Shopping on line can be easy, simple and save you lots of money. It can also take a lot of your time, frustrate you, and result in unwanted purchases. Now the same can be said for regular high street shopping, but with the vast opportunity presented by the Internet it will pay you to spend a few minutes reading this and understanding how to better optimize your Tops Friendly Markets shopping experience:
1. Compare - without doubt the biggest advantage that the Tops Friendly Markets offers shoppers today is the ability to compare thousands of Tops Friendly Markets at a time. This is a great thing, but not necessarily all the time! Too much can be daunting at times so take advantage of the great comparison sites and where possible let them do the hard work for you.
2. Research - if it has been said it will be on the internet. Ignorance is no longer a justifiable reason for buying the wrong thing. Take the time to research in detail everything that you could possible want to know about
3. Testimonials - don't know anybody that has bought a Tops Friendly Markets? Wrong! If the Tops Friendly Markets is good the internet will let you know. Use the Internet as a friend and get testimonials before you buy.
4. Questions - Got a question about Tops Friendly Markets then search the Forums, FAQ's, Blogs etc. Don't be afraid to ask .....
5. Reputation - Never heard of the company selling Tops Friendly Markets? Don't worry, no reason why you should know every company in the world, but you know someone that does! Use the internet to find out what people are saying about Tops Friendly Markets and build up a picture of their reputation for sales, returns, customer service, delivery etc.
6. Returns - still worried that even after all of the above your Tops Friendly Markets wont be what you want? Check out the returns policy. There is so much competition now that someone, somewhere is bound to offer the terms that you are comfortable with.
7. Feedback - happy with your Tops Friendly Markets then let people know, after all you are depending on others people input in your buying decision, so why not give a little back.
8. Security - check for the yellow padlock on the Tops Friendly Markets site before you buy, and the s after http:/ /i.e. https:// = a secure site
9. Contact - got a question about Tops Friendly Markets, or want to leave a comment then check out the sites contact page. Reputable companies have them and respond.
10. Payment - ready to pay for your Tops Friendly Markets, then use your credit card or PayPal! Be aware of companies that don't accept them, there may be genuine reasons but given the huge amount of choice you have when buying online there is no reason at all not to buy via credit card or PayPal.
This article is about the supermarket chain. For other uses of Tops or TOPS, see TOPS (disambiguation).
{{Infobox_Company | company_name = Tops Markets LLC |
company_logo = ] |
company_type = Subsidiary of [Ahold, pending sale to [Morgan Stanley |
foundation =
|
location = [Williamsville, New York|
key_people = [Carl Schlicker, CEO[Max Henderson, Executive Vice President and General Manager |
industry = [Grocery|
slogan = "Tops Never Stops, Giving You More" |
products = Bakery, dairy, deli, frozen foods, general grocery, meat, pharmacy, produce, seafood, snacks, liquor|
num_employees = 16,000 (
)|
homepage = http://www.topsmarkets.com/ www.topsmarkets.com
-->
Tops is an United States of America supermarket chain based in
Williamsville, New York,
New York, with stores in the
Western New York and
Central New York regions of that state, and in northwestern Pennsylvania. It is a subsidiary of the Netherlands
corporation Ahold. On
October 11,
2007, it was announced that the company would be sold to Morgan Stanley Private Equity. The sale is expected to close by the end of the year.
History
Early years
Tops was co-founded by Armand Castellani, who was born in 1917 in a village outside of
Rome, Italy. His family came to the
United States in 1920, and eventually settled in Niagara Falls, New York, where his father, Ferrante, opened a small neighborhood
grocery store.
Following his mother's death in 1933, Castellani left school to help manage the store. He continued to do so until joining the United States Army in 1941. He attained the rank of captain after five years' service.
After World War II, Castellani returned to the family business. In 1951, he set out on his own and opened the Great Bear Market in Niagara Falls. Shortly thereafter, he Partnership with Thomas Buscaglia, owner of a grocery equipment firm, T.A. Buscaglia Equipment Co. Throughout the 1950s, Buscaglia, as CEO, and Castellani worked together, entering into a cooperative agreement with other small stores to build the foundation of what was to become the Tops Friendly Markets chain.
