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IS A RETAIL STRATEGY?

The term strategy is frequently used in retailing. For example, retailers talk
about their merchandise strategy, promotion strategy, location strategy, or
private brand strategy. The term is used so commonly that it appears that all
retailing decisions are strategic decisions, but retail strategy isn’t just another
expression for retail management.

Definition of Retail Market Strategy


A retail strategy is a statement identifying (1) the retailer’s target market, (2)
the format the retailer plans to use to satisfy the target market’s needs, and
(3) the bases upon which the retailer plans to build a sustainable competitive
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advantage. The target market is the market segment(s) toward which the
retailer plans to focus its resources and retail mix. A retail format describes
the nature of the re-tailer’s operations—that is, its retail mix (type of
merchandise and services offered, pricing policy, advertising and promotion
program, approach to store design and visual merchandising, typical
locations, and customer services)—that is designed to satisfy the needs of its
target market. A sustainable competitive advantage is an advantage over
the competition that is not easily copied and thus can be main-tained over a
long period of time. The following are a few examples of retail strategies.
• Steve & Barry’s. Steven Shore and Barry Prevor opened their first store
near Philadelphia’s University of Pennsylvania in 1985. Initially, the chain
sold university-logoed sportswear at low prices. Its 200 stores now have
expanded to offering humorous t-shirts and basic clothing for men,
women, and children. Nearly all of its merchandise is priced at less than
$15, but the quality is surprisingly high. The Starbury brand of shoes
(licensed from NBA player Stephon Marbury) appear on NBA courts, worn
by professional basketball players. The key to its success is gaining
aggressive incentives from mall owners, applying creative approaches to
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working with vendors, and relying on virtually no advertising.
• Chico’s. The chain’s 600 specialty stores sell fashionable apparel designed
for women between 35 and 55 years of age. The company sells only its own
private-label brands and is verticly integrated, handling everything from
sourcing to designing to supervising merchandise, manufacturing, and
delivery. Chico’s does not use a cookie-cutter approach to its stores, so its
merchandise assortment is adjusted to fit local tastes. The retailer stocks
three collections. The Traveler’s collection is its core assortment, whereas the
other two collections are available in limited quantities and adapted from the
latest trends. Chico’s 5 million loyalty club members get a 5 percent discount,
notice of store sales, free shipping, catalog discounts, and other perks, and
they constitute 78 percent of Chico’s sales. These shoppers spend more too—
$110 per visit, compared with $70 for nonmembers. Chico’s delivers high-
quality customer service and devotes considerable time and effort to training
its sales associates to work hard to establish personal relationships with each
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of its customers.
• Curves. With more than 10,000 franchises in all 50 states and more than
30 countries, Curves has become the world’s top fitness center in terms of number
of clubs. One in every four fitness clubs in the United States is a Curves. Whereas
other clubs go after the prized 18- to 34-year-old demographic segment, Curves’s
customers are aging baby boomers, typically living in small towns. This retailer’s
fitness centers don’t have treadmills, saunas, locker rooms, mirrors, aerobics
classes, or free weights. Members work out on eight to twelve hydraulic resistance
machines, stopping between stations to walk or jog in place. The clubs’ standard
routine finishes in 30 minutes and is designe
to burn 500 calories. Club members
usually pay $29 a month, far less
than they would in conventional
fitness clubs. Rather than attracting
customers from other clubs, Curves
generates customers who haven’t
considered joining a fitness club
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before.
TARGET MARKET AND RETAIL FORMAT
The retailing concept is a management orientation that focuses a retailer on de-
termining the needs of its target market and satisfying those needs more effec-
tively and efficiently than its competitors do. The selection of a target market
concentrates the retailer on a group of consumers whose needs it will attempt to
satisfy, and the selection of a retail format outlines the retail mix to be used to
sat-isfy the needs of those customers. Successful retailers satisfy the needs of
custom-ers in their target segment better than their competition does.
A retail market is a group of consumers with similar needs (a market seg-
ment) that a group of retailers can service using a similar retail format to
satisfy them.8 Exhibit 5–1 illustrates a set of retail markets for women’s clothing and
lists various retail formats in the left-hand column. Each format offers a differ-ent retail
mix to its customers. Market segments are listed in the exhibit’s top row. As mentioned
in Chapter 4, these segments could be defined in terms of the customers’ geographic
location, demographics, lifestyle, buying situation, or benefits sought. In this exhibit, we
divide the market into three fashion-related segments: conservative, or consumers who
place little importance on fashion; traditional, who want classic styles; and fashion-
forward, or those who want the latest fashions.
136

