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Express Lane for August 6, 2008

A few of the stories I’m reading and wanted to share today:

John Zogby’s got a very insightful look into the political trends of retail consumers and dives behind the numbers to make sense of it all. He looks at presidential election polling numbers, the retailers the customers shop at, and how this relates to the retailers’ branding.

J.Crew’s website has had their share of mistakes and downtime lately. Church of the Customer is talking about the apology e-mail that the retailer sent out to their customers and what this means for the company.

Matt at A New Marketing presents a clean, easily digestable definition of what social media is.

.. and finally – Starbucks is offering a $2 discount on iced beverages in the afternoon when you buy a drink in the morning. I think this is a smart move that should drive repeat business throughout the day. Besides that, I’m selfish and now look forward to saving a little bit of money on my second trip to Starbucks every day.

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Sears, Lands End, and the Jersey Shore

Sears

Good article on Sears, focusing on the new Lands End shop, from today’s Asbury Park Press. Called “Changing clothes“, it focuses on some of the stores in my area (New Jersey) that have rolled out the new Lands End shop, what it means to their business, and what Sears is trying to do to turn things around.

I had previously written about Sears’ Lands End shop when they rolled out out, as one of the stores in my area appeared to be one of the first to roll it out. I have been enthusiastic about the concept. I think that the Lands End shop is one of the more exciting shopping concepts in any department store today. But I still worry that Sears is not doing enough in the rest of the store to match that experience.

They need to figure out a way to make the entire shopping experience in the store more exciting. The Lands End shop should be reflective of the store as a whole, not awkwardly sticking out from the messy racks of markdown merchandise in the department next to it. Between the Lands End concept and the new marketing campaign, I think Sears is starting to turn some heads.

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Retailers and Social Media – when are they going to learn?

Recently, I wrote about the new Sears marketing plan and slogan, “Where It Begins”. Today, a Google search for “sears + ‘where it begins’” returns an article from AdWeek first and my website second.

Good thing for Sears, I was generally positive about the new slogan and marketing campaign. Imagine if I was negative and ripped it apart.

As a retailer, do you know what your customers are really saying about your brand online?

Are people reacting favorably to your marketing strategy? To you Summer clothing line? To your latest sale prices?

Are people discouraging others from going to your store because of a bad experience? Because of a short tempered cashier they encountered? Because of the ugliness of your new dresses? Because your return policy sucks?

I can bounce across the web right now and show you a Facebook page where a guy is showing off the new polo he bought from Abercrombie & Fitch.

I can show you a forum where people are talking about the perceived lack of training the cashiers exhibit at Sears.

I can even pull up a Myspace group where employees are talking about mistreatment from management at Kohl’s.

This information is out there. It’s freely accessable. I know where to find it and I’m not alone in that.

If you, as a major retailer, are ignoring this information, you are giving away valuable information that could help you grow your brand, increase your sales, and make the changes that you need to make in order to compete better.

If you, as a major retailer, are reading this information but not interacting with your customers on your own, then you are completely missing the point. Start a corporate blog and encourage discussion, good and bad, on your own website.

Hire an evanglist. Someone who will be the e-face of your company. Someone who will interact with your customers through blogs, forums, and social networking websites. Someone who will drive people to come to your website, to your store, strenghten your brand, and build lasting relationships with your customers.

The answers to what your consumers want are all around us. You just have to look for them and let them know that you are listening.

Other industries are already doing this and succeeding. Why the major retailers in America haven’t jumped on, I don’t know.

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Sears. Where it begins.

Think of Sears.

Now think of opening a book and going on a wonderful journey through the pages.

Does it make you think of shopping at Sears?

The retailer has unveiled their new marketing campaign, featuring a book theme that:

[..] suggests that shopping at Sears is like opening a book which tells a never-ending story about possibilities for life at home. It is designed both to recall the Sears heritage and to speak to customers in a way that is relevant to their needs and lifestyles today.

(More information: from Sears’ own press release, AdWeek, and BrandWeek.)

It appears that the intention of the campaign is to invoke thoughts of the retailers’ catalog beginnings.

I saw one of the commercials tonight, for their Mother’s Day sale. I’ll say this, it did catch my eye. It reminds me of recent television campaigns by Macy’s and Target, but that’s not necessarily a bad thing. Although I don’t know how much ELO’s “Mr Blue Sky” has to do with Sears, I do love that song.

Visually, I do like this commercial. I’ll reserve judgement on the campaign on a whole until I see more of it in action. I think there is something positive with this concept and I’d like to see it work.

