Decoding German Retail
More than one hundred seventy-five billion euros in revenue. The second-largest retailer in the world after Walmart. A founder who has not given a public interview since nineteen ninety-nine. And a vertically integrated industrial group that owns its own software, its own cloud infrastructure, its own waste management, and is increasingly a real producer in its own private-label categories. This is the Schwarz Group, parent of Lidl and Kaufland, and one of the most influential and least understood organizations in global retail. Drawing on years of personal experience working with the Schwarz organization, Jan Wapelhorst explains the premium discount paradox that Lidl invented (and why that label only describes one half of the picture), the buying culture that international suppliers find difficult to navigate, the role of Kaufland as a strategic full-range platform, and the practical preparation that any supplier needs before walking into a meeting in Neckarsulm. Particularly relevant for international retailers watching Lidl move into their home market and trying to understand what kind of system competitor they are actually facing. Companion Brief for this block: insights.wfr-advisory.com [http://insights.wfr-advisory.com] Connect with Jan Wapelhorst on LinkedIn for weekly insights on German retail. Website: wfr-advisory.com [http://wfr-advisory.com] Email: info@wfr-advisory.com [info@wfr-advisory.com]
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