Information about Walgreens

Walgreen Co.
Enlarge picture
Walgreens logo
Public (NYSE: WAG)
Founded1901
HeadquartersDeerfield, Illinois
Key peopleJeff Rein, Chairman and CEO
Greg Wasson, President and COO
ProductsRetail
Revenue47.41 billion USD
Employees 195,000+
Websitewww.walgreens.com
Walgreen Co. (NYSEWAG), d/b/a Walgreens (without an apostrophe), is a pharmacy chain, mail service pharmacy, pharmacy benefit manager, and specialty pharmacy which has operations throughout the continental United States and Puerto Rico. There are 6,000+ Walgreens (as of October 2007) in operation with a current goal to have 7,000 stores by 2010. Of the 6,000+ Walgreens locations, about 1,650 of them are open 24-hours, including the pharmacy. Over 4.7 million customers are served by Walgreens daily chain-wide and over 580 million prescription scripts are filled annually. Walgreens was founded in Chicago, Illinois, in 1901 and has since expanded throughout the United States. Its headquarters is located in Deerfield, Illinois, a suburb of Chicago. Its main competitors are CVS/pharmacy, Wal-Mart, Rite Aid as well as Target Corporation and primarily Osco.

A typical Walgreens store is about 14,500 square feet with 11,000 square feet of sales area. They offer nearly 25,000 items for sale and typically staff between 25 and 30 people per store. On average, one store pulls in $8.5 million in annual sales. Most stores include a pharmacy, a photo lab, a cosmetics counter, and a general merchandise area. Select stores in metropolitan Chicago, Atlanta, Kansas City, Las Vegas, and St. Louis now include Walgreens TakeCare Health Clinics where certified (primarily nurse practitioners, and in some states, registered pharmacist) staff diagnose, treat, and prescribe for common illnesses and can also issue vaccinations and physicals in select locations. These clinics are open 7 days a week; including evenings and weekends with no appointments necessary and with acceptance of most major insurance plans. If a patient uses the TakeCare Clinic, their prescription is automatically processed through Walgreens' Intercom Plus Pharmacy System as a waiting prescription, so in most stores, the prescription is ready to be picked up in 15 to 20 minutes.

History

Beginnings

Enlarge picture
A typical Walgreens Pharmacy.
The Walgreens chain began as a drug store owned by Charles R. Walgreen, Sr.. [1] After he died, his son Charles R. Walgreen Jr. took over and ran the chain until his retirement. The Charles R. Walgreen Jr. years were relatively prosperous, but lacked the massive expansion seen in the early part of the company. Charles "Cork" R. Walgreen III took over after Jr's retirement in the early 1970s, and brought the company through many modern initiatives, including the switch to a computer inventory based system (bar code scanning). The Walgreen family was not involved in senior management of the company for a short period following Charles' retirement. In 1995, Kevin P. Walgreen was made a vice-president and promoted to Senior Vice-President of Operations - Southern Division in 2006. [2]

Related ventures

Walgreens formerly owned Sanborns, the largest pharmacy chain in Mexico, having purchased Sanborns from Frank Sanborn in 1946 and selling it to Grupo Carso in 1985. [3]

In the 1980s, Walgreens owned and operated a chain of casual family restaurants named Wag's, a belated attempt to compete with Woolworth’s lunch counters. The Wag's restaurants were very similar in concept to Denny's. Walgreens sold most of these to Marriott Corporation in 1988[4] and by 1991 the chain had completely gone out of business.

Walgreens is a sponsor of the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation and co-produced the Ron Santo documentary This Old Cub. It was created to help kids with diabetes

Contributions to popular culture

Walgreens claims responsibility for the popularization of the malted milkshake (or at least its version of the malted milkshake), invented by Ivar "Pop" Coulson in 1922 [5], although milkshakes and malted milk had been around for some time before. This development coincided with the invention of the electric blender in the same year.

Recent Expansion

The 1,000th Walgreen’s store, located at the intersection of Dearborn & Division in Chicago, opened at 9:00 a.m. on September 6, 1984. The ribbon cutting ceremony was presided over by Illinois Governor James R. Thompson and the movie superstar Cary Grant. Walgreens opened its 3000th store in Chicago in 2000. Its 4000th store opened in 2003 in Van Nuys, California, and most recently Walgreens opened its 5000th store in Richmond, Virginia in October of 2005. In late September 2007, The Walgreen Company opened it's six thousandth store.

Walgreens recently acquired the Happy Harry's chain of Delaware, Pennsylvania, Maryland, and New Jersey.