Can they execute this marketing package well across print, television, and interactive media while tying this in to the in-store shopping experience?

Last year I wrote about what I saw Sears doing with the Lands End shop concept (see: Sears’ Lands End Shop). At the time I said that I wasn’t sure how exciting the stores were going to be, outside of this new area. I still feel like that today. If this new marketing campaign is successful in bringing consumers back into Sears, what are they going to see? The Sears I have been in lately haven’t been terribly exciting nor inviting.

Once through those doors, are you going to want to spend your money there?

Looking at this as the first step in a turnaround for the retailer, perhaps this is just the first piece. I think Sears has a rich heritage and it is great to see them tapping in to that. If they continue to reevaluate their core competencies and merchandising assortment, maybe they can stop the bleeding that has begun. Same store sales at Sears were down in the first quarter (source), while many other retailers enjoyed hefty gains. Although their profits were up dramatically in 2006, there is only so much bottom line the retailer can slash before things get ugly.

Is 2007 Sears’ year?

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8/13/2006 Retail Notes

July sales came out and they were mixed, with a positive lean towards department stores. Second quarter results starting coming out, with very positive results from JC Penney and Kohl’s and strong results from Target. The bulk of the retail industry will be reporting their results this week. The Street has a great rundown on this week’s expected results (see: Coming Week: Attention Shoppers).

I am looking forward to seeing what the Second Quarter results look like this week. The numbers will be the tale of the tape in the battle of A&F vs. AE. Will there be anything positive in Gap’s results on Thursday? Did Limited Brands have a good quarter, July withstanding? Will Sears Holdings increase their bottom-line performance even though it appears that there sales haven’t? What is Home Depot doing to get them through the year? We’ll know everything this week.

Walking around the mall this week, I am very suprised at how well most retailers look. Everyone seems to be putting on a good face for the BTS season, plans are well underway, and now we’re all just hoping that the consumers will respond.

Denim, denim, denim.

PacSun’s got a big display of Levi’s 514 and 511 jeans for men. Hadn’t seen this before, so I’m assuming it is a fairly new relationship – but I think it’s a win. PacSun’s got a great brand and they’re riding the wave of the current trend with one of the harder to find styles of Levis. Credit goes to PacSun for getting it out there while Sears and JC Penney still have the 514 jean buried in the back of the department. Although it is a risky merchandising move, I think there will be a pay off for retailers like PacSun who are being so fashion-forward with this particular trend.

Came across a good story by Reuter’s today about denim marketing and BTS sales for retailers (see: Retailers step up marketing to hawk denim).

The Unlawyer talks about the effect this week’s terrorism threat has on duty-free sales and the retail enviroment in airports (see: No Liquids, No Duty-Free Sales).

Very detailed article in this month’s Apparel Magazine about Boscov’s Department store (see: Boscov’s: In a League of Its Own). This Pennsylvania-based, regional department store is making strides to better compete against the national chains in an increasingly consolidated marketplace.

And finally, kudos to The Writing on the Wal for their coverage of the Wal-Mart wage cap announcement and the effect on & reaction from Wal-Mart employees. I talked about the initial announcement here, but as I pointed out here and here, The Writing on the Wal was one of the sites I was going to for coverage.

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Planetfeedback

A month ago I wrote about five ways you, as a customer, can improve customer service. I talked about the value of customer feedback in improving customer service. One of the points I touched on was getting active online – be it through blogs, message boards, or other websites that share information about retailers or companies.

Recently, I came across PlanetFeedback.com, which is either “The Voice Of One. The Power of Many.” or “Helping Consumers Express Their Voice, Helping Companies Prime Their Ear”, depending on which tagline you read. The site is a way for people to leave and read feedback about different businesses. I wonder how much the actual companies involved read the site, but it contains a wealth of customer experience stories – both good and bad – that the companies could learn from.

To tie it into the retail industry, here are some quick links to some retailers and the feedback associated with them: Wal-Mart, Target, Kohl’s, Macy’s, Abercrombie, Sears and JC Penney.

This site has so much information about some things that are going on at the store level. I wonder anyone at corporate of any of these companies has read this site to learn about the customer experience – good and bad.

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6/4/06 Retail Notes

First in maybe a weekly column? Hopefully.

