Tesco Ireland CEO outlines back to basics plan

More convenience stores and delivery, fewer product lines and promotions, says Yaxley

Andrew Yaxley said Tesco’s strategy to restore the performance of its Irish operation involved rebuilding engagement with customers, simplifying its product range and developing its sales channels. Photograph: Rui Vieira/PA Wire
Andrew Yaxley said Tesco’s strategy to restore the performance of its Irish operation involved rebuilding engagement with customers, simplifying its product range and developing its sales channels. Photograph: Rui Vieira/PA Wire

Andrew Yaxley, chief executive of Tesco Ireland, told an industry conference on Tuesday it planned to remain "humble" in the Irish market, as he laid out details of measures it hopes will kick-start a return to strong growth.

Mr Yaxley, who was appointed last March following a group-wide management shake-up, indicated it would expand the number of Tesco Express convenience stores in the Irish market, currently about 30.

He also said it would push its private label products and hinted it would further develop its online shopping and home delivery service, as he addressed the Checkout magazine conference on retailing, in Dublin's Mansion House.

After a torrid few years in the Irish market due to the German discounters, Aldi and Lidl, Tesco returned to slight growth in the latter half of 2015, although SuperValu holds its old crown as the biggest grocer by market share.

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Strategy

Mr Yaxley said Tesco’s strategy to restore the performance of its Irish operation involved rebuilding its engagement with customers, simplifying its product range and developing its sales channels, such as online.

Tesco Ireland, he said, also must “protect and strengthen its balance sheet”.

“Our business here had become so complex, and that complexity costs too much money. We need a simpler operating model. It is also important for Tesco to be humble, especially in Ireland.”

He said its supermarkets were now focusing more on fresh foods, such as bakery items and meats, reversing a drift in recent years into more general retailing such as clothes and homewares.

“It will be fresh food first from now on, and only then will we support some of our shops with general merchandise, and only if it is the right-sized shop.”

Its Clubcard reward scheme has been “used too much as a promotional tool”, he said, and would be revamped to make it “more of a thank you for customers”.

Choice

Mr Yaxley said Tesco would “always offer the biggest choice of products”, but its supermarkets were now more focused on reducing the number of product lines: “There were too many. We have cut them by 15 per cent.”

Tesco plans to run “fewer, simpler” promotions, the sheer volume of which he said had confused shoppers, and it was also reducing sales of multipack items by 35 per cent: “We run half-price offers instead.”

He said the Irish unit had among the weakest sales of Tesco own-brand products in the group and customers had “fallen out of love” with its private labels. Mr Yaxley said it had put in an extra 1,000 own-brand product lines into its stores.

The company is embroiled in a row with its longest-serving staff members, whose contracts and agreed working conditions it has unilaterally proposed to change. It is engaged in discussions with trade unions, which slammed the proposals as punishment “for its most loyal” staff.

Mark Paul

Mark Paul

Mark Paul is London Correspondent for The Irish Times