BUILDING A SUSTAINABLE COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE


The final element in a retail strategy is the retailer’s approach to building a sus-
tainable competitive advantage. Any business activity that a retailer engages in
can be the basis for a competitive advantage, but some advantages are
sustainable over a long period of time, whereas others can be duplicated by
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competitors almost im-mediately. For example, it would be hard for Seattle’s
Best Coffee to establish a long-term advantage over Starbucks by simply offering
the same coffee specialties at lower prices. If Seattle’s Best’s lower prices were
successful in attracting custom-ers, Starbucks would know what Seattle’s Best
had done and quickly match the price reduction. Similarly, it’s hard for retailers to
develop a long-term advantage by offering broader or deeper merchandise
assortments. If broader and deeper as-sortments attract a lot of customers,
competitors will simply go out and buy the same merchandise for their stores.
Establishing a competitive advantage means that the retailer, in effect,
builds a wall around its position in a retail market. When the wall is high, it will
be hard for competitors outside the wall (i.e., retailers operating in other
markets or entrepreneurs) to enter the market and compete for the retailer’s
target customers.
Over time, all advantages erode due to competitive forces, but by building
high, thick walls, retailers can sustain their advantage, minimize competitive
pressures, and boost profits for a longer time. Thus, establishing a sustainable
competitive advantage is the key to positive long-term financial performance.
Seven important opportunities for retailers to develop sustainable competitive
advantages are as follows: (1) customer loyalty, (2) location, (3) human resource
management, (4) distribution and information systems, (5) unique merchandise,
(6) vendor relations, and (7) customer service. Exhibit 5–2 indicates which
aspects of these sources of competitive advantage are more and less
sustainable. Let’s look at each of these approaches.

SUSTAINABILITY OF ADVANTAGE
EXHIBIT 5–2
Methods of Developing
Sources of Advantage Less Sustainable More Sustainable Sustainable Competitive
Customer loyalty Habitual repeat purchasing; Building a brand image with an Advantage
(Chapters 11 and 16) repeat purchases because of emotional connection with
limited competition in the customers; using databases to
local area develop and utilize a deeper
understanding of customers
Location (Chapters 7 and 8) Convenient locations
Human resource management More employees Committed, knowledgeable
(Chapter 9) employees
Distribution and information Bigger warehouses; automated Shared systems with vendors
systems (Chapter 10) warehouses
Unique merchandise More merchandise; greater Exclusive merchandise
(Chapters 12 to 14) assortment; lower price; higher
advertising budgets; more sales
promotions
Vendor relations (Chapter 14) Repeat purchases from vendor Coordination of procurement
due to limited alternatives efforts; ability to get scarce
merchandise
Customer service (Chapter 19) Hours of operation Knowledgeable and helpful
salespeople
138 SECTION II Retailing Strategy