In 2003 Walgreens purchased 16 locations of the Vancouver, Washington based Hi-School Pharmacy Inc. stores, including the original Hi-School Pharmacy location in Vancouver, and converted them to Walgreens.

With the notable exceptions mentioned above, Walgreens expansion is different than that of competitors CVS/pharmacy and Rite Aid in that the company mostly expands by opening new stores in new markets instead of takeovers and acquisitions. This may actually benefit Walgreens in the long run, as both CVS and Rite Aid have experienced problems with this. CVS now has duplicate stores in Chicagoland after acquiring Albertsons's Osco Drugs chain while Rite Aid has several duplicate stores in the Mid-Atlantic region (more notably Pennsylvania) after its recent acquisition of Eckerd Pharmacy, and was only forced to sell off or close a handful of stores to meet regulations. Walgreens did buy a Rite Aid location in Zelienople, Pennsylvania, as well as 5 other locations as a result of the Eckerd/Rite Aid deal.

On July 12, 2006, David Bernauer stepped down as CEO of Walgreens and was replaced by company president, Jeff Rein. Holding degrees in accounting and pharmacy from the University of Arizona, Rein was a pharmacist, store manager, district manager, and treasurer prior to being named Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board. Greg Wasson, former President of Walgreens Health Services, was named President and Chief Operations Officer.

In late September 2007, The Walgreen Company opened it's six thousandth store.

Walgreens Health Services (WHS)



Walgreens Health Services [1], established in 1991, is a growing patient-care oriented business unit providing pharmacy benefit management (PBM), mail service pharmacy, home care, and specialty pharmacy services. Its primary division, Walgreens Health Initiatives (WHI), is a PBM whose client list contains over 400 health plans, employer groups, third parties, unions, government entities, and other types of organizations. WHI currently covers the prescription insurance benefits of 13.5 million individuals in a retail network of over 63,000 pharmacies.

Store model

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An Uptown Houston Walgreens at a street intersection.
Originally, Walgreens stores were connected to local groceries, for example in Chicago, which is Walgreens primary market, they teamed up with either Eagle Food Centers or Dominick's Finer Foods, usually with a "walkthru" to the ajoining store and often sharing personnel. This concept was instated to compete with the popular dual store format used by chief competitor Jewel-Osco. Eventually, they ended the relationship with Eagle and focused primarily on a connection to the Dominick's stores, which were considered to be of a better quality. PharmX-Rexall stepped in and filled the vacated Walgreen locations joined to Eagle stores.

In its current business model, new Walgreens locations are most commonly set up as freestanding locations at the corners of busy, intersecting streets -- literally making it a "corner drugstore" similar to how many independent pharmacies evolved over the years in the United States. This also usually allows the store to offer additional conveniences such as a drive-thru pharmacy and 24-hour shopping that would not be possible in the average shopping mall. Walgreens also offers "auto refill". Customers can have their prescriptions automatically refilled each month for no additional charge. Walgreens sells freshly brewed drip coffees, Icees, and fountain beverages at select stores, as part of the pilot "Café W" program. Over 3000 locations have equipment to refill inkjet cartridges. As of March 2007, Walgreens has introduced flat pricing, $10 for black, and $15 for color.[6]

Walgreens facts

  • Walgreens is the nation's leading drugstore in sales, earnings, growth, same-store sales increases, prescription drug market share, and prescription sales per store, and first on the list of Global Most Admired Companies in the food and drugstore category.[7]
  • Walgreens opens on average one store every 17 hours.[8]
  • The company plans to have 7000 stores by 2010.[9]
  • Walgreens fills over one million prescriptions every day[10]
  • Nearly 30% of Walgreens stores are open 24-hours[11]
  • Walgreens accounts for 14% of all retail prescriptions dispensed in the United States[12]
  • Walgreens has invested more than $1 billion in advanced systems and technology[13]
  • Walgreens is the largest private user of satellite transmission data in the world, second only to the U. S. Government[14]
  • Walgreens was the first drug store chain to utilize drive through pick up windows for prescriptions.

References

External links

A public company usually refers to a company that is permitted to offer its securities (stock, bonds, etc.) for sale to the general public, typically through a stock exchange.
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New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), nicknamed the "Big Board", is a New York City-based stock exchange. It is the largest stock exchange in the world by dollar volume and, with 2,764 listed securities[1], has the second most securities of all stock exchanges.
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Deerfield is a village in Lake County, Illinois, United States. A portion of the village is in Cook County, Illinois, United States. The population was 18,420 at the 2000 census. It is one of the predominant suburbs that make up Chicago's North Shore region.
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Jeff Rein is the Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Walgreens, a drug store chain in the United States.

