tm on Tue, 8 Apr 1997 02:34:30 +0200 (MET DST) |
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<nettime> Club Tesco |
TESCO ||||| Tescos is now the leading supermarket in the UK. Its superior marketing strategy has ensured its championship in the supermarket wars. - Safeway, Sainsbury's, Waitrose, Kwiksave, Gateway - Tescos outstrips them all Recently an errant vicar was punished for speaking out publicly in favour of shoplifting from big supermarkets. Its their fault anyway, he claimed, for destroying communities and contributing to moral decay. The vicar realised his congregation had disappeared because they were worshipping at Tescos on sunday morning. If the new cathedrals of light are computers their precursors are supermarkets. As Internet evangelists make righteous claims about the reestablishment of community through the computer networks, so too do supermarket chains promise to deliver services to the community to atone for building a new out_of_town shopping store over some happy bit of woodland. My local Tescos in Finsbury Park, London underscores my love/hate relationship with the Queen of supermarkets. Because actually,it is the only place i get to see my Finsbury neighbours see them having rows with their screaming kids, see the young rude girls and boys drop in to organise the evenings entertainment with the checkout assistants. But this is community behaviour in spite of Tesco policy not because of. They do make attempts to integrate community and shopping behaviour into marketing strategy. Eg the introduction of 'singles night' at the city centre Tesco Metro stores. But its always a mistake to systematise and make overt the hidden uses of supermarkets. Tescos best marketing weapon was the clubcard, the supermarkets ploy in cultivating loyalty - a giant community of Tesco shoppers. On a database. Everybody wins - The supermarket accumulates names and addresses, monitors individual shopping habits, stocks the shelves accordingly and offers a personalised service. The shopper is rewarded with a plastic card, an account number some points, some prizes and some letters through the door. Its a relationship made in heaven. Give, and you will receive. Tescos has the technology and the marketing strategy to make you feel a unique and special member of the club. However so personalised is the communication between us I might be forgiven for thinking I am the only member. If the clubcard was devised in order to decrease alienation and increase personal contact then why can't Tescos let me see who else is on their clubcard database? Then I might not feel so alienated. The database is a new point of assembly - we do not congregate at church or in town squares or even in supermarkets but as records on a thousand databases. --- # distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@icf.de and "info nettime" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@icf.de