Let's talk ASDA

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PhædrusR

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Jun 23, 2023
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This thread is for discussion of all things Asda, their business, their products, their prices. And anything else Asda-related.

Hopefully this can be a better, more sociable, community discussion area for those interested in discussing topics concerning Asda.
 
Still no CEO.

But someone has seen sense and brought back Rollback and the Asda Price pocket tap.
 
I know My mum and dad get a online order from Asda weekly, and half the time there are numerous subs
 
I know My mum and dad get a online order from Asda weekly, and half the time there are numerous subs
Yeah. It happens. I do an Asda shop every 2 or 3 weeks, if not Tesco/Sainsbury's, and I usually get a few substitutes, but not many.

Also, it depends when you order and check their stock. Typically if you order or amend the order the day before delivery, you get up to date stock info and they're less likely to not have something you order.

Whereas if you order a week ahead, and don't amend/check the day before, by the time the delivery happens, some of your order may get substituted.

I don't pay or setup a weekly regular order.
 
Mum and dad do a regular setup thing, We get shopping on a Friday, I think you have Gi order on the Tuesday. But can change the order up to the Thursday Night.

I know our local Asda isn’t one of the biggest Which might not help
 
I have a midweek pass, think I'm just about three years having an online shop every two weeks.

I find them really good now and haven't had any issues for a long time. I constantly amend my order and keep adding or subtracting stuff. Sometimes things go in my favour like the extra pack of coffee sachets I had last week lol
 
I have a midweek pass, think I'm just about three years having an online shop every two weeks.

I find them really good now and haven't had any issues for a long time. I constantly amend my order and keep adding or subtracting stuff. Sometimes things go in my favour like the extra pack of coffee sachets I had last week lol
Yep, I find refunds for poor quality, unsuitable substitutes, short date, etc. better than if I shopped in-store!
Often get an extra or freebee too.

Weirdly, the pickers at my store do a better, more accurate job, than when it came from the fully automated dark delivery warehouse that only had a human at the end packing/checking the totes (crates) on a computer screen. Used to get weird extras, missing and strange items added or weird substitutes.
 
...For those seeking retail therapy in a luxury shopping destination, Walthamstow high street probably isn’t top of the list. Yet even here among the payday lenders, pawn shops, bookies and greasy spoons, there is still something shocking about the state of the local Asda.

It shouldn’t really be a surprise, however. In 2023, food hygiene inspectors gave it a zero out of five rating: the worst possible score that a business premises can receive with every area requiring “major improvement”.


In the wake of the damning report, chastened managers said they had addressed the concerns and it was later awarded a three-star rating.

On a bitterly cold and damp January afternoon, the entrance is so quiet a passerby might mistakenly think the store is closed. There are customers dotted around inside but not many. Perhaps only the most loyal shoppers still come here.

Empty cardboard boxes, plastic crates and large metal cages sit abandoned in aisles. Packaging containing food meant for the shelves are un-emptied.

In other parts of the store, pallets stacked high with produce have been wheeled out and left, still covered in plastic shrink wrap. Fresh bread is in short supply and the halal food section was empty altogether.

Asda in Walthamstow, north London,
For many, a semi-desolate Asda store in Walthamstow epitomises the supermarket’s recent decline
For the unions, Asda’s problems in this corner of the capital – and in other stores across the country – are emblematic of the retailer’s sharp decline since it was sold to Blackburn petrol station tycoons Mohsin and Zuber Issa, and secretive financiers TDR Capital, in a debt-fuelled £7bn deal in 2021.
 
It is a straightforward trade-off, critics argue. The takeover has left Asda stores starved of much-needed investment because it is having to divert hundreds of millions of pounds every year towards interest payments on the debts that its owners took out to finance their swoop.



“Asda’s woes aren’t simply the result of mismanagement. Servicing its debt mountain strips money from the business that should be invested elsewhere,” Nadine Houghton, national officer for the GMB trade union, said.



Stores have fallen into disrepair. Complaints about poor pay and long hours have led to an exodus of disenchanted employees, while disgruntled customers have left in their hordes, allowing Asda’s arch rivals to swoop in and hoover up market share on a previously unseen scale.



Since the sale in 2021, Asda’s market share has plunged from 14.8pc to 12.6pc, according to figures from Kantar. Not only has this allowed Tesco and Sainsbury’s to strengthen their grip on the grocery market, it has also raised the prospect of Asda losing its crown as Britain’s third-largest supermarket to German discounter Aldi.



As Asda’s plight has worsened, chaos has engulfed the boardroom, forcing the Issa brothers to deny rumours of a rift. Zuber has sold out and although Mohsin remains a shareholder, he has stepped down from the day-to-day running of the chain.



Meanwhile, a four-year-long search for a permanent chief executive goes on with no sign of it ending any time soon.



Even former chairman Lord Rose confessed to being “embarrassed” by the mess – a frank admission that appears to have persuaded TDR to pull the ripcord with the shock return of former boss Allan Leighton.



Feted as one of Britain’s top corporate fixers, Leighton made his name in the late 1990s when he and then-chairman Archie Norman, now chairman of Marks & Spencer, rescued Asda from insolvency. The pair dragged the chain back from the brink before orchestrating its near-£7bn sale to American retail giant Walmart.



Leighton’s return has sparked “euphoria” on the shop floor, a former senior employee said. “Allan going back and getting rid of Mohsin is like a double whammy”.



During his eight-year spell at Asda between 1992 and 2000, four as chief executive, turnover almost doubled from £4.53bn to £8.2bn, and profits jumped from £86.8m to £422.9m.



In his farewell letter to staff in 2000, Leighton said Asda had gone from “basket case” to being “one of the finest companies in the world”.



But more than 25 years after Leighton’s heyday at Asda, can those heroics be repeated? He is at pains to manage expectations, warning that a turnaround could take as long as five years, by which time he will be almost 77 years old.
 
As I have my shopping delivered, I never actually go into Asda, haven't been in for years. My friend/neighbour does the opposite and she has remarked to me a few times how she hates shopping there now. When I asked her why, she said the aisles are full of staff 'picking' online orders and shelves are left empty in a lot of the aisles.

I will have to venture in one day and take a look for myself.
 

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