of Top 75 food retailers in North America that achieved annual sales in excess of $1 billion.

Trader Joe’s also has been described by CNN Money as β€œan offbeat, fun discovery zone that elevates food shopping from a chore to a cultural experience. It stocks its shelves with a winning combination of low-cost, yuppie-friendly staples (cage-free eggs and organic blue agave sweetener) and exotic, affordable luxuriesβ€”Belgian butter waffle cookies or Thai lime-and-chili cashewsβ€”that you simply can't find anyplace else.

β€œEmployees dress in goofy trademark Hawaiian shirts, hand stickers out to your squirming kids, and cheerfully refund your money if you're unhappy with a purchaseβ€”no questions asked.”

In addition, its Trader Joe’s line of foods is sought after by many shoppers, with the coffee, wine, chocolate and veggie burgers among the favorite purchases.

If you want to encourage the businesses to move into East Windsor, click HERE for Whole Foods, and HERE for Trader Joe’s.

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