Customer Loyalty
Customer loyalty means that customers are committed to buying merchandise and
services from a particular retailer. Other bases for sustainable competitive advantage
discussed in this section help attract and maintain loyal customers; for instance,
having dedicated employees, unique merchandise, and superior customer service all
help solidify a loyal customer base. But having loyal customers is, in and of itself, an
important method of sustaining an advantage over competitors.
10
Loyalty is more than simply liking one retailer over another. Loyalty means that
customers will be reluctant to patronize competitive retailers. For example, loyal
customers will continue to have their car serviced at Jiffy Lube, even if a competitor
opens a store nearby and provides slightly lower prices. Some ways that retailers
build loyalty are by (1) developing a strong brand image for the re-tailer or its private
label brands, (2) developing clear and precise positioning strate-gies, and (3) creating
11
an attachment with customers through loyalty programs.
Retail Branding Retailers use brands to build loyalty in much the same way
that manufacturers do. In retailing, however, a retailer may put its name on
the merchandise, such as Hot Topic, or use a name that is sold exclusively at
that re-tailer, such as Kenmore appliances at Sears. These store brands are
also known as private-label brands and are discussed in Chapter 14.
A retail brand, whether it is the name of the retailer or a private label, can cre-
ate an emotional tie with customers that builds their trust and loyalty. People
know, for instance, that when they buy the L.L. Bean brand, they can be assured
that the products are “guaranteed to give 100% satisfaction in every way. Return
anything purchased from us at any time if it proves otherwise. We do not want
you to have anything from L.L. Bean that is not completely satisfactory. [We] do
not consider a sale complete until goods are worn out and [the] customer [is] still
12
sat-isfied.” Retail brands also facilitate loyalty because they stand for a
predictable level of quality that customers feel comfortable with and often seek.
Retail brand-ing is discussed in Chapter 16. A strong retail brand also becomes
part of a retailer’s positioning strategy, the topic discussed next.

Positioning A retailer builds customer loyalty by developing a clear, distinctive im-


age of its retail offering and consistently reinforcing that image through its merchan-
dise and service. Positioning involves the design and implementation of a retail mix
to create an image of the retailer in the customer’s mind relative to its competitors. 13
Furthermore, positioning emphasizes that the image in the customer’s mind (not the
retail manager’s mind) is critical. Thus, the retailer needs to research what its image
is and make sure that it is consistent with what customers in its target market want. A
perceptual map is frequently used to represent the customer’s held
image and preferences for retailers.
Exhibit 5–3 offers a hypothetical perceptual map of retailers selling women’s
clothing in the Washington, DC, area. The two dimensions in this map, fashion/
style and service, represent the two primary characteristics that consumers in
this example use in forming their impressions of retail stores. Perceptual maps
are de-veloped so that the distance between two retailers’ positions on the map
indicates how similar the stores appear to consumers. For example, Neiman
Marcus and Saks Fifth Avenue are very close to each other on the map because
consumers in this illustration see them as offering similar services and fashion. In
contrast, Nordstrom and Marshalls are far apart, indicating consumers think
they’re quite different. Note that stores close to each other compete vigorously
because con-sumers feel they provide similar benefits.
According to this example, Macy’s has an image of offering fashionable
women’s clothing with good service. T. J. Maxx offers a similar level of
fashionable clothing with less service. Sears is viewed as a retailer offering
women’s clothing that is not fashionable with relatively limited service.
LIMITED SERVICE

The ideal points (marked by red dots on the map) indicate the characteristics
of an ideal retailer for consumers in different market segments. For example,
con-sumers in segment 3 prefer a retailer that offers high-fashion merchandise
with low service, whereas consumers in segment 1 want more traditional apparel
and aren’t concerned about service. The ideal points are located so that the
distance between a retailer’s position (marked with a blue “x”) and the ideal point
indicates how consumers in the segment evaluate that retailer.
Retailers that are closer to an ideal point are evaluated more favorably by
the consumers in the segment than are retailers located farther away. Thus,
consumers in segment 6 prefer Forever 21 and Bebe to Neiman Marcus
because these retailers are more fashion forward, and their target customers
do not require such high ser-vice levels.