As the local economy boomed in the mid-to-late 1950s, the company's operations expanded to include building construction principally devoted to supermarkets. During this time, Savino Nanula, a meat department manager, became an integral part of the company's management team.
By 1958, they had set up headquarters in Buffalo, and in 1960 opened their first modern supermarket: a 25,000 square foot (2,250 m²) store on Portage Road in Niagara Falls. The company then changed its name to Niagara Frontier Services (NFS).
1960s: The chain is born
In 1962, franchise systems were established for supermarkets, under the Tops Friendly Markets name, and for smaller stores as B-Kwik. In February of that year, Tops signs went up on seven stores, and the chain was born. By the end of the year, NFS was comprised of 15 franchised stores throughout Western New York, employing a total of 300 associates. Throughout the 1960s, NFS implemented
warehouse and centralized purchasing to allow the company to grow efficiently.
In 1967, Buscaglia died and Armand Castellani took over as
chief executive officer.
The next year, NFS Initial public offering, trading on the American Stock Exchange. Subsequently, the company began construction on a perishable warehouse and acquired general merchandise Distribution (business) G&G Sales and Service.
The following year, 1969, NFS entered the convenience store market by opening the first Wilson Farms Neighborhood Food store in Tonawanda, New York. The same year, Tops was named Retailer of the Year by the Brand Names Foundation, an honor it would again earn in 1974.
1970s-80s: Growth and Change
The 1970s saw Tops, under the leadership of Castellani and Nanula, continue to grow in Western New York, and thrive where competitors struggled. Early in the decade, Tops began to build more company-owned stores. By the mid-70s, the company had expanded into the
Rochester, New York area, and over time, it became the only real competitor to Wegmans in the region. Also during this time, Tops opened its first Pennsylvania store in Bradford, Pennsylvania. In 1977, Tops installed
Barcode readers, one of the first supermarkets to do so.
In 1983, SB Investors, a private, New York-based investment group, purchased NFS. By this time, operations had grown to include 65 Tops stores, 50 Wilson Farms stores and 15 B-Kwik Food Stores, employing 7,000 associates.
The next year, Tops introduced Western New York shoppers to direct debit service, Instabank Automated teller machines and the first CarryOut Café. It was also the year that Tops won the first of eight Golden Penguin Award from the National frozen food Association.
In 1985, Castellani was named Chairman of the Board and Nanula succeeded him as CEO. The following spring, SB Investors became known as Tops Markets, Inc., as the company went public for the second time, this time on NASDAQ. The following year, as Tops celebrated its 25th anniversary, a $196 million
leveraged buyout of the company was engineered between a private investors group and Tops executives.
1990s: Acquisition by Ahold
A new era began March 27, 1991 as Tops, which had grown to 145 total stores and 11,000 associates, was acquired by Ahold, a major international food retailer based in the Netherlands. The same year, the first Tops International Super Center opened in Amherst, New York. At that time, the 112,000 square foot (10,080 m²) store was the largest in Western New York, and boasted the biggest in-store bakery in the entire U.S.
In the next few years several other locations were expanded into Tops International Stores, with more floor space and a product mix of many foods from different world cultures which up until then had not been widely available in the Buffalo area. With many
Canadian people at the time regularly crossing the border due to relaxed
duty#economics after the recently-concluded Canada-United States Free Trade Agreement and the
Canadian dollar at 90% of the value to its American counterpart, the new stores were in the right place at the right time and did even better business than expected.
The 1990s were marked by a new growth in operations, including the 1996 merger with Finast in Northeast Ohio, expansion across New York, the construction of a new headquarters in Williamsville, NY and the opening of a 848,000 square foot (76,320 m²) distribution center in Lancaster (town), New York. By 1998, Tops' market area stretched from
Sandusky, Ohio, to
Utica, New York. In January 1999, the BonusCard, its customer loyalty program, debuted. In May 1999, all 45 Northeast Ohio Finast stores adopted the Tops Friendly Markets banner.
