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Retailers Are Buying Less To Increase Profits

July 23, 2009

Saks CEO Stephen Sadove said Monday that the company is aiming to order at least 20% less from its vendors in 2009 and forecasts a subsequent jump in gross margin, according to a report by Bloomberg.

The cuts may curb what Sadove has described as the “enormous excess” that existed last year in the luxury retail category.

“Across the board you are going to find less of the sizes, less of the availability in almost all of the categories,” Sadove told Bloomberg. “You are probably going to see less aggressive markdowns than you saw last year.”

Neiman Marcus cut its orders 25% in the quarter ended May 2 and said on June 10 that it is being “conservative” for the rest of the year. Both Neiman and Saks have said they are weeding out underperforming labels.

Nordstrom and Cincinnati-based Macy’s have said they are buying less, too.

For further information, visit: http://www.chainstoreage.com/story.aspx?id=107905&menuid=437


Some Big Chains Reconstruct to Accomodate Consumers During This Recession

June 22, 2009

Shopping as we know it is on the brink of major change.

Hammered by the recession, some of the nation’s biggest retailers are seizing the moment to reinvent their business strategies. And the impact will mean both sweeping changes in the merchandise on their shelves and subtler alterations, like how many pantyhose to keep in stock.

High-end stores like Neiman Marcus, Saks and Coach will offer more midpriced merchandise. Many chains, including Wal-Mart, will carry less inventory and fewer brands. The likes of Sears and J. C. Penney will put self-service computers in stores so customers can browse collections or buy out-of-stock items. And retailers of all stripes will offer more exclusive merchandise and more attentive customer service.

One of the biggest changes consumers are likely to see is greater personalization and regionalization of merchandise.

An initiative known as “My Macy’s” requires the retailer’s merchandisers and other planners to go into stores each week to learn from the sales staff — who keep logs at the cash registers — what shoppers are requesting, snapping up or complaining about.

For instance, when strapless and bare-shouldered dresses were selling well everywhere except Salt Lake City and Pittsburgh, Macy’s employees in those stores knew the problem was that their customers wanted more modest dresses. So they passed that information on to the merchandisers. Out went the strapless dresses; in came dresses with cap sleeves. And sales went from lackluster to robust.

Under the new system it will not be unusual for a local Macy’s to stock the merchandise customers request, be it wide-width shoes or Sean John suits, and for those offerings to be different from the ones in a Macy’s store 100 miles away.

“I think what Macy’s is embarking on is perhaps the largest transformation in our company in a couple of decades,” said Terry J. Lundgren, president and chief executive.

The Macy’s change is just one example of a wide range of initiatives retailers are pursuing as they struggle to cope with an economy where sales are lower than they were just a few years ago.

At high-end stores, the era of ever-escalating prices on luxury goods appears to be over. In the future, consumers will still be able to buy chic brand names, but at a wider range of prices.

“Our customer loves our brands,” said Stephen I. Sadove, chairman and chief executive of Saks. “They don’t want to trade down to lower brands. But they want more of a range in price within the brands that they love.”

And that is what retailers intend to give them. Burton M. Tansky, president and chief executive of Neiman Marcus Group, told investors on a conference call last week that “we’re working with the designers to try and ease a portion of their collections into a new price range.”

Prices will also be lower at some “affordable luxury” chains, like Coach, which is increasing the proportion of handbags it sells for less than $300. About 50 percent of the company’s handbags will cost $200 to $300, in contrast to about 30 percent of handbags last year.

Another change is that consumers will have fewer brands from which to choose. Wal-Mart, Target, Home Depot, and PetSmart are just a few of the chains winnowing their brands. As Home Depot’s executive vice president for merchandising, Craig Menear, put it: consumers are “time-starved” and “looking for simplification in the entire shopping experience.”

That may delight minimalists, because it will be easier to find items on the shelves. But it also limits choice.

Another potential drawback for consumers is that stores may run out of stock more quickly than in the past because, as Mr. Lundgren of Macy’s explained, “retailers learned that you can’t get out of the merchandise that you ordered months before.”

“Instead,” he said, “you’re more likely to see retailers ordering fewer of each individual size and taking that risk that they’ll sell out and not capture every sale, rather than the risk of having too much inventory left over to mark down.”

Another trend is on the horizon: seasonal transitions for apparel will probably have shorter lead times. With strapped consumers buying only what they need when they need it, it has occurred to retailers that selling swimsuits to New Yorkers in early March is not necessarily a winning strategy. And so chains are beginning to work with suppliers to shorten the time between ordering and delivering merchandise.

Consumers will also see even more of the exclusive collaborations between retailers and prominent designers that are so prevalent today. That will help distinguish stores as well as avoid price wars because the same items will not be sold at multiple chains.

Yet another change will be the obliteration of any remaining divide between online and in-store shopping.

In Sears stores, “appliance research centers” with computers are enabling customers to compare local competitors’ prices. (If Sears does not offer the best price, it will match the lowest offer and hand over 10 percent of the difference.) Four J. C. Penney stores in Dallas are testing “FindMore” machines the size of arcade games, letting customers see every item J. C. Penney sells and find out if the item they want is in the store or online.

Shopping by cellphone will also become widespread.

“Everything we are developing is with a mind-set that it’s going to be running on a handset,” said J. C. Penney’s chief information officer, Thomas M. Nealon.

Despite all the new technology, consumers will be getting more attention from sales staff. During the last few years, retailers did not have to work hard to separate consumers from their dollars.

But those days are over. More middle-market chains are striving for Nordstrom-quality service to win customers. Even Home Depot has adopted its “most extensive customer service training ever,” its chairman and chief executive, Frank Blake, told investors and retailing analysts last week.