Loyalty Programs Loyalty programs are part of an overall customer relation-


ship management (CRM) program, examined in Chapter 11. These programs are
prevalent in retailing, from department stores to the local pizza shop.
Customer loyalty programs work hand-in-hand with CRM. Members of loyalty
programs are identified when they buy because they use some type of loyalty card.
Their purchase information then is stored in a huge database known as a data ware-
house. From this data warehouse, analysts determine what types of merchandise
and services certain groups of customers are buying. Using this information, retailers
can tailor their offerings to better meet the needs of their loyal customers.
140 SECTION II Retailing Strategy

For instance, by analyzing its database, Safeway might identify those


customers who buy expensive wines and gourmet food. Having identified these
customers, Safeway could develop a special promotion focusing on preparing a
gourmet meal and offer recipes, a list of ingredients, and coupons for some of the
products. Retailing View 5.1 describes how Mitchells/Richards uses customer
information to build store loyalty through customer service and by targeting its
promotional activities to improve customer satisfaction.

Location
The classic response to the question, “What are the three most important things in
retailing?” is “location, location, location.” Location is the critical factor in con-sumers’
selection of a store. For example, most people shop at the supermarket closest to
where they live. A competitive advantage based on location is sustainable because it
is not easily duplicated. Once Walgreens has put a store at the best location at an
intersection, CVS is relegated to the second-best location.
Starbucks has developed a strong competitive advantage with its location
selection. It conquers one city at a time, saturating a major market before entering

5.1 RETAILING VIEW Mitchells/Richards “Hugs” each Customer

and these long-term employees


treat all customers as
Mitchells/Richards is a multimillion-dollar
celebrities or CEOs.
men’s and women’s clothing business
To empower employees to
with one store in Westport and a second
serve clients properly,
store in Greenwich, Connecticut. The
Mitchells/Richards uses a
family-owned business delivers excellent
sophisticated customer relation-
personal service to its customers. The
ship management (CRM)
company is focused on a philosophy of
program. Mitchells/Richards
building relationships, always “hugging”
designed its com-puter system
the customer, not just making transac-
around its business model. The
tions. The Mitchells family view their staff
system includes a profile for not
as a critical component of their customer-
only each individual customer
centered business model. On average,
but also
the tenure of sales associates at the
Connecticut stores is 15 years or more,
each household member, which may include the primary such as family birthdays, changes in spending habits,
cus-tomer, a spouse or significant other, children, and even golf handi-caps, and so forth.
pets. The financial returns from this CRM system are Mitchells/Richards does not do traditional advertising but rather
significant. Achieving $1 million in sales was once unheard communicates with its existing and new customers via personalized
of but is now expected during the first year a sales associate gestures. For instance, customers in the area that have bought
joins the company. Some customers’ annual purchases million-dollar homes receive a box of wooden hang-ers and a $100
range up to $100,000, and some even spend $250,000. gift certificate. With these efforts, the retailer re-minds customers of
The retailer’s customer service goes far beyond just offering its loyalty and service to the customer.
complimentary tailoring. The employees, including the sales as-
Sources: Edmondson, Amy C. and John A. Davis, “The Mitchell
sociates, the tailors, the fitters, and the delivery people, know
Family and Mitchells/Richards,” Boston: Harvard Business Press,
everything about their customers. They study their customers’
2007; http://www. mitchellsonline.com (accessed July 30, 2007);
profiles, which include merchandise they have bought recently, Keiko Morris, “Venerable Men’s Store ‘Hugs’ Women,” Knight Ridder
merchandise they have not bought recently, upcoming events
Tribune Business News, Sep-tember 11, 2006, p. 1.
Retail Market Strategy CHAPTER 5 141
a new market. For example, there were more than 100
Starbucks outlets in the Seattle area before the com-
pany expanded to a new region. Starbucks will
frequently open several stores close to one another. It
has two stores on two corners of the intersection of
Robson and Thur-low in Vancouver. Starbucks has
such a high density of stores that it makes it very
difficult for a competitor to enter a market and find
good locations. Approaches for evaluating and
selecting locations are discussed in Chap-ters 7 and 8.

