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Warehouse club

 
Business Dictionary: Warehouse Clubs

Low-price retail outlets selling annual memberships to consumers and businesses. These stores are normally established in warehouse-type buildings where merchandise is displayed without any frills. Perhaps the best known is SAM's Club, a division of Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.

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Wikipedia: Warehouse club
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Exterior of a Sam's Club warehouse club store in Maplewood, MO, a suburb of St. Louis.

A warehouse club is a retail store, usually selling a wide variety of merchandise, in which customers are required to buy large, wholesale quantities of the store's products, which makes these clubs attractive to both bargain hunters and small business owners. The clubs are able to keep prices low due to the no-frills format of the stores. In addition, customers may be required to pay annual membership fees in order to shop.

The concept is similar to the consumers' cooperative supermarkets found in Europe, though using bigger stores and not co-operatively owned. The use of members' prices without co-operative ownership is also sometimes used in bars and casinos.

Contents

History

A BJ's Wholesale club in Virginia

Sol Price founded FedMart in 1954, an early US discount store. Sol and his son Robert Price founded Price Club in San Diego in 1976 as the first warehouse club. In 1982 discount pioneer John F. Geisse founded The Wholesale Club of Indianapolis, which he sold to Sam's Club in 1991.[1]

In 1983, Costco Wholesale, PACE Wholesale Club and Sam's Club started operations. BJ's Wholesale Club was started in 1984 by former The Wholesale Club executives and owned by Zayre.

As of 2009, four warehouse club chains operate in the United States. Costco and Sam's Club are the largest chains. Sam's Club claims a membership base of 46 million persons and 602 stores across the United States.[citation needed] Costco has locations in seven other nations including Canada, Mexico, the United Kingdom, Japan, Korea, and Taiwan. BJ's Wholesale Club is one of two smaller competitors with stores located primarily in the Eastern United States. FedMart has survived as a small company owned by West Coast enterpriser Donald L. Kirk. In January 2009, Kirk announced plans to again expand FedMart; opening two new FedMart stores in 2009, in currently vacant former department store buildings; as well as opening an online FedMart Clearance/Closeout store.

Alcohol sales without a membership in the USA

Many jurisdictions prohibit the discounting of liquor for promotional reasons, meaning that even in warehouse clubstores, members and non-members will pay the same price. Several examples in the United States are included below;[2]

Examples

Defunct

  • The Wholesale Club, merged with Sam's Club
  • Super Saver, merged with Sam's Club (Southeast US)
  • Warehouse Club, was a public company
  • PACE Membership Warehouse, owned by Kmart, merged with Sam's Club
  • Price Savers Wholesale Club, merged with PACE Warehouse Club, then merged with Sam's Club
  • Club Wholesale, turned into office supplies stores, then folded
  • Price Club, merged with Costco
  • American Wholesale Club, (1986-1989)
  • SourceClub, owned by Meijer
  • Max-Club, owned by SuperValu (United States)
  • Buyers Club, a Denver-based independently owned chain
  • GEM & GEX Membership Department Stores (required Membership like a Warehouse Club)
  • HomeClub, a home improvement warehouse, later became HomeBase and then folded in 2000

See also

References

  1. ^ News article detailing John F. Geisse's retailing career
  2. ^ [www.smartmoney.com/spending/deals/the-cheapest-way-to-buy-booze-19639/ The Cheapest Way to Buy Booze] SmartMoney, August 29, 2008

 
 

 

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Business Dictionary. Dictionary of Business Terms. Copyright © 2000 by Barron's Educational Series, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
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