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Waitrose boss vows to relocate ‘terribly organised’ shops
Waitrose's James Bailey says the company has started its store overhaul programme to make the supermarket ‘more accessible’
Waitrose's James Bailey wants to make the supermarket ‘more accessible’ - Paul Grover for The Telegraph

Waitrose has vowed to move out of badly organised and dated stores as it attempts to become more “accessible” and appeal to a wider audience.

James Bailey, executive director of Waitrose, which is owned by the John Lewis Partnership, said he was determined to make sure the company had its shops located in “the right place in the right postcode” after reining in spending in recent years.

Mr Bailey said: “For the last two or three years with Covid-19 and the cost of living challenges – and a little bit before that – we had to be careful about the shops we were investing in.

“Now the partnership is in a position where it’s able to reinvest in that shopping estate from now on, and we’ve got really big, well-thought-through plans about how we go back through the years.”

It comes after The Telegraph revealed in March that the supermarket had been cutting costs to free up cash for an overhaul of its 332 stores. Sources said at the time a complete refresh would cost up to £250m, with restructuring experts brought in to help thrash out where costs could be cut to reinvest in ageing stores.

John Lewis is aiming to cut £600m of costs out of the business in the coming years, on top of £300m already cut.

Mr Bailey said he wanted to relocate a number of stores to sites that were more efficient and cost-effective, such as those run using solar energy and fitted with LED lighting. It is understood that some Waitrose stores have not received significant investment in over a decade.

He added: “Most of our shops are in the right postcode, but some of them might be in the wrong place in that postcode. So if you’re a Waitrose shopper and you’re shopping in a high street or some of the older shops, that shop itself might be on three floors.

“It might be really terribly organised and it’s just not a very modern facility to do your shopping in.”

Waitrose is expecting to have roughly the same number of larger stores at the end of the overhaul, although more of the sites will include mini John Lewis stores inside them. It is also pushing ahead with opening more of its smaller convenience stores, which trade as ‘Little Waitrose’.

Mr Bailey said its store overhaul programme was now underway, with the aim of making Waitrose “more accessible and more appealing to more people”.

It has historically been seen as a supermarket aimed at middle class shoppers in suburban towns and villages. However, Mr Bailey said: “This is one of those Waitrose myths that we have a very particular kind of customer and it’s only from certain parts of the country, nobody else.”