Tops entered into the new millennium by acquiring the Sugarcreek Stores chain, adding 87 stores to its Wilson Farms division. That summer, Tops installed self-scanning checkouts at 11 stores in Ohio and in late August, the first Tops fueling station premiered in Akron, Ohio.
In 2001, Tops acquired 22 former Grand Union stores in the Adirondack region and in Central New York, further east than its market had traditionally been. They also introduced the Tops Xpress convenience store format. By the end of the year, the company celebrated another landmark with the opening of its 150th Tops store, located in
Madison, Ohio.
2000s: Scandal and recovery
However, this aggressive growth was fueled in part by deliberate understatements of Ahold's debt to the financial markets, and when the scandal broke in
2003, Tops along with other units of the company was forced to backtrack. By 2005 the convenience stores had been sold to WFI Acquisition Inc., which will continue to operate the stores under their former names, and Tops was also looking to sell the 31 stores it had tried to establish in the Adirondack region (so far P&C Foods acquired 2, Price Chopper has acquired six,
Hannaford will acquire three, and twelve will return to the Grand Union (stores) division of C&S Wholesale Grocers). The divesture of these stores will allow for Tops to invest the capital raised from the sale in its Western New York stores and "redefine" its market area.
2006: Store Closings
, which later became an Acme Fresh Market storeOn July 6, 2006, Ahold announced its decision to exit the
Greater Cleveland market, which consists of 46 locations. The 46 stores are located in Greater
Cleveland, Ohio,
Akron, Ohio,
Youngstown, Ohio and
Norwalk, Ohio and currently employ approximately 3,800 full and part-time employees. Tops announced on October 10, 2006 that 18 of its Ohio stores were sold to rival Giant Eagle. An additional store in Sheffield, Ohio was reportedly sold on November 29,
2006 http://www.morningjournal.com/site/index.cfm?newsid=17530265&BRD=1699&PAG=461&dept_id=566374&rfi=8 . On
November 9 in a company press release, it was stated that all Tops stores in Northeast Ohio will close whether they have been sold or not. http://www.topsmarkets.com/shareddev/tops_press/company_press_article.cfm?press_id=233 All Northeast Ohio stores closed by 3pm on
December 8, 2006. http://www.cleveland.com/business/plaindealer/index.ssf?/base/business/1165052076171230.xml&coll=2
2006-2007: Tops Markets For Sale
Ahold announced on
November 6, 2006 that the remaining 72 stores in the Tops chain, in New York and Pennsylvania, will be sold. Although they have been profitable, it is a strategic decision for Ahold to focus on other chains such as
Giant Food of Carlisle, Pennsylvania and Stop & Shop http://www.ahold.com/_media/061106RetailReviewEN.pdf .
On November 7, 2006 it was reported that Price Chopper (New York) may buy the chain. It had previously bought six former locations. http://www.bizjournals.com/albany/stories/2006/11/06/daily10.html?jst=s_cn_hl
On May 25, 2007, well-known grocery industry consultant Burt P. Flickinger III announced that he is part of a group of investors interested in purchasing the Tops Markets chain. Flickinger's family co-financed the first 60 Tops stores that opened, and stated that he hopes to restore the local focus that Tops was originally known for. http://money.cnn.com/news/newsfeeds/articles/newstex/VNU-0035-17017010.htm
On June 1, 2007 it was reported that Tops Markets agreed to repurchase its Lancaster warehouse from C&S Wholesale Grocers, Inc. C&S will continue to operate and manage the warehouse. Max Henderson, Executive Vice President and General Manager of Tops Markets, stated that he hoped repurchasing the warehouse would make Tops more attractive to a potential buyer. http://washington.bizjournals.com/buffalo/stories/2007/05/28/daily34.html
On October 11, 2007 Ahold announced the sale of Tops Markets, LLC to Morgan Stanley Private Equity in a transaction valued at $310 million. Morgan Stanley agreed to purchase 71 of the 72 stores in the chain.http://www.morganstanley.com/about/press/articles/5624.html The Baytowne Plaza store in Penfield, NY, known to Tops associates as the "Webster store", was not part of the transaction and is slated to close when the lease expires.http://rnews.com/Story_2004.cfm?ID=54256&rnews_story_type=18
Martin's Super Food Stores
In
2004, Tops fully remodeled a store in Perinton, New York, and rebranded it Martin's Super Food Store in an effort to revitalize the marketplace. The stores were designed in a colorful manner in order to attract both new and old customers. The format worked well for the company, which prompted them to remodel another location in the Buffalo suburb of Amherst, New York into the Martin's Super Food Store format, and then later three other stores in
Dunkirk (city), New York, Derby, New York, and Batavia (city), New York. As of
April 16, 2006, the Martin's Super Food Store in Amherst reverted back to a Tops Market due to customer feedback, and the company announced it would no longer pursue the Martin's brand in New York.
