Whole Foods' CEO shares company's future under Amazon

Updated


Amazon's (NASDAQ: AMZN)purchase of Whole Foods (NASDAQ: WFM) started the way so many marriages do. "How did we meet?" said John Mackey, CEO and founder of the grocery chain. "It was actually mutual friends who set us up on a blind date. [Whole Foods executives] Jason Buechel and Ken Meyer and David Lannon and I flew up to Seattle a little over six weeks ago. And I, we just fell in love. It was truly love at first sight," Mackey said on Friday, according to a transcript.

The Whole Foods CEO, who will keep his position after the deal closes, made those remarks in a "town hall" meeting with employees where he tried to share his enthusiasm for the deal and assuage employee fears. He explained that things came together quickly, with the agreement being announced less than six weeks after the first casual discussion. Mackey tried to make it clear that this is not a marriage of convenience, but a logical long-term opportunity for his company.

"This is not a Tinder relationship," he said, according to a transcript of the meeting filed with the SEC. "I am, like, super excited. And so I also wanna reassure you that we're keeping our corporate headquarters here in Austin. We're not gonna be moving out to Seattle."

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Change is coming

Mackey said the sale of the company will bring changes and opportunities. He repeatedly referred to plans he could not talk about until the deal closes, but he did share some specifics.

"I can't say there's not gonna ever be any changes," he said. "Because you already know we're evolving. We are, we've sent out, publicly, we're doing category management... We're gonna take $300 million out of our cost structure."

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To help make that happen, Whole Foods has hired Boston Consulting Group to analyze how it spends money. The goal of that project, according to Mackey, is helping the company lower its costs while also improving its service to customers.

"We do think our partnership with Amazon is gonna help us do that more skillfully and, hopefully, faster," he added.

Amazon can resist investor pressure

Public companies often struggle with balancing a need to hit quarterly numbers with building for longer-term success. That's something Amazon has seemingly not been bothered by, with the company being willing to have a "bad" quarter or even a few if it was in the best interest of the company's long-term thinking.

"They have had the courage that almost no other public company has had the courage to, basically, resist the drumbeat of short-term, quarterly earnings that have had us trapped here for a couple of years, as our same-store sales came down," Mackey said.

Quality stays

Mackey made it very clear that he believes Amazon's ability to innovate can help Whole Foods do much more than keep costs down. He also tried to reassure his employees that saving money would not mean compromising what the brand has represented since its launch.

"Whole Foods Market's quality standards are not gonna change," he said. "We've got a lot invested in our brand. And these guys are really smart people. They're not stupid enough to go change that." He also said the two companies could create formats not labelled with the Whole Foods name.

See how prices at Whole Foods currently compare to competitor Trader Joe's:

A one-company vision

Mackey said he did not know if Amazon had plans to install someone on his executive leadership team, but he sees a merging of talent.

"In a good marriage, you know, we want Amazon people to be here," he said. "And we want Whole Foods people to be at Amazon. Because at the end of the day, we're all Amazon people."

The best intentions

Most marriages begin hopefully. That early optimism, however, eventually gets replaced by reality. Every relationship has problems and it's how you handle those that determine whether things work out in the long term.

Amazon and Whole Foods appear to be a good match and Mackey seems to be going into the deal understanding that it means change for him as well as his brand. That seems to give the deal a better chance for success than most.

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John Mackey, CEO of Whole Foods Market, is a member of The Motley Fool's board of directors. Daniel Kline has no position in any stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool owns shares of and recommends Amazon and Whole Foods Market. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

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