The Woolworths Museum

Launch of the Winfield own brand

There was an emerging trend in the Sixties for retailers to develop own brands, rather than simply selling exclusive merchandise in plain wrappers. British Home Stores had Prova, Tesco had Delamare, Littlewoods had Keynote, many will remember St Michael from Marks and Spencer, fewer St Margaret, their women's brand.

Woolworth exclusive products from the early 1960s, immediately before the launch of a corporate own-brand programme.Kingsmere was Woolworth's first attempt at an own brand. The name appeared on many exclusive grocery products in the late 1950s and early 1960s.

Woolworth already had a number of exclusive brands, each for different types of product and from a single supplier.  For example paint from Donald Macpherson and Company was branded "Household" and records from Oriole were branded Embassy.

Then in the 1959 they launched an own-brand for Groceries called Kingsmere.  The canned items were made by the Goldenhanger Fruit Farms Ltd. but other suppliers including Weston's Biscuits also manufactured Kingsmere branded products.  Company folklore said that Kingsmere was the name of Frank Woolworth's British Bulldog, but it is more likely to have been the suggestion of some market research boffins, particularly as archive documents reveal that the firm also registered the trade name Queensmere.

Interestingly, despite repeated requests, Pasolds were not allowed to mark their clothing items "Ladybird". Woolworth executives repeatedly insisted on leaving the garments unbranded, though their colleagues in the new-born out-of-town off-shoot Woolco disagreed and signed a franchise arrangement to sell Ladybird Clothes in their Department Stores.

 

winfield - "it's the mark of quality" : the original own-brand logo of F. W. Woolworth in the UK, which was launched in 1963 and abandonned in 1984.  Winfield was the founder, Frank Woolworth's middle name.


In 1963 the Board launched a major re-branding exercise to move all exclusive merchandise to a new label called 'Winfield'.  The brand guidelines were clear that every item had to be better quality than the supplier-branded equivalent.

 

A Winfield laundry bag from F. W. Woolworth & Co. Ltd. in 1963

 

 

Every item was backed by a complete money-back satisfaction guarantee, and all packaging was designed by the Company's own experts, to ensure a consistent visual presentation across the range.

Some of the early items in the Winfield range were of superb quality. The packaging and labelling were ahead of their time.  But marketing a brand which spanned drain cleaner and perfume, drinking straws and ant killer, bras and brass cleaner proved difficult.

Despite a heavy advertising spend, the Winfield brand was never considered to be as good quality as the branded equivalents.  Customers considered it acceptable for household goods and paper products but never really for fashion or for gifts.  Despite this the company persisted with Winfield branding until 1983.

 

Some of the wide range of Winfield products when the brand was launched by F.W. Woolworth in 1963.