Of course, luxury chains have always featured a high level of attentiveness. But the chains say that in this economy, customers have heightened expectations. Saks, for one, has invested tens of millions of dollars in the last year on software that provides its sales staff easy access to information about client purchases and preferences, so that a returning customer might be greeted by a sales representative who recalls the shopper’s suit size and penchant for Christian Louboutin heels.

Economists and analysts forecast that it will take up to 10 years to return to 2007 levels of consumer spending — which makes now a good time for retailers to re-imagine the future. Paul A. Laudicina, chairman and managing officer of A. T. Kearney, the management consulting firm, noted that major consumer innovations like Neoprene and Teflon came out of the Depression.

Mr. Lundgren pointed out that if consumers were still throwing money around, stores might not want to alter strategies that were still working.

But with today’s recession, he said, “now is the time to aggressively rock the boat.”

For further information, visit: http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/20/business/20retail.html


Chapter 11 Saving Companies

June 15, 2009

The numbers from U.S. retail industry in the first two weeks of June tell many different stories depending on the bearish or bullish theory that you’re currently trying to support. New store opening figures have outnumbered store closing additions so far, but just as one publicly traded retailer finds 75 million ways to stay in business, rumors swirled around another major apparel brand that is expected to file Chapter 11 papers any day now. When you add them all together, the retail industry numbers so far this month don’t exactly total up to equal “recovery.”

Talbots feels pretty certain that most of its problems have been solved now that it has finally sold its J. Jill brand for $75 million. Golden Gate Capital is the purchaser of 204 J. Jill stores, which reportedly, they will continue to operate. Talbots has actively been trying to unload the J. Jill chain since November, 2008. Talbots’ leaders seem openly and publicly relieved to get those specialty stores off the balance sheet.

To get back on firm financial footing, Talbots will add the remaining 75 J. Jill locations that nobody wants, along with 16 underperforming Talbots operations to the 2009 retail store closings tally. Company leaders expressed confidence that these dramatic moves, coupled with a 20% reduction in its corporate staff, will allow it to focus on bringing Talbots back to profitability. If that means that they are now giving their focus to stocking their stores with relevant clothing that women actually want to wear, then they will definitely be traveling down recovery road.

Golden Gate Capital, by the way, has gobbled up a diverse collection of retail companies in the past five years. It is now the money and the management behind Express, Spiegel, Newport News, and Herbalife, among others. Since many of these companies were in trouble at the time of acquisition, one has to wonder what the Golden Gate leaders know that the original retail leaders couldn’t figure out. Whatever they know, it seems to work equally well for apparel stores, direct mail catalogs, nutritional supplement MLMs and high-tech businesses alike.

Maybe some members of the U.S. retail industry will start looking for some fresh leadership faces on the pages of Golden Gate’s website. Perhaps the current cadre of retail CEOs has been recycled between the major retail organizations quite enough.

Closings of a different kind are being utilized by some retailers who are still struggling to survive.

Neiman Marcus announced that it will be closing its doors an hour earlier at some of its stores this summer. This is another way the luxury chain is paring back on expenses without compromising the quality of its high class experience. Will it be enough, though? Since same store sales have been off by more than 20% for the past six months, maybe the store hours should be shortened by 20% as well.

Perhaps the Neiman Marcus team could take Sundays off and meet the Chick-Fil-A team for Sunday brunch. There would be no strategic retail value to these meetings, but the Neiman employees might find benefit in a break from the current pressures of luxury retailing, and hanging out with people who have plenty of experience with taking a day of rest every week.

The new Neiman store hours really are not that radical. Other major retailers like Macy’s and Kroger have cut hours at some of their stores this year. Dick’s Sporting Goods has trimmed 30 minutes off both ends of its operating schedule, and the Best Buy team members get an extra hour to party on Fridays and Saturdays because those stores are turning off the lights earlier too. Entire malls are cutting back on hours in order to cut back on expenses.

When was it exactly that Americans found a need to shop for 12 hours a day, seven days a week anyway? Adjusted store hours may be one more way that the retail recession demonstrates to the U.S. retail industry that less can be more.

The topic of closings wouldn’t be complete without mentioning a Houston restaurant named Saute’. Nearly 500 of its fans were notified about the restaurant’s demise through an official announcement made on Twitter. Reportedly, another Houston-area restaurant, Sireneuse Euro Bistro, had blazed that tweet trail in April, announcing its own shutdown via Twitter as well.

Both of these restaurants certainly gave a meaty answer to the foundational Twitter question, “What are you doing?” This may make a good case for retailers with Twitter accounts to learn how to creatively leverage this social media outlet before it’s too late. Finding successful Twitter strategies now might help keep some retail operations off the store closing list later. They’ll never know if they never tweet.

The biggest Chapter 11 story last week was found in the rumors swirling around Eddie Bauer, with many experts and media sources predicting that a filing from the company is imminent. The Chapter 11 filing may never happen, though, if the Wall Street Journal is correct in its speculation that the company or part of its assets might be sold. One of the possible purchasers identified is Gordon Brothers Group, the same company that liquidated both Sharper Image and Linens ‘n Things. That doesn’t really bode well for the future of Eddie Bauer as an ongoing member of the U.S. retail industry. Considering the Gordon Brothers option, claiming a spot on the retail Chapter 11 roster doesn’t seem like such a bad fate for Eddie.

The retail CEO quotable quote of the week belonged to Home Depot’s Frank Blake. When speaking on an investor teleconference about the home improvement company’s performance so far this year he said, “Getting to ‘less bad’ is not the same as getting to recovery.”

Well said, Mr. Blake! That pretty much sums up the state of affairs for most of the U.S. retail industry so far in June. For further information, visit: http://retailindustry.about.com/od/retailindustryweeklynews/a/retailweeklynewsjune1-132009.htm