This Is Why Costco Only Charges $5 For A Rotisserie Chicken - YouTube

Channel: Mashed

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If you're the observant sort of shopper who wants to get the most out of every dime, it's
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possible you've noticed that Costco's fully cooked, 3-pound rotisserie chickens are actually
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cheaper than their uncooked ones.
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They're also among the cheapest rotisserie chickens around, making this a deal that seems
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too good to be true.
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"so, you got money?"
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"Not a penny.
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But I'll still take that chicken!"
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In fact, the chicken is so cheap, it doesn't seem like Costco could even make money selling
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them.
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And yet, Costco continues to sell them for $4.99 while their competitors have raised
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prices.
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So what's going on here?
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To get the answer, first we have to jump in the Wayback machine for a look at the avian
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flu crisis of 2015, which threatened the entire US poultry industry.
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With countless birds lost, Barclays analyst Meredith Adler asked Costco's chief financial
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officer Richard Galanti if this would finally result in the company raising prices.
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He said,
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"I can only tell you what history has shown us: When others were raising their chicken
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prices from $4.99 to $5.99, we were willing to eat, if you will, $30 to $40 million a
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year in gross margin by keeping it at $4.99.
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That's what we do for a living."
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Why would Costco leave tens of millions of dollars in potential profits on the table
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if they could sell the chicken for more?
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Because they think they can make even more money by selling chicken cheaper.
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Costco first began selling their $4.99 chicken in 2009 and it was an instant hit.
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Just a year later, Costco sold 51 million rotisserie chickens, and by 2017 that number
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was up to 87 million.
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That's a lot of customers coming through the door looking for chicken, which is why Costco
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keeps their chickens all the way in the back of the store.
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Many other chains use the same strategy of luring customers into their stores with cheap,
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delicious chicken.
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Don Fitzgerald, vice president of merchandising at the Kroger-owned Mariano's, told the Wall
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Street Journal that it's all about getting people in the door — and then pouncing with
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high profit margin add ons.
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"If they get a chicken, a salad, and maybe they pick up a bottle of wine — now we're
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really talking."
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While Costco isn't the only player in the rotisserie chicken game, they're taking steps
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to go above and beyond their competition.
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Since they started selling, they've invested in larger, high-efficiency ovens, and containers
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made with less plastic, both of which help keep their costs down.
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And, in 2018, The Seattle Times reported Costco was investing hundreds of millions of dollars
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in a massive chicken farm located in eastern Nebraska.
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The centrally-located state was chosen, in part, because of the large corn and soybean
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production there, which will save Costco on feed costs.
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That's important, because they're going to have a lot of chickens to feed: an estimated
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100 million a year.
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The only downside, of course, is a less personalized chicken experience than you might get from
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a boutique dealer.
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"the chicken you'll be enjoying tonight…" "you have this information, this is fantastic!"
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"Absolutely!
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His name was Colin."
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And there are other plans in the works, too.
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They're in talks to raise hundreds more chicken barns, and while it's a hefty initial investment,
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it's going to help their keep costs low in the future.
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Of course, none of that explains why Costco's uncooked chickens are actually more expensive
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than their cooked chickens, which seems backwards.
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After all, they're doing all the work so you don't have to!
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"What are we supposed to do with that?"
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"eat it."
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"Eat it?!
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The f-----'s alive!"
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But Time Money suggests there may be a sneaky reason for this too — cooked chickens are
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going to go bad faster, and they want to keep them at a price point that'll make sure they're
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continuously going out the door.
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They definitely do at that price!
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It's also worth noting that rotisserie chickens aren't the only products Costco has said they'll
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keep at these insanely, super-low prices.
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According to Time, Costco's jumbo hot dog and drink deal has been priced at $1.50 since
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the mid-1980s.
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It's all about increasing foot traffic, and that's been particularly challenging for stores
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like Costco, which generally aren't located in super-convenient areas where people might
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pop in regularly to see what's on the shelves.
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People need a reason to make the trek to Costco, and what's a better reason than a quick and
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tasty low-cost dinner that's ready to serve?
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And besides.
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Passing up the chicken might make them angry.
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And you don't really want to get the rotisserie chicken angry, do you?
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"I don't know, I think they're kind of cute, this one just walked right up to me and…"
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