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Majestic Wine

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Majestic Wine Warehouses Ltd
Company typePrivate Company
IndustryWine retailing
GenreLiquor firm
Founded1980; 44 years ago (1980)
FounderSheldon Graner
HeadquartersWatford, England, UK
Number of locations
200
Area served
United Kingdom
Key people
John Colley, CEO
ProductsWine, champagne, spirits
ServicesFree glassware hiring, free wine tasting, delivery service from local stores, 'no quibble' returns guarantee
Revenue£382.5m (12 months to 28/Mar/2022)
£24.8m (12 months to 28/Mar/2022)
OwnerFortress Investment Group
Number of employees
1,350
Websitewww.majestic.co.uk

Majestic Wine is a British wine retailer based in Watford, England.[1] The company employs more than 1,300 employees nationwide, and operates more than 200 stores across the United Kingdom.[2]

History

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1980 to 1999

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Majestic Vintners was founded by Sheldon Graner in 1980. Prior to Majestic Vintners, Graner gained work as a merchandiser with the John Lewis group.[3] The initial design logo for the company was based on a definitive set of King George V postage stamps of 1929. During the 1970s, laws regarding selling alcohol were restrictive in the United Kingdom. Majestic Vinters offered wine tastings and sold wine by the case to comply with the laws.[3]

Graner opened his first wine warehouse in Harringay, North London, in 1980, hiring Tony Mason to manage the day-to-day running of the store. A second shop launched in Battersea in May 1981. A few months later, the group called in receivers and Majestic's assets were bought by Giles Clarke.[4]

In August 1987, Majestic acquired Liquor Barn, a chain of 104 stores in California and Arizona, as part of its US expansion plans.[5] Following the disposal of the American business, Majestic Wine was sold for £15 million to investors in 1989.

In 1986, Tony Mason set up Wizard Wine under the same concept, which in 1987 was purchased by retailer Bejam. After Bejam was purchased by rival Iceland in January 1989, Mason and partners John Apthorp (now retired) and Tim How (CEO until 2008) bought Wizard Wine from the heavily indebted Iceland. In September 1991, Wizard Wine purchased Majestic Wine in a leveraged buyout, and merged as a private company.[6] Headquartered in Watford, Hertfordshire, under the leadership of Tim How, Majestic Wine became a public company in 1996, trading on the Alternative Investment Market (AIM).[citation needed][7]

2000 to 2019

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  • April 2000 – Majestic started selling wine online for the first time through majestic.co.uk.[citation needed]
  • October 2001 – Majestic acquired Les Celliers de Calais, whose business was based around the British cross-channel trade. The stores were rebranded initially as Wine & Beer World, and then Majestic Wine Calais in 2013. Majestic closed its two remaining stores in Calais and Coquelles in 2021, stating that the stores were “no longer commercially viable” following changes to the duty-free alcohol personal allowance after the UK’s exit from the EU. [citation needed][8]
  • March 2009 – Majestic acquired the privately owned companies Lay & Wheeler Ltd, WBI Ltd and Vinotheque Holdings Ltd as the fine wine specialist arm of Majestic Wine plc.[9]
  • February 2015 – Majestic announced the departure of chief executive Steve Lewis.[10]
  • April 2015 – Majestic acquired Naked Wines for up to £70 million, and appointed Naked's founder Rowan Gormley as group chief executive.[11]
  • December 2019 – Majestic Wine and Naked Wines split after private equity firm Fortress Investment Group struck a deal to buy the Majestic business, including its 200 stores and on-trade arm Majestic Commercial, for £95m. Fortress re-hired John Colley, who had previously served as managing director of Majestic's retail business, as Chief Executive.[12] Following the split, Majestic Wine plc was renamed Naked Wines plc. Effectively, the previous shareholders of Majestic became shareholders of Naked Wines, as Majestic moved back into private ownership.

Under Fortress ownership

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  • January 2020 – New chief executive John Colley restructured his executive team, with managing director Josh Lincoln and chief customer officer Natalie Thng leaving the business. Former Tesco beers, wines, and spirits boss Robert Cooke was promoted from buying and merchandising director into the role of chief commercial officer, while Majestic veterans Keith Blessley and Nick Workman were named retail director and IT director respectively.
  • May 2020 – Majestic Wine extended its relationship with Deliveroo in the United Kingdom, aiming to better reach customers staying at home because of the COVID-19 pandemic.[13] Following the deal, 80 stores were able to fulfil Deliveroo orders from local customers.
  • June 2020—Majestic confirmed a surge in sales during lockdown and said it served more than 150,000 new customers through its home delivery service while its stores were closed. The business also revealed plans to grow sales by 10% by 2025, roll out new ranges, improve staff training and relaunch its website as part of Colley's strategy to "get back to what we do best".
  • November 2020—Majestic debuted its new brand, including a venture into fine wine, at its new store in Beckenham. The new shop is located inside a listed pavilion originally built in 1928.
  • June 2021—Majestic launched its Shop Local online proposition, aiming to appeal to e-commerce customers by allowing them a live, real time view of stock available in their local store and place orders for same-day click-and-collect or home delivery.
  • September 2021—Majestic launched its Wine Club subscription proposition, described as providing customers with exclusive new wines every quarter, video content from producers, and bespoke food pairing recipes.
  • December 2021—Majestic closed its two remaining stores in Calais, blaming changes to the duty-free alcohol allowance following the UK's exit from the European Union. Prior to the referendum, UK residents were able to transport as much alcohol as they wanted across the English Channel, provided it was for personal consumption. After the UK left the EU, the personal allowance was cut to 42 litres of beer or 18 litres of non-sparkling wine. As a result, Majestic said the stores were “no longer commercially viable”.
  • December 2022—Majestic published its results for the 2021/22 financial year, which included a 1.4% increase in revenues to £382.5 million and an 8% up tick in pre-tax profit to £17.3 million.
  • April 2023—Majestic opened the doors to its first small format store in Harpenden. The 1,800 square foot store was half the size of an average Majestic shop and stocked a reduced selection of around 600 wines.

References

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  1. ^ "Financial Times".
  2. ^ "Majestic Wine". majestic.co.uk. Retrieved 27 September 2023.
  3. ^ a b Live, Birmingham (4 May 2013). "Majestic value and quality on offer for lovers of top tipples". birminghammail. Retrieved 21 February 2020.
  4. ^ About Us: National Council - C Giles Clarke Archived 2009-02-25 at the Wayback Machine Learning & Skills Council
  5. ^ "California Vintners Feel the Crush of Anti-Alcohol Forces, Increased Foreign Ownership". Los Angeles Times. 8 September 1987. Retrieved 21 February 2020.
  6. ^ "Company History | Majestic Wine". Investors.majestic.co.uk. Retrieved 31 March 2016.
  7. ^ "Financial Times".
  8. ^ "Financial Times".
  9. ^ "Majestic snaps up Lay & Wheeler". Decanter. 6 March 2009. Retrieved 31 March 2016.
  10. ^ "Majestic Wine chief Steve Lewis steps down". Harpers.co.uk. 19 February 2015. Retrieved 31 March 2016.
  11. ^ Ruddick, Graham (10 April 2015). "Majestic Wine 'buys' a new boss with acquisition of Naked Wines". Telegraph. Retrieved 31 March 2016.
  12. ^ Mercer, Chris (12 December 2019). "Majestic Wine sale completes as retailer plots growth". Decanter. Retrieved 21 February 2020.
  13. ^ Douglas, Ellie (19 May 2020). "Deliveroo and Majestic Wine partnership expands to 80 sites". Decanter. Retrieved 27 May 2020.
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