7-Eleven


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At 7-Eleven, our doors are always open, and our friendly store teams are ready to serve you. Our fresh, fast and convenient hot foods appeal to any craving, so your on-the-go meal can still be delicious! Come in to any 7-Eleven store and you’ll find a broad selection of fresh, high-quality products at an everyday fair price, along with speedy transactions in a clean and friendly shopping environment. Visit your neighborhood 7-Eleven in Newport News for all your everyday needs and text EARN to 711711 to download the 7-Eleven app and join 7Rewards today!


Rice balls. What are that? Michelin Tabaraman. Collaborations with famous restaurants Milk tea. This is 7-Eleven. In Japan. But in the U. S. , the company is more known for slurpees and hot dogs. It's just not as appealing. My perception is people go in there when they need to. The world's largest convenience store chain has over 13,000 locations in North America alone and made over $72 billion in sales last year. But now, it's working to bring more Japanese inspiration to its American stores. Convenience stores have historically made their money selling tobacco and gas. But now, as cigarette sales continue to decline and many expect gas sales to slow, many are racing to find other sources of revenue and doubling down on food. But shifting a business this massive is a major undertaking. This is the economics of 7-Eleven. 7-Eleven started as an American company, but it went bankrupt twice. Once in 1932 during the Great Depression and again in 1990 as it struggled with debts. 7-Eleven is now owned by a Japanese company, 7 and I Holdings. A majority stake was bought by Ito Yokaro, a Japanese supermarket chain that had been operating 7-Eleven stores in Japan for more than a decade. From the beginning, the Japanese owners said American 7-Eleven, both its central operations and its franchises, had a lot of catching up to do. The Japanese model was a lot more data-driven. They would pour over what sold well at what time of day, break it down by gender and age, and use that to inform their next order decisions. The American system just wasn't as sophisticated as that. There were some major differences between U. S. and Japanese 7-Elevens. The U. S. stores were typically larger and attached to gas stations. The Japanese stores didn't sell gas, but had a much wider array of fresh food. Japanese stores only stocked items that would sell quickly. They had a proprietary distribution system that made multiple shipments to stores every day. Orders were customized by store, based on sales data, demographic trends, and local weather forecasts. American 7-Eleven stores were getting two deliveries per week. And some items were never being purchased. When American operators began counting items in their stores, some found that 40% of their products were selling less than one unit per month. Now, American 7-Eleven has its own distribution system, where franchises place orders every day based on company recommendations of what'selling nationally and regionally, and their own store data. They're making decisions every single day on what they're going to order, based on what they understand the customer wants to purchase, what new items are going to be made available. One of the most interesting lessons that we've learned from 7-Eleven Japan is their approach to operations and to retailing, which they call top-and-conry. And top-and-conry is basically this idea that we localize our assortment to the needs of customers. We actually help our stores localize their assortment so that they have the right balance of a consistent assortment of products that cons This is especially important when it comes to food. 7-Eleven Japan is known for its wide array of meal options. You're not going to believe the choice of food in a convenience store. American 7-Eleven also has a big food and beverage business. In total, it sold over $17 billion of food last year, about 24% of its overall sales. That included 315 million cups of coffee, 153 million slurpees, and 99 million slices of pizza. But next year, it hopes to make one-third of its sales from store-brand goods, including food, up from less than one quarter in 2022. That's particularly important given shifts in the convenience store industry. So if you think about what convenience stores sell, there's fuel, there's tobacco products, and there's food and snacks. Gas is already a low-margin business, and it's at risk long-term if electric vehicle adoption increases over time. Tobacco, very profitable, but people are smoking less. Food, though, is a category where demand just isn't going away. So for convenience stores, it makes sense that they would want to double down on that. 7-Eleven currently has 17 so-called commissaries around the country that make food for all of its US locations. Now, it's working on upgrading them. It's partnering with Warabea, a supplier for 7-Eleven Japan to spearhead the effort. Warabea's new factories in Hawaii, Texas, and Virginia can make a wider and more localized range of food than 7-Eleven has been able to stock in the past. Things We recently launched a product that's a spicy miso ramen soup, not something you would typically think about being sold at a 7-Eleven. It's adding a lot of items to its menu. The main question is how many customers will buy them, and this is where data comes into the question. When customers come into our stores, they're in an immediate cons Capitalizing on this is a key priority for the company, and it plans to use its massive data operation to do it. American 7-Eleven's monitor daily sales, and for loyalty members, they collect demographic information on who's buying what. The company's loyalty program has 95 million members. Building on that, the company's investing in targeted advertising on screens and TVs throughout stores. That's to spur impulse buys. It helps not only 7-Eleven, but also our advertisers, our vendors, to target our customers at the point of purchase. So for example, in the morning, we may target our customers with a message around a hot cup of coffee and a donut. Whereas later in the day, we may target our customers with an advertisement that's around a snack and a beverage from our cold vault. And for potential customers who aren't at the store, there's delivery, the fastest growing part of the company's business. It's highly profitable for the company, since delivery orders tend to be for about double the amount of in-store purchases. How the brand's grown for nearly 100 years starts with what's the customer want? Where do we think they're going and how do we meet them where they're going? A big question is whether American customers will match the enthusiasm 7-Eleven sees in some of its other markets. In Asia, I think there is so much excitement around convenience stores and the types of food and snacks they offer. So if they can bring even a little bit of that excitement to the US. We're gonna get some lucubes. That would be a great success.

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Mon 12:00 AM - 12:00 AM
Tue 12:00 AM - 12:00 AM
Wed 12:00 AM - 12:00 AM open now
Thu 12:00 AM - 12:00 AM
Fri 12:00 AM - 12:00 AM
Sat 12:00 AM - 12:00 AM
Sun 12:00 AM - 12:00 AM