OUR PRESS
CAROL'S TWEETS
SEARCH OUR SITE

by tags:

or enter your search term below:

 

Receive our blog updates in your inbox!

It's super easy - just enter your email address in this box:

Email Address:

Subscribe to Our Updates

 

Receive our blog updates in your inbox!

It's as easy as entering your email address below:

Email Address:

Entries in best buy (4)

Wednesday
Jan042012

New Year Brings Decision Time

Thomas Lee of the Minneapolis Star Tribune asked Carol Spieckerman to weigh in on where retail will go in the New Year . . .

In 2012, less will be more, according to retail expert Carol Spieckerman.

Struggling chains like Sears, Christopher & Banks, and Gap will continue to shut down stores to save cash. At the same time, retailers like Wal-Mart, Target and Best Buy will experiment with smaller formats instead of building big-box stores, said Spieckerman, president of newmarketbuilders, a retail management-consulting firm based in Bentonville, Ark., home of Wal-Mart.

As consumers continue to flock to online shopping, traditional brick-and-mortar retailers have been seeking less-costly areas of growth instead of spending gobs of money on 125,000-plus-square-foot boxes.

Best Buy, based in Richfield, is rolling out Best Buy Mobile stores, while Minneapolis-based Target experiments with CityTarget in dense cities like San Francisco, Seattle, and Los Angeles. The smaller stores, which focus more on everyday essentials, are about half the size of normal Targets.

Still if shoppers also subscribe to the less-is-more philosophy, the economy could continue its anemic growth. Consumer spending accounts for about 70 percent of economic activity.

Read the full article.

Copyright © 2011 Star Tribune

Tuesday
Dec202011

Earth-shattering Events that Escaped (Almost) Everyone in 2011

In Carol's latest article for the International Licensing Merchandiser's Association (LIMA), Carol calls out a couple of retail developments that barely made a ripple and gives her take on how they will transform retail in 2012 and beyond.

Global Power Launches State-of-the-art Satellite

Grabble, Kosmix, OneRiot…What may sound like adult parlor games are actually a series of acquisitions made by Walmart under its newly-formed @WalmartLabs division. Headed up by the braniacs that came as a part of the bargain when Walmart acquired Kosmix back in April, @WalmartLabs has already more than made up for any of the virtual time that Walmart lost futzing with its physical assets during the much-maligned Project Impact era. A Facebook-mining gifting app and all manner of personalized shopping and couponing capabilities have already been conjured up.

Make no mistake though, the steady stream of incubation and innovation coming out of this lab isn’t just transforming Walmart’s “social web” trajectory, but raising the social, mobile, and big data bar for everyone in the retail orbit.

Read the rest of the article

Wednesday
Sep212011

Social Gaming Building a Bridge to Female Shoppers at Best Buy? 

Carol Spieckerman comments on Best Buy's latest moves in social gaming.

Retailers Angle for Presence in Social Media's Virtual Worlds (pdf)

 BY THOMAS LEE - STAR TRIBUNE (MINNEAPOLIS), Wednesday, September 21, 2011

©2011 Minneapolis Star Tribune

Read article at startribune.com

 

Tuesday
Jul192011

Retail Wire's BrainTrust Query: The Squeeze on Dollar Stores

Retail Wire published the following excerpt of our article, Retailers' Inflation Improvisation Part I: Perilous Parity, on July 12, 2011.  The article generated a terrific discussion among Retail Wire’s BrainTrust panelists and we’ve included those comments at the end of this post.


Both Walmart and Dollar General have recently made it clear that high-low price shenanigans are off the table and that building trust through price consistency is their highest value. In a presentation at last month's William Blair Growth Conference, Rick Dreiling, Dollar General's CEO, claimed that "price integrity is building loyalty" with its customers and that those customers "truly trust" the retailer's everyday low price positioning.

But dollar stores are facing new competition from big-boxers -- from Best Buy to J.C. Penney, Staples, Target and Walmart -- who are determined to downsize their way in by shoving small formats into previously unexplored urban and rural markets, many of which are already populated with the original small format specialists. At the same time, rising fuel and raw material prices are pressuring margins. Combining the inflationary dynamics with the encroachment by the big boxes, and dollar stores' inherently narrow wiggle-room on both price and physical space, dollar stores' sovereign reign over some urban and rural fiefdoms may be at risk. Yet they aren't betraying much vulnerability.

Dollar General's Mr. Dreiling, for instance, recently spoke of the company's "radical shift" to "proudly" selling national brands alongside private brands. However, the more Dollar General focuses on procuring the same national brands that Walmart and others carry, the more they will have to obsess over comparative value, especially since local price adjustments are standard operating procedure for both Target and Walmart.

Family Dollar's CEO, Howard Levine, noted in the company's Q3 2011 earnings call that "so far, our market and price checks are confirming that our competitiveness remains strong" and went on to say that Family Dollar is looking at the competitiveness of various markets and taking advantage of "higher pricing opportunities" in those that aren't as competitive. He added that Family Dollar is continuing "to learn more about these opportunities, particularly as we open up more and more stores in urban markets where that's a lever that we can pull to help the margin." In other words, Family Dollar is banking on localized pricing winning the day, even as others who have arguably had more practice at it head their way.

Dollar stores have a very defensible position as they are thousands of stores ahead of the interlopers, but the nagging exceptions (markets that the big boxers have taken a shine to) have the potential to upset their apple carts as everyone attempts to adjust pricing to increasingly complex local market dynamics. Throw in Walmart's Site-to-Store and Pick Up Today services, which have the potential to transform every Walmart Express location into an endless aisle delivery mechanism (the brands and products in the store may eventually represent only a fraction of the actual item transactions that occur in the store), and you have a multi-layered, localized moving target. So how will dollar stores be able to carry out a balancing act and live up to price consistency claims as others encroach and as the continuous upward crawl of commodity prices adds even more complexity to the picture?


BrainTrust Panel Comments


Three quick observations.

1.  The only big box that can mount a credible threat to dollar stores with small formats is Walmart. The other retailers mentioned might do OK with small formats, but it won't be Dollar General's sales they will be taking, it will be other local merchants.

2.  Dollar General is doing precisely the right thing by bringing in national brands that Walmart will be offering. They can't afford to let Walmart have the additional advantage of being the only low-price, local store that is offering "the good stuff."

3.  In general, dollar store format operating costs remain below those of big box retailers. And the purchasing power of 8,000 stores is leverageable no matter how small those stores are. Even Walmart will have to go a long way to beat the typical dollar store net cost structure.

Small format Walmarts are indeed a threat to dollar stores in general and to lesser chains and independents in particular. DG and FD can stand up to the challenge -- but not without taking some hits along the way.

Ben Ball, Senior Vice President, Dechert-Hampe


Every retailer is always subjected to being vulnerable when some new, changing or more powerful force enters their environment. In the case of today's dollar stores, their vulnerability lies in big box stores with reliable supply chains and strong balance sheets duplicating the dollar stores format in urban and rural areas.

Gene Hoffman, President/CEO, Corporate Strategies International


Read more comments from BrainTrust panelists