"Food, Wine and Grocery"
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Private limited company | |
Industry | High-end Supermarket |
Founded | 1847 1896 (incorporated) |
Founder | Edwin Henry Booth |
Headquarters | Ribbleton, Preston, Lancashire, England, UK |
Number of locations
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28 retail stores in Northern England |
Area served
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Cumbria, Lancashire, Yorkshire, Greater Manchester and Cheshire |
Key people
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Edwin J. Booth (Executive Chairman) Andrew Rafferty (IT & Ecommerce Director) Nigel Murray (Commercial Director) Julie Mills (Marketing Director) Jacqueline Lunardi (HR Director) Matthew Rothwell (Finance Director)) Paul Minett (Retail Director) Mike Thomson (Estate Director) |
Products | Food, beverage & tobacco retailing |
Revenue | £280.75m (2015) |
£3.58m (2015) | |
Profit | Loss -£6.3m (2016) |
Owner | Booth Family and staff |
Number of employees
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2,870 |
Website | www |
Booths is a chain of high-end supermarkets in Northern England. Most of its branches are located in Lancashire, but there are also branches in Cheshire, Cumbria, Greater Manchester and North Yorkshire and a single branch in West Yorkshire in the town of Ilkley. Booths is said to be the 'Waitrose of the North' by various sources, most notably The Telegraph. Booths attempt to compete on quality as opposed to just price. It has been developed on the motto "to sell the best quality goods in shops staffed by first class assistants".
E.H. Booth & Co. Ltd was founded in June 1847 when 19-year-old tea dealer Edwin Henry Booth opened a shop called The China House in Blackpool. In 1863, he added the sale of wines and spirits, and branches were opened in Lytham in 1879 and Blackburn in 1884. The business was incorporated as a private limited company in 1896.
Edwin's son John opened cafes in the stores in 1902 and invited all staff to become shareholders in 1920. It has remained owned by the Booth family and staff ever since, comprising over 250 shareholders in 2011 and with no individual having more than 12% of the total shares. The current chairman, Edwin J. Booth, is the fifth generation.
In a feature article in The Guardian in 2008, David Webster, the former chairman and co-founder of Britain's Safeway chain (which had sold out to Morrisons in 2004), said that he had tried to buy out Booths several times over the years, as did several of his rivals, adding "one thought Booths would have disappeared ages ago but it jolly well hasn't. It is obviously doing an outstanding job for its customers".
In 2008, Booths were under pressure by Waitrose with rumours of a takeover, which was later 'ruled out'. Booths and Waitrose then formed a buying group together.
From beginning as a tea shop in Blackpool, Booths grew into the first chain of supermarkets in the area, and even though it has now been eclipsed by bigger supermarkets such as Tesco and Sainsbury's, it boasted 28 stores across the region in 2016.