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Wednesday, November 2,2011

Call to Action Update: Pick 'n Save/Metro Market Shoppers

Roundy's Response

By Louis Fortis
 
First of all, we want to be very clear that we feel that we have always had a good relationship with Roundy's. We thoroughly respected Roundy's decision to move their corporate headquarters to Downtown Milwaukee, as well as "Chairman Bob" Mariano's leadership in promoting the extension of the Chicago-Kenosha commuter rail line through Racine and to Milwaukee (the KRM). The rail extension would have been another factor in helping to create more jobs in southeastern Wisconsin.

As we stated last week, the Shepherd Express had been in all of Roundy's grocery stores, both Pick 'n Save and Metro Market, for the past 10 years. That changed on Wednesday, March 30, within hours of the issue with the Shepherd Express' endorsement of JoAnne Kloppenburg hitting the streets. Roundy's emailed the Shepherd and told us that we had to get all of our newspapers out of their five Brookfield stores. Now we have been told to get our papers out of all of their remaining stores. The newspaper rack takes up 2 square feet at the exit door beyond the cash registers—the least valuable floor space in the store, due to theft issues, according to a business consultant. Those are the facts.

We asked the 192,700 Shepherd readers (according to Media Audit statistics) who do some or all of their shopping at Roundy's to please call "Chairman Bob" Mariano and politely ask him to keep providing the Shepherd Express at Roundy's stores if they value the convenience of picking up their Shepherd when they shop for groceries. We provided the phone number to Chairman Bob's assistant.

Roundy's had two responses. First, they said that this was not a political decision, but rather a business decision. After reading the facts above, you can decide whether the timing was a mere coincidence. Secondly, after receiving hundreds and hundreds of phone calls from concerned customers at the phone number provided by the Shepherd, Roundy's simply shut down that phone number without even providing an outgoing message or any opportunity for their customers to express their opinions. They just killed the number.

Regarding this business decision, Roundy's argues that they had removed the pocket racks in their stores, those large multi-slot racks that had commercial publications for auto sales and apartment rentals—and since they were out, the Shepherd Express also had to go. But the Shepherd is a newspaper, which has a very different status, as clearly defined in Wisconsin statutes because of First Amendment free-speech considerations. Former Republican Gov. Tommy Thompson even signed into law a provision that reinforces the unique status of a newspaper, as opposed to a commercial publication. His provision stated that even if a grocery store has an exclusive contract with a company that has the multi-slot racks featuring commercial publications, a grocery store could override the exclusive contract and choose to allow a newspaper because of its different status. Newspapers have a unique role in a democracy, and the state of Wisconsin recognizes that role. If some people do not want to read the newspaper, they do not have to pick it up.

To be perfectly clear, Roundy's is a private company, and they have every right to make whatever business decisions they choose to make. They also have the right to shut down their phone line so that they don't have to hear from their customers. That is a business decision. Just recently another popular company, Netflix, made some business decisions designed to increase their revenues, and their customers also expressed their disapproval. Netflix lost more than 800,000 customers, and their stock price fell 75%. Netflix quickly re-evaluated the business decision that had focused solely on what they thought would be good for their profits and had totally ignored their customers' needs. Netflix then apologized to their customers and backed off.

Now, we are not saying that Roundy's owes the Shepherd Express anything, but the question is: Does Roundy's owe its customers something? If 192,700 of their customers read the Shepherd Express and some of them like the convenience of picking up their issues of the Shepherd at a Roundy's store when they shop, should Roundy's care what their customers want?

If you want to express your concerns to Roundy's, you now have to call Roundy's customer service number at 866-279-6269 or email "Chairman Bob" at robert.mariano@roundys.com.

Thank you for your help.

Sincerely,

Louis Fortis

Publisher/Owner

The Shepherd Express

UPDATE: We've been hearing from readers that the email for "Chairman Bob"
isn't receiving messages right now. If you want to email Roundy's to voice
your support for the Shepherd Express, you can fill out their customer
service form at http://www.picknsave.com/Contact/. You can also call them at
1-866-279-6269. Thank you for your support.

