Transcript of interview with John Mackey on
"60 Minutes" tonight:
John Mackey: Not Your Average Grocer
Dan Rather Profiles The Founder And
CEO Of Whole Foods Market
(Page 1 of 3)
June 4, 2006
 John Mackey (CBS)

 
Quote 
"Shopping for groceries for
most people is like a chore. It's like doing the laundry or taking out the
garbage. And we strive to make shopping engaging, fun and
interactive."
John Mackey
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(CBS) Can you find virtue in a grocery store? John
Mackey, the CEO and founder of Whole Foods Market, is convinced you can.
As correspondent Dan Rather reports, his 184 stores are seen as
more than supermarkets — they're hailed as shrines to food that is good for you.
At a time when 60 percent of Americans are overweight, Mackey has tapped
into a growing obsession with the old adage you are what you eat. Organic food
has become one of the fastest growing parts of the food industry — two thirds of
Americans bought organic last year. And as one of its top sellers, Mackey is
raking in billions of dollars and discovering that not everyone thinks he's an
angel.
All this from a man who dropped out of college — six times —
searching, as he puts it, for the meaning of life.
John Mackey says he was just a "normal guy" — not a hippie —
though at one time he had socialist leanings, grew his hair long and lived in a
cooperative. "All my friends were doing it. So, I was influenced by my peer
group," he explains.
Asked if he ever imagined that he would become a
big man on campus in corporate America, Mackey says laughing, "That would be
no!"
At the age of 52, John Mackey has become that big man on campus in
corporate America, running a Fortune 500 company.
Yet, in one of the
most competitive industries, Mackey's unorthodox approach has transformed Whole
Foods Market into a business worth about $9 billion. In the last five years
alone, the company's stock has grown faster than such powerhouses as eBay, Yahoo
and Microsoft. And he has done it by creating a supermarket unlike any other.
"Shopping for groceries for most people is like a chore," says Mackey.
"It's like doing the laundry or taking out the garbage. And we strive to make
shopping engaging, fun and interactive."
And so, at Whole Foods, chefs
can be seen in the aisles whipping up sautéed broccoli with garlic, while
customers dine at a sushi bar. There are 600 kinds of cheese, 1,800 wines and
six in-store eateries. In one corner of the Austin, Texas, store Rather visited
with Mackey, customers could chose from 10 different peanut butters that they
can grind themselves. And you can dip anything you want in a chocolate fountain.
All of this decadence comes with an unlikely flourish: it's supposed to
be good for you. Virtually all of the food has no artificial preservatives,
coloring, sweeteners or trans fats. But not everything is healthy. Mackey's
stores sell beer and ice cream.
"'We're not holy foods,' what do you
mean by that?" Rather asked, citing one of Mackey's quotes.
"There's
always going to be people that don't think you go far enough," Mackey says. "We
have certain standards the food has to meet. But then it's up to the customers
to make those choices."
"Well, you've been quoted as saying, 'We don't
think you'll go to hell if you don't shop at Whole Foods,' " Rather remarks.
"I hope not," Mackey replies.
Still, Mackey is about to take his
standards to a whole new level. Appalled by the way animals are often treated at
factory farms, he has come up with animal compassion standards. For an added
price, shoppers can soon buy beef from cattle that were treated humanely,
grazing on grass outdoors, and lobsters whose tanks were kept at the most
comfortable temperature.
"In the end, what difference does it make
whether you have a happy lobster or not? If the lobster's gonna be eventually
dropped into boiling water, he's gonna be a dead lobster and it doesn't much
matter," Rather says.
"Oh, Dan, are you gonna die someday?" Mackey
replies. "Does the quality of your life not matter then? Since you're gonna
eventually die? Get dropped in your own pot? At the end of the day, the quality
of life is all we have, and it's just as important to that lobster, the quality
of life that it lives — even if it's not as long — as the quality of your life."
"Bound to people who say this animal compassion standards business is a
little beyond the pale," Rather says.
"I mean, I say they're entitled to
their own opinions," Mackey says. "They should do what they think is right, and
I'll do what I think is right."
That approach has infused his business —
no matter how unorthodox. He lets his workers vote on whom to hire on their
team, share in the profits and know what everyone else is being paid. They spend
little on advertising, but give workers at each store $125,000 to spend on ideas
to bring in new customers. In the Austin store, someone suggested an ice skating
rink on the roof.
"When I would travel around and talk to the team members,
they're always asking me, 'You know, John can we have this? Can we have that?
What about this? Can we do this?' And I didn't wanna be daddy anymore. And
that's kind of how they were, 'Daddy, daddy, daddy. Can we have this? Can we
have that?' And I realized, why don't we let them decide for themselves what
we'll have?" says Mackey.
But despite all his talk about empowering
workers, the one thing he doesn't have in his stores is unions. He's quick to
argue that his workers are among the highest paid in the industry and almost 90
percent have full benefits. There's also a salary cap on executives, so Mackey,
who's worth at least $30 million, made $430,000 last year. And Mackey insists
his company is more socially responsible than most. Whole Foods donates 5
percent of profits to local charities and recently made the largest purchase by
a fortune 500 company of wind energy credits to offset the power in its stores.
