Waitrose: the story of how it started and why it's become a British high street favourite
Waitrose brand over the years

Humble origins in Acton

Waite takes sole responsibility

Flourishing retail business

Branch receives Royal Warrant

In 1928, Waitrose was awarded a Royal Warrant by King George V to supply groceries and cleaning materials. The Windsor branch received the mark of recognition, handed to individuals or companies who have supplied goods or services to the royal household for at least five years, because it supplied Queen Mary with her favourite honey soap. It proved to be the first of several awarded to Waitrose over the decades...
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Expansion into affluent areas

The world's 'choicest' foods

Waitrose joins John Lewis Partnership

John Lewis Partnership

Self-service supermarkets

Expansion in the 1970s

Distribution centre opened

First to sell organic produce

Queen visits Windsor store

There was a right royal occasion in 1984, when the Queen visited the Windsor branch of Waitrose during the opening of the King Edward Court shopping centre. The partnership did not do much advertising until the 1990s, with the exception of new store openings, so the royal visitor brought some welcome PR. The predominant colour on its branding then was orange, to catch the eye of customers on the high street. But in 1987, a major rebranding saw it assume the current green colour scheme.
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Waitrose signs rediscovered

First UK supermarket to sell sushi

Waitrose Bag for Life introduced

Sourcing deal with Ocado

The Leckford Estate

Waitrose buys 19 Morrisons stores

Queen returns to Windsor branch

The Queen returned to the Windsor branch of Waitrose in 2008 after the local shopping centre's redevelopment, but only after all newspapers covering her grandson Harry's deployment in Afghanistan were removed from her eyeline, reported the Daily Telegraph. Waitrose continues to enjoy royal backing, having received Royal Warrants from both the Queen and Prince Charles. It also held a Royal Warrant as Grocers to Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother from 1994-2007.
"Everyone deserves quality food"

Throughout the years, Waitrose remained closely associated with the high ethical and quality standards established by its founders. However, this became an issue after the 2008 financial crash when it risked becoming associated as a retailer for special occasions, rather than for daily shopping. In response, the company launched its Essential Waitrose range with the tagline "Everyone deserves quality food". Waitrose saw sales lift by 14.6% thanks to the campaign.
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Heston by Waitrose brand launched

Waitrose opens 'dark store'

Convenience store opens in Nottingham

Waitrose moved into the convenience store market in 2008, with the opening of a smaller branch in Nottingham. Ian Kirkdale, of Beeston, was one of the customers pleased they would no longer need to travel to Lincoln or Newark for their shopping, reported The Guardian. As was his wife, who declared: "It's like shopping at Harrods." There are now more than 50 Little Waitrose convenience stores across the UK.
Rebranding as Waitrose & Partners

September 2018 saw Waitrose and John Lewis launch their first joint marketing campaign, emphasising their employee-owned business model amid an increasingly challenging retail environment. The new unified brand identity saw both companies add "& Partners" to their names and implement similar branding in an attempt to better reflect their mutual democratic ethos.
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John Lewis ad spoofed

Partnership perks for staff

But while the branding has changed, the company's democratic ethos remains. All John Lewis and Waitrose staff, or "partners", benefit from competitive levels of pay, a yearly share of profits – last year's was 5% of each employee's pay – and subsidised shopping at both the supermarket and John Lewis, among other perks. There are some 83,000 employees in the John Lewis Partnership.
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Relaxing retreat by the sea

High welfare a priority

Waitrose remains as committed to high-welfare standards today as its founders Waite, Rose and Taylor intended. It is dedicated to maintaining high animal welfare and farming standards, as well as responsible fishing. The grocer also champions local produce, selling more than 1,400 locally and regionally sourced products from about 375 suppliers. In addition, Waitrose has vowed to tackle waste, including donating any surplus food to charities and social enterprises.
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Waitrose goes global

Despite once being limited to the Home Counties, Waitrose now exports its own-label and branded goods to over 50 countries around the world including India, Ghana, Hong Kong, the UAE, Bermuda, Spain and Malta. And while it faces increasing competition from domestic rivals such as Aldi, it still frequently tops charts for quality goods and customer service. After all, it's a bit like shopping at Harrods.
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