Saturday, July 11, 2026

Kroger + Giant Eagle: Why? If Neither Company Can Win More Customers Organically, What's the Point?

 


When Kroger announced its $1.65 billion acquisition of Giant Eagle, the grocery industry immediately began talking about buying power, scale, retail media, private label, and operational synergies.

As the Grocerant Guru®, my first question is much simpler:

Why?

Not why buy Giant Eagle.

Why would consumers care?

Because consumers—not investors—ultimately determine whether acquisitions succeed.

For decades, the grocery industry has relied on the same playbook. Acquire another chain. Add another banner. Increase purchasing leverage. Cut costs. Promise efficiencies. Hope market share follows.

Yet history continues to show that bigger retailers do not automatically become more relevant retailers.

Kroger already operates one of the largest collections of grocery banners in America. Adding Giant Eagle simply gives Kroger one more regional nameplate.

Consumers do not wake up saying, "I wish this store belonged to a larger corporation."

They wake up asking:

What's for dinner?

Where can I get it quickly?

Is it affordable?

Is it fresh?

Is it easy?

 

Can I feed everyone in my family without cooking from scratch?

Those are entirely different questions.

While traditional supermarket operators continue consolidating, customer migration tells a much different story.

Retailers such as Aldi, Lidl, WinCo Foods, and Costco continue attracting shoppers because their value proposition is immediately obvious.

Each has developed a highly differentiated position based on everyday low prices, limited assortment with high inventory turns, operational simplicity, strong private brands, fast shopping trips, and clear customer value.

Warehouse clubs continue benefiting from larger basket sizes, treasure-hunt merchandising, and strong member loyalty. Discount grocers continue attracting shoppers looking for relief from persistent food inflation, while employee-owned retailers such as WinCo maintain pricing advantages through low operating costs.

Those retailers are earning customer migration not because they are larger, but because they consistently solve consumer problems better.

The grocery industry often talks about competing against each other.

That is yesterday's battle.

Today's competitors include warehouse clubs, dollar stores, convenience stores, quick-service restaurants, fast-casual restaurants, meal delivery services, meal kits, and Ready-2-Eat and Heat-N-Eat meal solutions.

Consumers no longer think in retail channels.

They simply ask, "What's the easiest way to feed myself or my family tonight?"

The retailers answering that question best are winning.

Supporters of the acquisition point toward greater buying power, improved retail media opportunities, stronger personalization, and operational efficiencies.

Those improvements may help margins.

 


They do not necessarily improve customer traffic.

Neither Kroger nor Giant Eagle has demonstrated consistent organic traffic growth in recent years. Both have faced increasing competitive pressure from value retailers, warehouse clubs, and retailers that better align with changing shopping behaviors.

Simply combining two slower-growth organizations does not automatically create a faster-growing one.

It often creates a larger version of the same problem.

Today's shoppers are making decisions differently than they were just a few years ago.

Industry research throughout 2025 and 2026 continues pointing toward several consistent behaviors.

Consumers are making more frequent shopping trips while purchasing fewer items per visit.

Value remains the primary purchase driver, but convenience increasingly determines where meals are purchased.

 


Ready-2-Eat and Heat-N-Eat fresh prepared foods continue outperforming many traditional center-store categories as consumers seek faster meal solutions.

Private label continues gaining share as shoppers become increasingly comfortable substituting retailer brands for national brands.

Digital engagement and personalized promotions influence shopping behavior, but only when paired with meaningful value and relevant meal solutions.

The winners are not simply selling groceries.

They are helping consumers solve dinner.

That is the question investors should be asking.

Not, "How many stores are being acquired?"

 


Instead, ask:

How many new customers will this acquisition create?

How many shoppers will switch from Walmart?

How many Costco members will change their buying habits?

How many Aldi shoppers will return?

How many younger families will choose Kroger over convenience stores and restaurant meal solutions?

 

Those answers remain far less certain than the acquisition announcement itself.

Consumers increasingly want Ready-2-Eat meals, Heat-N-Eat meal solutions, mix-and-match meal components, restaurant-quality food at grocery prices, fresh foods with minimal preparation, personalized meal bundles, and convenient grab-and-go options.

 



That is where future grocery growth will come from.

Not another logo.

Not another banner.

Not another acquisition.

The companies that best integrate fresh prepared foods, meal solutions, portability, personalization, digital engagement, and compelling value will capture tomorrow's customer.

Simply owning more supermarkets will not.

 


Grocerant Guru® Insights

1. Bigger companies do not automatically create bigger customer demand. Organic growth begins with consumer relevance, not acquisition announcements.

2. Scale without differentiation rarely creates customer migration. Consumers switch retailers because of superior value, convenience, meal solutions, or experience—not because ownership changes.

3. The future grocery winner will compete for meals, not merely grocery baskets. Ready-2-Eat, Heat-N-Eat, and meal-component merchandising remain among the industry's greatest growth opportunities.

4. Kroger's biggest challenge is not integrating Giant Eagle. It is convincing consumers that shopping at Kroger offers a meaningfully better experience than shopping at Aldi, Lidl, WinCo Foods, Costco, or simply picking up dinner from a restaurant.

Steven Johnson is the Grocerant Guru® at Tacoma, Washington-based Foodservice Solutions®. Since 1991, he has helped retailers and foodservice companies identify customer migration opportunities by focusing on Ready-2-Eat and Heat-N-Eat fresh prepared foods, meal solutions, and changing consumer behavior. His work centers on where grocery and foodservice intersect to drive both top-line sales and bottom-line profits.



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