Jack Sinclair
Analyst · Gordon Haskett. Your line is now open
Thank you, Susannah, and good afternoon, everyone. Thank you for joining our call today. A lot continues to happen in our world and at Sprouts. Before I speak to the results, I want to express my thanks to our team members, who have worked so hard during challenging circumstances. What I’ve seen from the team is a true demonstration of our Sprouts culture, rooted in respect, inclusion and caring for one another. This culture shines through in everything our team members do for our customers and for each other. In true Sprouts Farm, our team members have adapted to a new way of operating and remain everyday heroes, as we provide our communities and customers healthy food for their families. Along for the day when this pandemic is over, but for now, we are steadfast in doing what we must to keep our team members and customers safe, wearing protective gear, keeping a social distance and maintaining a sanitized and stocked store. Our results are in large part due to our team members on the front line. As such, I’m focused on supporting them with enhanced compensation and a safe work environment. I remain committed to continually reviewing these topics through these trying times. In fact, in July, we once again paid enhanced compensation and continue to encourage and pay for team members to stay home if they’re not feeling well. As for our results, our sales for the second quarter peaked in the middle of the quarter and started to settle in June. Some of the consumer trends we experienced in the first quarter related to the pandemic remained in the second quarter. Customers consolidated trips to avoid social contact, which resulted in a reduction in traffic, but with increased basket size. Our customers’ desire to remain healthy, correlated to an increase in immune building categories we’re known for, such as vitamins and healthier products like organic and plant-based foods. The percent of organic produce sold trended up into the high-20% range of total produce sales, and sales growth of organic chicken is up three times since pre-COVID days. As the country continues to practice social distancing, our e-commerce sales have remained elevated, up more than 500% from last year in the second quarter. Our roll-up of pickup service to all our stores was successfully implemented by early May, giving our customers another option for shopping with Sprouts. The pickup service grew rapidly throughout the quarter, and as expected, home delivery remained the preferred service by our customers at six times the size of pickup. During the second quarter, we also increased our marketing spend for our owned channel, delivery.sprouts.com. This website is also powered by Instacart. But when customers order through this owned channel, we capture customer data, providing insights for future marketing. The increased marketing dollars resulted in our owned channel sales, growing more than two times that of all e-commerce sales. The supply chain for our distribution for produce distribution centers finished strong in the second quarter, rebounding from the high volumes in March and early second quarter. Importantly, for our fresh distribution, our on-time delivery to stores is nearly back to historical norms. From a nonperishable standpoint, service levels have dramatically improved, since the low levels in March and the stores are doing well keeping the stocks shelf stocked with available products. Our pinch point mainly remains with the vendor community and assortment availability, but imports are flowing through again, resulting in improved levels of private label products. And importantly, our innovation pipeline is robust. We continue to launch new items like the Snow Monkey vegan paleo ice cream and frozen vegetable from – vegetables from Stahlbush Island Farms, who was the first farm to build a biogas plant using agricultural byproduct and become certified as sustainable. I’d now like to provide an update on a few pillars of our strategy, starting with some additional color on our target customer segments. Last quarter, we highlighted two consumer segments that Sprouts resonates with, the health enthusiast and innovation or experience seeker. These two consumer segments combined cover a wide range of income in age demographics from Gen Z to baby boomers, wherever they live in the country aligns nicely with our stores and our store expansion plant, healthier foods and a pleasant store experience highlighted by friendly customer service, two defining characteristics of Sprouts drive their shopping habits. Both consumer segments also over-indexed to fresh produce, a foundational category of Sprouts and part of our DNA. Our produce lineage traces a long way back in history, and the bountiful fresh produce selection at great prices will always be the centerpiece of our stores. Having said this, we have significant headroom within these target groups to capture new customers by doubling down our efforts. Today, we’re only capturing a small percentage of the more than $200 billion market that makes up these two segments. Starting in June, we began to significantly adapt to our marketing spend to focus on more digital, social, radio, and for the first time TV towards these two customer segments. In the past, our heavy reliance on a print ad kept us from optimizing our connection to the customers that our brand and experience resonate with the most. To bring this point home, in June 2019, we sent out 110 million print flyers of our weekly ad. Without having full visibility into how many were seen by customers. In comparison, in June of 2020, we had $125 million measured digital impressions of our weekly ad. And we’re able to achieve a significant 1,800% year-over-year increase in digital impressions of brand and promotional content by reallocating the saving from eliminating print. Another key insight is that we know from the data that customers who read the printed flyers frequently only read the front page, while the digital flyers have high readership across all pages. We’re reaching more customers, and importantly, customers that align most to our offering and this new media strategy will continue to evolve. Our messaging and promotions are evolving as well. Gone are the days when all our marketing dollars are spent talking about price. Our promotions are starting to become more around storytelling. The products we carry are unique, like Daring’s frozen plant-based chicken alternatives and our marketing stories will bring them to life. This in no way means, we are eliminating promotions. Even during this COVID pandemic, we are still promoting, but we’re being smarter, we’re buying better and targeting our promotions to our core customers. Our investments are focused on items that are elastic and drive volume. We stopped the deep promotions in price that did not change the customers’ decision or drive additional traffic and only resulted in deflated sales. Moving forward, we’re promoting what we are known for healthy differentiated products and multiple varieties of produce. A portion of the promotional dollars left are being reinvested back into a competitive everyday price. We started this promotional change in the back of the third quarter of 2019. In the fourth quarter of last year and the pre-COVID days of 2020, this strategy was taking hold, as seen in those results and it still is today. Outside of March and part of April, most all grocers are back with their full distribution of print promotions, and we continue to see the benefits from our strategy, as evidenced from today’s results. Being with such a young company, our operating margin improvement opportunities are beyond promotion and price. We’ve already begun to experience shrink improvements from the implementation of fresh item management. For example, for the first time, the meat department has a clear line of sight of how to reduce overproduction and what products really are their best sellers from an overall cost perspective, reducing the complexity of our stores, merchandising appropriately with the right number of SKUs and minor fixture changes will result in further savings in shrink in the years to come. A smaller, less complex box with our new format will also contribute to better labor standards, helping to offset future increases in labor costs. And a continuation of the rollout of self-checkout stations in our stores can create additional labor efficiencies to help to offset additional labor needed for future e-commerce growth. Our future at Sprouts remains bright, and I look forward to the continued improvement in the business as we scale and grow. Now, let me hand it off to Denise to speak to the financials for the quarter and provide some additional color on our stock to the third quarter.