Advertising and Logo
Its longtime Advertising
slogan (first used in the late 1980s) is "Tops Never Stops ... Saving You More!" The slogan, temporarily put on hiatus in 2001, was brought back and refreshed in 2006, as "Tops Never Stops ... Giving You More!". Its stores, painted white and decorated in a very airy and modernistic style, are an integral part of the culture of Western New York. The company
logo was originally a spinning top, and is still reflected in the diamond design used today.
References
External links
This article is about the supermarket chain. For other uses of Tops or TOPS, see TOPS (disambiguation).
{{Infobox_Company | company_name = Tops Markets LLC |
company_logo = ] |
company_type = Subsidiary of [Ahold, pending sale to [Morgan Stanley |
foundation =
|
location = [Williamsville, New York|
key_people = [Carl Schlicker, CEO[Max Henderson, Executive Vice President and General Manager |
industry = [Grocery|
slogan = "Tops Never Stops, Giving You More" |
products = Bakery, dairy, deli, frozen foods, general grocery, meat, pharmacy, produce, seafood, snacks, liquor|
num_employees = 16,000 (
)|
homepage =
http://www.topsmarkets.com/ www.topsmarkets.com
-->
Tops is an United States of America
supermarket chain based in
Williamsville, New York, New York, with stores in the
Western New York and Central New York regions of that state, and in northwestern Pennsylvania. It is a subsidiary of the Netherlands corporation
Ahold. On
October 11,
2007, it was announced that the company would be sold to Morgan Stanley Private Equity. The sale is expected to close by the end of the year.
History
Early years
Tops was co-founded by Armand Castellani, who was born in 1917 in a village outside of Rome,
Italy. His family came to the United States in 1920, and eventually settled in Niagara Falls, New York, where his father, Ferrante, opened a small neighborhood
grocery store.
Following his mother's death in 1933, Castellani left school to help manage the store. He continued to do so until joining the United States Army in 1941. He attained the rank of captain after five years' service.
After
World War II, Castellani returned to the family business. In 1951, he set out on his own and opened the Great Bear Market in Niagara Falls. Shortly thereafter, he
Partnership with Thomas Buscaglia, owner of a grocery equipment firm, T.A. Buscaglia Equipment Co. Throughout the 1950s, Buscaglia, as CEO, and Castellani worked together, entering into a cooperative agreement with other small stores to build the foundation of what was to become the Tops Friendly Markets chain.
As the local economy boomed in the mid-to-late 1950s, the company's operations expanded to include building construction principally devoted to supermarkets. During this time, Savino Nanula, a meat department manager, became an integral part of the company's management team.
By 1958, they had set up headquarters in Buffalo, and in 1960 opened their first modern supermarket: a 25,000 square foot (2,250 m²) store on Portage Road in Niagara Falls. The company then changed its name to Niagara Frontier Services (NFS).
1960s: The chain is born
In 1962, franchise systems were established for supermarkets, under the Tops Friendly Markets name, and for smaller stores as B-Kwik. In February of that year, Tops signs went up on seven stores, and the chain was born. By the end of the year, NFS was comprised of 15 franchised stores throughout Western New York, employing a total of 300
associates. Throughout the 1960s, NFS implemented
warehouse and centralized purchasing to allow the company to grow efficiently.
In 1967, Buscaglia died and Armand Castellani took over as
chief executive officer.
The next year, NFS
Initial public offering, trading on the
American Stock Exchange. Subsequently, the company began construction on a perishable warehouse and acquired general merchandise Distribution (business) G&G Sales and Service.
