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Why John Lewis has a Waitrose problem
waitrose staff
Staff are being targeted in the latest cost-cutting push – but many say they are crucial to upholding the supermarket’s reputation - Simon Dawson/Bloomberg News

When Waitrose workers opened an email from retail director Tina Mitchell last week, few were surprised to find it was about cost cutting.

“The challenges we’re facing as a business are not relenting,” Mitchell wrote. “Waitrose is one of the least productive grocers in the UK.”

Supermarket staff would need to become more flexible on the hours they work, she said, after years of the grocer having either too many or too few workers on duty at any given time.

“For every full-time equivalent partner we make a £400 loss every year,” Mitchell said. This, at a time when parent company, the John Lewis Partnership, was suffering heavy losses, was no longer acceptable.

As well as pushing more flexible working patterns, Waitrose told staff it was preparing to scrap the night shift in 18 shops. Workers in those roles “are at risk of compulsory redundancy”.

In 17 other shops, Waitrose has launched a consultation over reducing how many hours staff work and will be offering employees voluntary redundancy.

Collectively, the changes could save the supermarket £50m a year.

Sharon White, chair of John Lewis Partnership
Dame Sharon White is under pressure to show her turnaround plan is working ahead of JLP’s half-year results - Jason Alden/Bloomberg Finance LP

The cost-cutting push comes ahead of a crucial set of half-year results for the John Lewis Partnership this week, as chairman Dame Sharon White faces pressure to show her turnaround plan is yielding results.

In March this year, Dame Sharon unveiled plans to strip £600m of costs out of the partnership – which owns John Lewis and Waitrose – on top of the £300m that had already been cut.

The turnaround plan followed a loss of £230m last year after the business was battered by inflation and the cost of living crisis. John Lewis has hired turnaround expert Nish Kankiwala to help in the new role of chief executive.

Until now, much of the cost cutting has focused on the department store.

March’s results show £47m of savings were found in John Lewis last year, while Waitrose delivered £29m. The smaller savings come despite the fact Waitrose delivered higher sales than its stablemate, suggesting there may be more fat to cut.

“John Lewis department stores have really been through it in the past few years,” says one former executive at the partnership. “Waitrose is late to the party, but I’d imagine we’ll see more there.”

Sharpening focus is the fact that performance at Waitrose is deteriorating faster than at John Lewis. Sales dropped by 3pc at the supermarket, while they were flat at the department store. Trading profits are also falling faster at Waitrose.

Its market share fell from 4.6pc to 4.4pc last year, according to Kantar, and is down from 5.3pc in 2017. Customers who do come are spending less: Waitrose said earlier this year that shoppers were putting less in their baskets amid intense cost of living pressures.