Human Resource Management


Retailing is a labor-intensive business, in which
employees play a major role providing services for
customers and building customer loyalty.
Knowledgeable and skilled employees committed to
the retailer’s objectives are criti-cal assets that support
the success of companies such as Southwest Airlines,
14
Whole Foods, and The Container Store.
JCPenney chairman and CEO Mike Ullman believes in
the power of the employee for building a sustainable com-
petitive advantage.15 As he notes, “The associates are the
first customers we sell. If it doesn’t ring true to them, it’s
impossible to communicate and inspire the customer.” To
build involvement and commitment among its employees, Starbucks creates a
Penney has dropped many of the traditional pretenses that define an old-style competitive advantage by
picking good locations, by
hierarchical organization. For instance, at the Plano, Texas, corporate headquar- saturating an area.
ters, all employees are on a first-name basis, workweeks are flexible, and
leadership workshops help build the executive team for the future.
Recruiting and retaining great employees does not come easy. Chapter 9
exam-ines how retailers can gain a sustainable competitive advantage by
developing programs to motivate and coordinate employee efforts, providing
appropriate in-centives, fostering a strong and positive organizational culture
and environment, and managing diversity.

Distribution and Information Systems


All retailers strive to reduce operating costs—the costs associated with running
the business—and make sure the right merchandise is available when and where
cus-tomers want it. The use of sophisticated distribution and information systems
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of-fers an opportunity for retailers to achieve these efficiencies. For instance,
merchandise sales information flows seamlessly from Wal-Mart to its vendors,
like Procter & Gamble, to facilitate quick and efficient merchandise replenishment
that avoids costly stockouts and reduces inventory levels. Wal-Mart has the
largest data warehouse in the world, enabling the company to fine-tune its
merchandise assortments on a store-by-store, category-by-category basis. Wal-
Mart’s distribu-tion and information systems have enabled this retailer to become
the lowest cost provider of merchandise in every market in which it competes.
This component of competitive advantage is discussed in Chapter 10.

Unique Merchandise
It is difficult for retailers to develop a competitive advantage through merchandise
because most competitors can purchase and sell the same popular national
brands. But many retailers realize a sustainable competitive advantage by
developing private-label brands (also called store brands), which are products
17
developed and marketed by a retailer and available only from that retailer.
142 SECTION II Retailing Strategy

For example, three of Sears


power-ful private-label brands are
Kenmore, Die Hard, and Craftsman.
Each of these brands has strong
loyalty among a significant group of
con-sumers and thus generates
consider-able store traffic. The
quality image of these brands also
makes a signifi-cant contribution to
the image of Sears and the value of
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Sears Hold-ing Company. Issues
pertaining to the development of
private label brand merchandise are
discussed in Chapter 14.

Vendor Relations
By developing strong relations with
vendors, retailers may gain exclusive
rights to (1) sell merchandise in a
Sears has a strong private specific region, (2) obtain special terms of purchase that are not available to
label program. If you want competi-tors that lack such relationships, or (3) receive popular merchandise in
to buy Craftsman tools or
Kenmore appliances, you short supply. Relationships with vendors, like relationships with customers, are
19
have to purchase them developed over a long time and may not be easily offset by a competitor. For
from Sears or Kmart. example, IKEA, the Swedish-based furniture retailer, works very closely with its
suppliers to design low cost furniture and keep inventory to a minimum so it can
20
offer its furniture at low prices. Chapter 14 examines how retailers work with
their vendors to build mutually beneficial, long-term relationships.

Customer Service
Retailers also can build a sustainable competitive advantage by offering excellent
21
customer service. Offering good service consistently is difficult because customer
service is provided by retail employees, and humans are less consistent than
machines. Have you ever received less than perfect service from a salesperson or
customer service representative? It is possible that the employee wasn’t trained
properly, that she didn’t like her job, or that he was either inept or just plain rude. It is
also possible that you were the 497th customer the salesperson interacted with that
day, and she was at the end of her shift. Retailers that offer good cus-tomer service
instill its importance in their employees over a long period of time through coaching
and training. In this way, customer service becomes part of the retailer’s
organizational culture, a topic examined in Chapter 9.
It takes considerable time and effort to build a tradition and reputation for
cus-tomer service, but good service is a valuable strategic asset. Once a
retailer has earned a service reputation, it can sustain this advantage for a
long time because it’s hard for a competitor to develop a comparable
reputation. Chapter 19 discusses how retailers develop a service advantage.