The following year, 1969, NFS entered the convenience store market by opening the first Wilson Farms Neighborhood Food store in
Tonawanda, New York. The same year, Tops was named Retailer of the Year by the Brand Names Foundation, an honor it would again earn in 1974.
1970s-80s: Growth and Change
The 1970s saw Tops, under the leadership of Castellani and Nanula, continue to grow in Western New York, and thrive where competitors struggled. Early in the decade, Tops began to build more company-owned stores. By the mid-70s, the company had expanded into the
Rochester, New York area, and over time, it became the only real competitor to
Wegmans in the region. Also during this time, Tops opened its first Pennsylvania store in Bradford, Pennsylvania. In 1977, Tops installed
Barcode readers, one of the first supermarkets to do so.
In 1983, SB Investors, a private, New York-based investment group, purchased NFS. By this time, operations had grown to include 65 Tops stores, 50 Wilson Farms stores and 15 B-Kwik Food Stores, employing 7,000 associates.
The next year, Tops introduced Western New York shoppers to direct
debit service, Instabank
Automated teller machines and the first CarryOut Café. It was also the year that Tops won the first of eight Golden Penguin Award from the National
frozen food Association.
In 1985, Castellani was named Chairman of the Board and Nanula succeeded him as CEO. The following spring, SB Investors became known as Tops Markets, Inc., as the company went public for the second time, this time on NASDAQ. The following year, as Tops celebrated its 25th anniversary, a $196 million
leveraged buyout of the company was engineered between a private investors group and Tops executives.
1990s: Acquisition by Ahold
A new era began March 27, 1991 as Tops, which had grown to 145 total stores and 11,000 associates, was acquired by
Ahold, a major international food retailer based in the Netherlands. The same year, the first Tops International Super Center opened in Amherst, New York. At that time, the 112,000 square foot (10,080 m²) store was the largest in Western New York, and boasted the biggest in-store bakery in the entire U.S.
In the next few years several other locations were expanded into Tops International Stores, with more floor space and a product mix of many foods from different world cultures which up until then had not been widely available in the Buffalo area. With many Canadian people at the time regularly crossing the border due to relaxed
duty#economics after the recently-concluded
Canada-United States Free Trade Agreement and the
Canadian dollar at 90% of the value to its American counterpart, the new stores were in the right place at the right time and did even better business than expected.
The 1990s were marked by a new growth in operations, including the 1996 merger with
Finast in Northeast Ohio, expansion across New York, the construction of a new headquarters in Williamsville, NY and the opening of a 848,000 square foot (76,320 m²) distribution center in
Lancaster (town), New York. By 1998, Tops' market area stretched from
Sandusky, Ohio, to Utica, New York. In January 1999, the BonusCard, its customer loyalty program, debuted. In
May 1999, all 45 Northeast Ohio Finast stores adopted the Tops Friendly Markets banner.
Tops entered into the new millennium by acquiring the Sugarcreek Stores chain, adding 87 stores to its Wilson Farms division. That summer, Tops installed self-scanning checkouts at 11 stores in Ohio and in late August, the first Tops fueling station premiered in Akron, Ohio.
In 2001, Tops acquired 22 former Grand Union stores in the Adirondack region and in Central New York, further east than its market had traditionally been. They also introduced the Tops Xpress convenience store format. By the end of the year, the company celebrated another landmark with the opening of its 150th Tops store, located in Madison, Ohio.
2000s: Scandal and recovery
However, this aggressive growth was fueled in part by deliberate understatements of Ahold's debt to the financial markets, and when the scandal broke in 2003, Tops along with other units of the company was forced to backtrack. By 2005 the convenience stores had been sold to WFI Acquisition Inc., which will continue to operate the stores under their former names, and Tops was also looking to sell the 31 stores it had tried to establish in the Adirondack region (so far
P&C Foods acquired 2, Price Chopper has acquired six, Hannaford will acquire three, and twelve will return to the Grand Union (stores) division of C&S Wholesale Grocers). The divesture of these stores will allow for Tops to invest the capital raised from the sale in its Western New York stores and "redefine" its market area.