Some quick retail notes for this lazy Sunday:

I hear that the new Abrecrombie & Fitch Back To School Preview floorset is this week. The seasonal transition at A&F is very impressive and seamless. Sales will be strong but it will be tough for A&F to compete with themselves and the high comps they had with BTS 2005 (June, July & August had comps of 38%, 22% & 24% in 2005). Look for solid increases in the gross margin with decreases in markdowns and sales for this upcoming season. This will be another great season for A&F.

Two quickies from the Loss Prevention blog: Cop kills man in grocery store shoplifting and Kroger manager jumps on hood of shoplifter’s car. I have nothing to say about the unfortunate shooting, but I’m sure Kroger’s corporate management doesn’t look fondly on employees jumping on cars to apprehend shoplifters. There has to be more to the story than that.

Last week, the Chicago Sun-Times ran an article showing where some of the former Sears executives have gone: Life After Sears.

And finally, a story from Starbucks showing how a good idea from worker, combined with the support of co-workers, the corporate office and customers can lead to a very positive outcome: Starbucks worker brews plan to get java to GIs in Afghanistan. A Starbucks employee from Maine organized a campaign where her co-workers donated their weekly bag of coffee they recieve as a benefit and, with corporate approval, solicited donations from customers. The result? 106 pounds of coffee sent to troops in Afghanistan. [via Starbucks Gossip]

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Sears + K-Mart, Year One

Article from the Chicago Sun Times recapping the first year of the Sears/K-Mart merger in an article called “Furniture, new luxury items in Sears’ plans“.

Interesting points:

A few certainties emerged at the first shareholders’ meeting of the newly combined Sears Holdings Corp.: Lampert sees great opportunity in home fashions without Martha Stewart, even though Kmart’s existing contract with Stewart gives the parent company the right to sell her goods in Sears Roebuck stores.

Stewart’s contract exacts too high a price in guaranteed minimum royalty fees from Kmart, and the two sides have been unable to work out a long-term agreement, Lampert said. Kmart’s contract with Stewart ends in four years.

It doesn’t make sense to sell Martha Stewart goods in Sears stores for just a few years, Lampert said. Another sign of the fraying relationship came last week when Stewart agreed to provide higher-end home goods exclusively to Macy’s department stores.

Instead, Sears will try again to sell furniture — this time, ready-to-assemble furniture; will expand to 100 stores its test of high-profile Lands’ End “shops,” featuring dedicated salespeople and online ordering and hotline telephone access to Lands’ End; and introduce a new, private label line of luxury bed and bath products called Everyday Luxe.

Martha Stewart no longer in K-Mart? Speaking for current and former K-Mart execs, I don’t think that they would have ever thought that they would see the day. I’ve heard stories about the extravagant measures that K-Mart has gone through to keep all eyes focused on that brand. It was their cash cow, as one former exec told me. The people I know that still shop at K-Mart seem to only shop there because of the Martha Stewart line. If K-Mart loses this, I don’t know how they’d recover. They need something big — huge — and furniture is not going to cut it.

However, Martha branching out to Macy’s is a win-win situation for both sides. Martha is diverisifying her retail presence at a time when her brand is red hot and Macy’s gets a red hot brand to add to their home line. Great move by Martha, smart move by Macy’s, and whoever is making the moves at Sears/K-Mart should be fired.

Store managers are asked to act as cheerleaders by passing the rules on to their subordinates, and to pledge their allegiance to the new culture. If they don’t, they must leave. The result: 35 percent of Sears’ 870 store managers have departed since the merger, and 25 percent of Kmart’s 1,400 have left.

What an incredible rate of turnover. Who are they filling these positions with? New hires? I don’t know how many people from other retailers are really ready to make the jump to Sears at this time – I don’t know of any. Internal promotions? With the amount of holes to be filled, have they really promoted the best people from inside? I have to imagine that there were some rushed promotions of people who may not be ready just yet. But of course this is speculation. I’d just relaly like to know how they have filled over 650 store executive positions. On top of that, what’s the rate of turnover at the ASM/Lead level? I’m sure that is just as high, if not higher.

From the grumbles that I read on employee message boards, it seems that most days there is no captain at the head of the ship and the employees are trying to do the best they can with little or no leadership.

Both Kmart and Sears are getting upgraded information technology systems in stores, and concentrating on the basics such as cleaning the bathrooms, stocking the shelves and sourcing merchandise that customers want, Lewis said.

Isn’t this what is taught in Retail 101? Amazing that a multi-billion dollar company can announce a turnaround plan revolving around “stocking the shelves with merchandise that customers want.”