 

POST A COMMENT
REPLY TO THIS COMMENT
Jer
Louis, you are the one who has made the bad decision here with regards to your business. Journalists are supposed to be objective. Using your medium to sway opinion in ONE direction defies the very principles of journalistic integrity. You should be ashamed. Report the news and leave the opinions and decision making to your readers.

 

REPLY TO THIS COMMENT
The Shepherd made a business decision to when they endorsed Kloppenberg. I'm sure that was very offensive to people who live in Brookfield. So sure it would make sense to have the papers removed in order not to offend the customers. The endorsement of Kloppenberg in Brookfield would be similar to having Hustler Magazine at the checkout. In my opinion, due to Chairman Bob's close affiliation with high national level Democrats, the chain wide removal of the Shepherd is not politically motivated. The Shepherd crossed the line when they published Bob's private phone line. It would have been more appropriate to list the main number or a customer service line. Bob is generally a fair man but if the Shepherd is going to pull a dirty trick like that, I don't blame Bob for not reconsidering the paper's request. I doubt not having the Shepherd will deter customers from going to Pick 'N Save. Woodmans, Walmart, Aldi, Target, and Costco will take care of that. I was shocked to read Louis write "a private company, and they have every right to make whatever business decisions they choose to make." Well alrighty then, they made their decision. At the end of the day, the Shepherd is just another free paper like the Onion, ethnic papers, college newspapers, and buy/sell rags. Its probably one of the better free papers but its still a free paper.

 

LAME comment!  I for one WILL boycott Pick n'Save because of this & SEVERAL of my friends are doing the same.  How lame of Roundy's -- and to lie about it....WOw.

Brookfield SUCKS, btw!

 

 

jg

The people in Brookfield have been pissed for a while because of the ads in the back of the paper, the timing with the endorsement was a coincidence.  You'd probably be better off lobbying to get the express back into specific stores your readers actually shop at rather than someplace like Brookfield.

 

 

The people of Brookfield have been pissed off at everything for a while because they have the hugest stick stuck up their arses- and frankly no one cares.

 

REPLY TO THIS COMMENT
I find it comical that the fact that roundy's was removing ALL publicans from the front of the stores was a fact not included in the article. The omission of key facts in this article is just wrong. Do you have any journalistic integrity whatsoever? Also, comparing this decision by roundy's to the poor decisions made my netflix is a joke, right? How can you begin to even compare the two? Louis, you are pathetic.

 

Yeah funny, that Netflix comment just comes from nowhere.  A high school English teacher would have given Louis a poor grade for that one.  Putting a stack of free tabloids out by the liquor dept exit doesn't really even qualify as a business or marketing decision.  I think the people at the Shepherd have a false sense of what they are.   You, me, and a few other crackpots are the only ones who ever comment.  A boring story on page 9 of the Journal Sentinal gets dozens of comments every hour.  If it wasn't for me providing my chartiable time commenting many of these stories at the Shepherd would go unappreciated.

 

Why all the smoke and mirrors in this article?  You are clear and usually not on point about your political leanings so why be so vague about why your publication is being pulled from the shelves? As business leaders and professionals find Gov. Walker's policies beneficial for revenue and job growth, you guys keep chugging along your arrogant and thick headed path.  

 

REPLY TO THIS COMMENT
jg
The fact is that the decision was made to get rid of all the free publication racks not because anyone cares about the politics, but because the racks are just one more thing that clutters up the exits. Half the time the rack sits there empty, falling apart, dusty, and looking like crap.

 

REPLY TO THIS COMMENT
Mr. Fortis, your publication is not a newspaper. It is nothing more than liberal opinion, advertising and an event calendar.

 

In the back of the paper I've seen ads for homosexual chat lines and such.  Not the kind of thing you want your kids to read from the supermarket.  The paper is better suited for adult book stores and taverns.

 

While I, myself, don't agree with the liberal leanings of this rag, I do, however, use those very chat lines at night when I am away from the Koch's. Those are sure some nice boys on there!

 

 
 
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