Multiple Sources of Advantage


To build a sustainable competitive advantage, retailers typically don’t rely on a single
approach, such as low cost or excellent service. 22 Instead, they need multiple approaches
to build as high a wall around their position as possible. For example, McDonald’s success
is based on providing customers with a good value that meets their expectations, having
good customer service, possessing a strong brand name, and having great locations. By
pursuing all of these strategies concurrently, McDonald’s has developed a strong
competitive position in the quick service restaurant market.
McDonald’s has always positioned itself as providing a good value—customers get a
lot for not much money. Its customers don’t have extraordinary expectations;
Retail Market Strategy CHAPTER 5 143
they don’t expect a meal prepared to their specific tastes. But customers do
expect and get hot, fresh food that is reasonably priced.
McDonald’s customers also don’t expect friendly table service with linen table
cloths and sterling silverware. Their service expectations, which are typically met,
are simple. By developing a system for producing its food and using extensive
training for its store employees, McDonald’s reduces customers’ waiting time.
Furthermore, McDonald’s has a strong brand name with very high levels of
awareness around the world. When most people think of fast food, they think
of McDonald’s. The brand also has a number of favorable brand
associations, such as Ronald McDonald, fast, clean, and french fries.
Finally, McDonald’s has a large number of great locations, which is very impor-tant
for convenience products such as fast food. Given its market power, it has been
successful in finding and opening stores in prime retail locations. In every great city in
which it operates around the world, McDonald’s has outstanding locations.
By developing these unique capabilities in a number of areas, McDonald’s has
built a high wall around its position as a service retailer, using a fast-food format
directed toward families with young children. Each of the retail strategies outlined
at the beginning of the chapter involves multiple sources of advantage. For
exam-ple, Chico’s has developed a strong competitive position through its unique
merchandise, strong brand name, high-quality service provided by committed
employees, and effective loyalty program. Retailing View 5.2 describes The

The Container Store—Selling Products that Make Life Simpler RETAILING VIEW 5.2
Customers go to The Container Store to solve a problem. For
example, when approached by a salesperson, a customer may
say, “My wife loves romance novels. She’s got them scattered
all over the house. I need something to keep them in.” And the
salesperson helps the customer solve the problem, or chal-
lenge, as the company likes to call them.
The Container Store sells products to help people organize their
lives. Multipurpose shelving and garment bags are available to
organize closets. Portable file cabinets and magazine holders create
order in home offices. Backpacks, modular shelving, and CD holders
can make dorm rooms less cluttered. Recipe hold-ers, bottles, jars,
and recycling bins bring harmony to kitchens.
The Container Store also owns Elfa International, one of
its main suppliers of shelving and storage units. Although
Elfa is sold throughout the world, The Container Store
decided in 2007 to be the exclusive dealer of it in North
America. Elfa products are compatable, interlocking items
that can be built to the desired size and shape needed. The Container Store spends considerable time training
Its more than 40 stores range in size from 22,000 to 30,000 sales associates about its unique merchandise that
square feet and showcase more than 10,000 innovative prod- simplifies its customers’ lives.
ucts. The stores are divided into lifestyle sections marked with
brightly colored banners, such as Closet, Kitchen, Office, and their lives and thus may hire people who were not even
Laundry. Wherever you look in the store, there’s always some- looking for employment. The Container Store has
one in a blue apron ready to help solve everything from the tini- appeared on Fortune’s list of 100 Best Companies to
est of storage problems to the most intimidating organizational Work For in each of the last eight years.
challenges. The annual sales per square foot for this retailer av- Over the years, the company has developed strong
erage approximately $400. Although storage items and many vendor relations. Most of its vendors’ primary focus has
other similar products are available at other retailers such as been to manu-facture products for industrial use. Yet over
Linens ’N Things and Bed Bath & Beyond, few competitors offer time, the company has worked closely with its vendors to
The Container Store’s customer service. The Container Store develop products that are appropriate for the home.
spends considerable time educating sales associates about the Sources: Katherine Field, “Containing Culture,” Chain Store Age, April
merchandise, who are then empowered to use their own intu- 2007, pp. 22–24; Sara Schaefer Munoz, “Why The Container-Store Guy
ition and creativity to solve customer problems. It actively re- Wants to Be Your Therapist,” The Wall Street Journal, March 29, 2007, p.
cruits customers who are intrigued with helping people organize D.1; www.containerstore.com (accessed July 16, 2007).
144 SECTION II Retailing Strategy