My dad went to Sears the other day and had an unpleasant customer service experience. I won’t get into the long story now but at one point he told me that he showed his Sears card to the cashier, showing her that he’s been a Sears card holder since 1978. “Doesn’t that mean anything?” he asked me. I told my dad that this weekend he went to Sears – but his loyalty was the Sears, Roebuck & Co. “That company no longer exists.”

You can read the full article here.

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Retail Notes

A few retail notes/links for today:

The Business Journal Of Milwaukee has a great article about new strategies by JC Penney, called Penney’s Targets Nemesis Kohl’s. First off, how cool is it that Kohl’s is a nemesis? It sounds so bad ass. However, the article does touch on a lot of things that I think Kohl’s as been doing very well over the past two years. JC Penny, unlike Sears, is still in a position to recapture it’s market share and turnaround a stale business. Retailwire.com [login required] has a good discussion on this article.

Also out of Milwaukee, The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel has a very interesting article, entitled ‘Finding Its Niche‘, about the Lands’ End shop at Sears, which I talked about a few weeks ago. They talk about how Sears is trying to win back customers and attract new ones through the increased brand awareness of Lands End. Some of the comments in the article echo statements that I previously made, but the photos in the article are interesting because they show how nice the area looks. However, I am suprised that they would use a beautiful photo that shows three hunters walking down the aisle, as I’m sure that’s not the target demographic for this new undertaking. Also worth noting, that my local Sears is only one of about 30 stores in the nation to get this new shop concept.

To complete the Milwaukee trifecta, I’ll be in that town on April 26 to attend the Kohl’s shareholder meeting. It should be very fun.

And lastly, the Associated Press has a quick rundown of the comp store sales for Department Stores in the month of March and they have a more detailed rundown of comp store sales for the entire retail sector (minus Kohl’s, for some reason). For those not in the industry, the “comp number” is the percentage increase in sales in a store for this year compared to last year. So in this case, it is the change in the month of March vs. March of 2005. Good to see Kohl’s near the top of the list.

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Sears’ Lands End Shop

I went to the nearby Sears the other day – I know, don’t tell my bosses – and they were just putting the finishing touches on the new Lands’ End concept shop. They pulled together all of th Lands’ End apparrel in the Mens and Misses Departments with new fixtures, graphics, visual elements, and updated merchandising. Beautiful graphics anchored by light wood trimed fixtures with deep blue walls made this area really stand out. The two apparel areas are seperated by the new style of self-service (”open sell”) shoe bunkers that Sears has recently put in (following the lead of Kohls and Target, among others). As a visual merchandiser, I was really impressed – as a consumer, I was really drawn to the area and wanted to shop.

But, looking at Sears from an industry standpoint, I don’t know how well this concept is going to work for them. The downfall is this launch lies within the brand, on two different levels. One, how strong is the Lands’ End brand with consumers today? And two, how does Sears look to brand itself to consumers across the board? There seems to be some disarray within how Sears is being marketed (no clearer sign of this than the recent decision to drop the ‘Essentials’ line of stores and convert them all to ‘Sears Grand’) and what their leverage is with consumers.

When I walked into the area, I felt as if I was in J.Crew. Sleek tables with beautiful presentations of pants and shirts, all wonderfully brought together with accessories and shoes. They are really pushing the entire collection and it looks great. However, walk outside of that area and you are reminded of exactly what Sears has become – a dumping ground for a mish mosh of unattractive clothing and horrible merchandising. Walking away from the Lands’ End shop and there are six-ways of clearance merchandise dragged out to the middle of the aisle. Tables look horrible, racks are all over the place, and the merchandise is just not presented well.

Which is why the true test of this Lands’ End rollout will be in how well the stores are able to keep this up. I was in the store the day that the Corporate team was there, setting this up fresh for the first time. Of course it is going to look great – but will it still look great in two weeks, two months, or two seasons from now? The new visual elements look great but Sears is not a visual company – last I knew, they had no ‘visual merchandiser’ positions in their stores anymore. To my knowledge, it is all up to the departments to do their own. Will they be able to keep up with this? Judging by the way the rest of their stores look, I’m not sure.

At the end of the day, I just don’t think Lands’ End is as strong as it once was and that they are sacraficing floor space from other brands and merchandise assortment that they could be offering. There are a lot of eggs in this basket and for Sears shareholders, I hope it is a gamble that pays off.

I guess there is another note to make with this entry, and that is that I approached this whole entry strictly talking about the apparel end of Sears. I know Sears is not an apparrel retailer – their big money is made in hardware and hardlines. So, with that said, this entry is strictly referencing the apparrel side of Sears.

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