Recently on Twitter:

9/25/2006 Retail Notes

Yes, it’s been a few weeks since I have had the opportunity to update the retail notes column, but it’s back! Only change is that due to a different schedule that I’m not on, it will be coming out Monday’s instead of Sundays, as I had been publishing it.

A couple of things for this week that have caught my eye:

At least one analyst is happy with Gap’s winter offerings for all three of it’s brands. As we enter into the final week of September and anticipate same store sales being released next week, I’m not sure what to expect from Gap. I’ve been in a lot of malls lately and foot traffic seems to be up to the adult Gap store, but are people buying? I was in two Old Navy’s on Friday and both of them had moderately high clearance levels with high foot traffic, buoyed by the “50% Off All Clearance” sale that had quietely gone up in this area on Friday afternoon. Great for the consumer, not great for the bottom line. Judging by the amount of clearance that was sitting around, it didn’t appear that consumers in this area reacted very positively to Old Navy’s fall offerings.

Estee Lauder’s Beautybank division has signed an agreement with Coach to produce a new, exclusive fragrance for the handbag maker. Beautybank currently produces four exclusive cosmetic lines for Kohl’s and this is the first non-Kohl’s deal that they’ve announced. It is also the first major move they’ve announced since Julie Howard took over as SVP Brand Development & Global Marketing. She had previously been with Estee Lauder’s Clinique division.

Electronics is a very cut-throat, bottom line driven market. Just as quickly as retailers have scaled back their electronic offerings, in face of competition from retailers like Best Buy and Circuit City, it appears that more than a few non-traditional electronic retailers are ramping up their flat screen plasama and lcd television offerings (see: Unlikely retailers selling big screen TVs).

And finally, a really great article hit the wire this past week about the makeover of Saks (see: Upscale Makeover). After years of unsuccessfully chasing the younger crowd, Saks is reevaluating their business plan and going back to their core, “well-heeled” consumer. The article has a lot of detail over the business moves that got them to where they are right now and what they are doing to get back on top.

Did you find this post helpful? Then, you should also view these posts:

No Comments

There are no comments on this post yet, but we are very interested in your thoughts, so please share them below.

Sorry, we are no longer accepting comments on this post. Please join the conversation through one of our more recent posts.