Mackey acknowledges he's also committed to making a profit and
delivering for stockholders but he doesn't see a contradiction.
"Not at
all," he says. "The more profit we make, the more stores we can open, the more
donations we can make to our community, the more responsible citizens we can be
for the environment. It's all interactive. It's all connected together. There's
no separation."
Asked what he would say to someone who assumes that, in
the end, Mackey is only about the bottom line and making a buck, Mackey says, "I
say that he's talking more about himself than he is about me. How does he know
who I am? He's wrong. That's not what I'm all about."
What Mackey's all
about has its roots in a conventional upbringing in Houston. But he was out to
do things his own way from an early age. When his coach cut him from his high
school basketball team, he persuaded his parents to send him to another school
so he could play.
"They actually moved. We had to move to another place,
in order for me to play," he says. "I will say that after basketball season was
over, they moved back," he adds, laughing.
After he dropped out of
college against his parents wishes, he and his then-girlfriend opened a health
food store in Austin called "Safer Way." Determined to merge with a competitor,
he soon showed what kind of businessman he could be.
"I'm told that you
said to that competitor, 'Either you arrange to join forces with us, or we'll
drive you out of business.' True or untrue?" Rather asks.
"Partially
true," Mackey admits. "Well, because it's only half true. They were a competitor
but they were friends of mine. So I didn't go up there and threaten them and
say, 'Join with us. We're gonna drive you out of business.' I went up there and
said, 'We gonna open a 10,000-square-foot store about a mile from here. Wouldn't
it be a lot more fun to join forces together? Rather than compete? When our
store's gonna be four times bigger than yours?' And they saw the logic of that
argument."
Mackey admits he has a lot of drive and is a fierce
competitor.
And so in 1980, Whole Foods was born. Over 25 years, he
gradually expanded the business by acquiring smaller health food stores and
tapping into a burgeoning movement that advocated food grown organically on
small, local farms without chemicals or pesticides polluting the environment.
Some think all that virtue can come at a steep price — the store's earned the
nickname "whole paycheck."
But not everything is expensive. There's a
substantial selection of competitively priced food. You still pay the usual
premium for organic, which Mackey argues costs more to grow.
What does
Mackey say to someone who argues that poor people can't afford this food?
"To me, you make a tradeoff," he says. "It might be a little bit more
expensive. But you're getting a better tasting, higher quality food that's going
to be better for your health and better for the environment."
That kind
of marketing has attracted an almost cult following of millions of urban
professionals and suburbanites. Now, with 184 stores across the country and soon
expanding to Europe, Mackey has had to change the way he does business.
Carol Ann Sayle at Boggy Creek Farm in Austin started selling
produce to Whole Foods 15 years ago. She picks 17 heads of lettuce, washes them
in a sink, packs the lettuce in the car and delivers it immediately to the local
Whole Foods.
Mackey says the company deals with farms of all different
sizes, from very small farms to some pretty big ones, noting that there are now
some big organic farms.
And, so, while most of us imagine organic to
mean small, family run farms like the five-acre Boggy Creek Farm — where lettuce
is handpicked — larger farms are the growing reality. Whole Foods also counts on
large industrialized organic farms such as the 26,000-acre Earthbound Farm,
based in California, where they process 17,000 pounds of lettuce every hour. It
still has to be organic, which means they can't use pesticides or synthetic
fertilizers. The leaves are pre-washed on conveyor belts, swept into salad
spinners the size of washing machines, and packaged on automated assembly lines.
Each week, Earthbound ships 22 million servings of salad in refrigerated trucks
to stores across the country.
Some of that goes to Whole Foods, which
now has regional distribution centers, bake houses, seafood processing
facilities, a coffee roasting operation and field buyers who travel the world.
And some of the natural food companies that supply Whole Foods are actually
owned by such giants as General Mills, Kraft and Coca Cola.
Some critics
have said Mackey "sold out," starting with organic food but having gone too
corporate. Asked what his reaction to that is, Mackey says: "The first time I
heard Whole Foods was getting too corporate, when we opened our second store
back in 1982. As a company changes and evolves, some people are gonna always
remember the good old days as being better."
Mackey insists he's made no
tradeoffs as his business has grown. "America has a romance with small
businesses. And it has mistrust of the large businesses," he says. "Whole Foods
is out to prove that wrong. I don't see any inherent reason why corporations
cannot be just as caring and responsible as small business."
Like his
company, Mackey seems to try to strike a balance between a billion-dollar
business and the good old days. He took five months off to hike the Appalachian
trail, practices yoga and meditates on his ranch where he follows his own kind
of animal compassion.
"Chickens are … they're beautiful animals. If you
spend some time with chickens, you'll come to admire them. They have their
social patterns. They're really interesting," Mackey says.
"There are
gonna be people who say 'I'm not sure he's not a little wacky.' Do you get that
from people sometimes?" Rather asks.
"You know, I've heard that a good
part of my life," Mackey says, laughing. "But I found the more successful I've
become, now I'm being interviewed by 60
Minutes.