The country's 72 largest grocery chains have just been ranked by customer data science company dunnhumby, and it seems a store only available in 10 states has come out on top
A Southern grocery chain has been named best in the United States for the fourth time and many were shocked to find out it wasn't Walmart or Costco.
H-E-B was among several regional grocery retailers that dominated the top spots in Dunnhumby’s annual ranking.
A beloved southern grocery chain has taken the top spot in the annual ranking of the 72 largest grocery stores
A nationwide study named San Antonio-based H-E-B as the top U.S. grocery retailer for the fourth time in eight years.
Shelves at the Walmart in Hayden were wiped out entirely Friday as supply chains grapple with a nationwide avian influenza outbreak.
Dunnhumby has released its annual Retailer Preference Index, and the widely regarded ranking names H-E-B the No. 1 grocery. Market Basket jumps into the second spot, and Costco holds steady in third place.
CINCINNATI — For the third straight year, Texas chain H-E-B was rated as the No. 1 US grocery retailer in the eighth annual dunnhumby Retailer Preference Index (RPI), with value grocer Market Basket pushing Amazon out of the No. 2 spot to edge past Costco Wholesale.
Each week, we're checking the prices at five Valley grocery spots, Bashas', Fry's, Safeway, Walmart and WinCo, looking specifically at a gallon of 2% Milk, a loaf of wheat bread, a 1-lb chicken breast, 1-lb of ground beef, a dozen white large eggs ...
H-E-B maintained its rankings as the top U.S. grocery retailer for the third year standing, according to the annual retailer preference index report released last week by customer data science source dunnhumby. The analysis evaluated the 72 largest retailers and comprised intel from 11,000 U.S. consumers surveyed.
According to information from the annual study by a data analytics company called dunnhumby, consumer preference in supermarkets across the United States leans towards a chain that
Developed by researchers at Mass General Brigham and publicly accessible, the database reveals the prevalence of processed foods across various grocery stores, emphasizing the need for greater awareness and regulation of food offerings.