2006: Store Closings
, which later became an
Acme Fresh Market storeOn July 6, 2006, Ahold announced its decision to exit the Greater Cleveland market, which consists of 46 locations. The 46 stores are located in Greater
Cleveland, Ohio, Akron, Ohio,
Youngstown, Ohio and
Norwalk, Ohio and currently employ approximately 3,800 full and part-time employees. Tops announced on October 10, 2006 that 18 of its Ohio stores were sold to rival Giant Eagle. An additional store in Sheffield, Ohio was reportedly sold on November 29, 2006 http://www.morningjournal.com/site/index.cfm?newsid=17530265&BRD=1699&PAG=461&dept_id=566374&rfi=8 . On
November 9 in a company press release, it was stated that all Tops stores in Northeast Ohio will close whether they have been sold or not. http://www.topsmarkets.com/shareddev/tops_press/company_press_article.cfm?press_id=233 All Northeast Ohio stores closed by 3pm on
December 8, 2006. http://www.cleveland.com/business/plaindealer/index.ssf?/base/business/1165052076171230.xml&coll=2
2006-2007: Tops Markets For Sale
Ahold announced on
November 6, 2006 that the remaining 72 stores in the Tops chain, in New York and Pennsylvania, will be sold. Although they have been profitable, it is a strategic decision for Ahold to focus on other chains such as
Giant Food of Carlisle, Pennsylvania and Stop & Shop http://www.ahold.com/_media/061106RetailReviewEN.pdf .
On November 7, 2006 it was reported that Price Chopper (New York) may buy the chain. It had previously bought six former locations. http://www.bizjournals.com/albany/stories/2006/11/06/daily10.html?jst=s_cn_hl
On May 25, 2007, well-known grocery industry consultant Burt P. Flickinger III announced that he is part of a group of investors interested in purchasing the Tops Markets chain. Flickinger's family co-financed the first 60 Tops stores that opened, and stated that he hopes to restore the local focus that Tops was originally known for. http://money.cnn.com/news/newsfeeds/articles/newstex/VNU-0035-17017010.htm
On June 1, 2007 it was reported that Tops Markets agreed to repurchase its Lancaster warehouse from C&S Wholesale Grocers, Inc. C&S will continue to operate and manage the warehouse. Max Henderson, Executive Vice President and General Manager of Tops Markets, stated that he hoped repurchasing the warehouse would make Tops more attractive to a potential buyer. http://washington.bizjournals.com/buffalo/stories/2007/05/28/daily34.html
On October 11, 2007 Ahold announced the sale of Tops Markets, LLC to Morgan Stanley Private Equity in a transaction valued at $310 million. Morgan Stanley agreed to purchase 71 of the 72 stores in the chain.http://www.morganstanley.com/about/press/articles/5624.html The Baytowne Plaza store in Penfield, NY, known to Tops associates as the "Webster store", was not part of the transaction and is slated to close when the lease expires.http://rnews.com/Story_2004.cfm?ID=54256&rnews_story_type=18
Martin's Super Food Stores
In
2004, Tops fully remodeled a store in Perinton, New York, and rebranded it Martin's Super Food Store in an effort to revitalize the marketplace. The stores were designed in a colorful manner in order to attract both new and old customers. The format worked well for the company, which prompted them to remodel another location in the Buffalo suburb of
Amherst, New York into the Martin's Super Food Store format, and then later three other stores in
Dunkirk (city), New York,
Derby, New York, and Batavia (city), New York. As of
April 16, 2006, the Martin's Super Food Store in Amherst reverted back to a Tops Market due to customer feedback, and the company announced it would no longer pursue the Martin's brand in New York.
Advertising and Logo
Its longtime Advertising
slogan (first used in the late 1980s) is "Tops Never Stops ... Saving You More!" The slogan, temporarily put on hiatus in 2001, was brought back and refreshed in 2006, as "Tops Never Stops ... Giving You More!". Its stores, painted white and decorated in a very airy and modernistic style, are an integral part of the culture of Western New York. The company logo was originally a spinning top, and is still reflected in the diamond design used today.
References
External links