Rein was born in New Orleans in 1953, lived in Phoenix, and came to Tucson at age 10 when his family relocated.
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Aspinwall Classification System (Leo Aspinwall, 1958) classifies and rates products based on five variables:
  1. Replacement rate (How frequently is the product repurchased?)
  2. Gross margin (How much profit is obtained from each product?)

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Retailing consists of the sale of goods or merchandise, from a fixed location such as a department store or kiosk, in small or individual lots for direct consumption by the purchaser.[1] Retailing may include subordinated services, such as delivery.
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Pharmacy (from the Greek φάρμακον = drug) is the health profession that links the health sciences with the chemical sciences, and it is charged with ensuring the safe use of medication.
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photograph (often shortened to photo) is an image created by light falling on a light-sensitive surface, usually photographic film or an electronic imager such as a CCD or a CMOS chip.
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United States dollar
dólar estadounidense (Spanish)
dólar amerikanu (Tetum)
dólar americano

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A website (alternatively, Web site or web site) is a collection of Web pages, images, videos or other digital assets that is hosted on one or several Web server(s), usually accessible via the Internet, cell phone or a LAN.
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New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), nicknamed the "Big Board", is a New York City-based stock exchange. It is the largest stock exchange in the world by dollar volume and, with 2,764 listed securities[1], has the second most securities of all stock exchanges.
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apostrophe  or  ' ) is a punctuation mark, and sometimes a diacritic mark, in languages written in the Latin alphabet.
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Pharmacy (from the Greek φάρμακον = drug) is the health profession that links the health sciences with the chemical sciences, and it is charged with ensuring the safe use of medication.
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Chain stores (also called retail chains) are a range of retail outlets which share a brand and central management, usually with standardized business methods and practices. They are a type of business chain.
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A Pharmacy Benefit Manager (PBM) is a third party administrator of prescription drug programs. They are primarily responsible for processing and paying prescription drug claims.
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Motto
"In God We Trust"   (since 1956)
"E Pluribus Unum"   ("From Many, One"; Latin, traditional)
Anthem
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Motto
Latin: Joannes Est Nomen Eius
Spanish: Juan es su nombre
(English: "John is his name")
Anthem
"La Borinqueña"
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City of Chicago

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Nickname: "The Windy City", "The Second City", "ChiTown", "Hog Butcher for the World", "City of the Big Shoulders", "The City That Works"
Motto: "Urbs in Horto
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Deerfield is a village in Lake County, Illinois, United States. A portion of the village is in Cook County, Illinois, United States. The population was 18,420 at the 2000 census. It is one of the predominant suburbs that make up Chicago's North Shore region.
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Suburbs are commonly defined as residential areas on the outskirts of a city or large town.[1] Most modern suburbs are commuter towns with many single-family homes.
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City of Chicago

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Seal
Nickname: "The Windy City", "The Second City", "ChiTown", "Hog Butcher for the World", "City of the Big Shoulders", "The City That Works"
Motto: "Urbs in Horto
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CVS Caremark Corporation

Public (NYSE: CVS )
Founded 1963
Headquarters Woonsocket, Rhode Island

Products Retail - Pharmacy, Prescription Benefit Management
Revenue $43.8138 billion USD (2006)
Operating income $2.4416 billion USD (2006)
Net income $1.
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Rite Aid Corporation

Public (NYSE:  RAD )
Founded 1962 - as Thrif D Discount
1968 - Public, as Rite Aid Corp
Headquarters Camp Hill, Pennsylvania

Key people Mary Sammons, Chairman, President & CEO
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Target Corporation

Public (NYSE:  TGT )
Founded 1902 (Minneapolis, MN)
Headquarters Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA

Key people Bob Ulrich, chairman and
chief executive officer
Industry Retail
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Osco Drug

Pharmacy/Retail
Founded 1915 American Falls, Idaho
Headquarters Scottsdale, Arizona

Key people Jeff Noddle, Chairman and CEO
Mike Jackson, President and COO
Kevin Tripp, R.
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Atlanta, Georgia
Downtown Atlanta

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Nickname: Hotlanta,[1] The A-T-L[1]
Location in Fulton and DeKalb counties and the state of Georgia
Coordinates:
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Kansas City is two cities and a metropolitan area situated at the confluence of the Kansas and Missouri Rivers. The combined population of Kansas City, Missouri and Kansas City, Kansas is 594,173 as of the 2000 census.
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