Container Store, a retail chain that built a sustainable competitive advantage


through unique merchandise, excellent customer service, and strong
customer and vendor relations.

GROWTH STRATEGIES
Four types of growth opportunities that retailers may pursue—market penetra-tion,
market expansion, retail format development, and diversification—are shown in
Exhibit 5–4.23 The vertical axis indicates the synergies between the retailer’s present
markets and the growth opportunity—whether the opportunity involves markets the
retailer is presently pursuing or new markets. The horizontal axis in-dicates the
synergies between the retailer’s present retail mix and the retail mix of the growth
opportunity—whether the opportunity exploits the retailer’s skills in operating its
present format or requires a new set of skills to operate.

Market Penetration
A market penetration growth opportunity involves realizing growth by
REFACT direct-ing efforts toward existing customers using the retailer’s present
Wal-Mart found that 60 retailing format. These opportunities involve either attracting consumers from
per-cent of customers the current target market who don’t patronize the retailer currently or devising
picking up their product approaches that get current customers to visit the retailer more often or buy
orders in the store were
25
more merchandise on each visit. For example, many retailers allow products
spending an extra $60. bought through their Web sites to be picked up at their stores. This initiative
has been successful not only in bringing customers into the stores more often
24
but also in encouraging them to purchase more items while in the store.
Market penetration approaches include opening more stores in the target
mar-ket and keeping existing stores open for longer hours. Other approaches
involve displaying merchandise to increase impulse purchases and training
salespeople to cross-sell. Cross-selling means that sales associates in one
department attempt to sell complementary merchandise from other
departments to their customers. For example, a sales associate who has just
sold a DVD player to a customer will take the customer to the accessories
department to sell special cables to improve the performance of the player.

EXHIBIT 5–4 TARGET MARKETS


Growth Opportunities Existing New

Existing
Market Penetration Market Expansion
RETAIL FORMAT
New

Format Development Diversification


(unrelated/related)
Retail Market Strategy CHAPTER 5 145
Market Expansion
A market expansion growth opportunity involves using the existing retail
format in new market segments. For example, Dunkin’ Donuts gradually has
been opening new stores outside its northeastern U.S. stronghold. The plan calls
for Dunkin’ eventually to increase the number of its U.S. outlets from the current
level of more than 5,300 (out of a total of 7,000-plus stores) to 15,000 while also
26
moving into more foreign countries, including China. Abercrombie
& Fitch’s (A&F) primary target market is college students, not high-schoolers.
Because college-aged people don’t particularly like to hang out with teens,
A&F opened a new, lower-priced chain called Hollister Co. Although the
merchan-dise and ambience are slightly different than A&F, the retail format
27
is essentially the same.

Retail Format Development


A retail format development growth opportunity is an opportunity in which
a retailer develops a new retail format—a format with a different retail mix—
for the same target market. Multichannel retailing is an example of retail
format develop-ment, because a bricks-and-mortar retailer is offering an
Internet channel as a new format, in addition to its exisiting channel.
The U.K.-based retailer Tesco has employed a retail format development
growth strategy by operating several different food store formats that all cater to
essentially the same target markets. The smallest is Tesco Express, up to 3,000
square feet. These stores are located close to where customers live and work.
Tesco Metro stores are 7,000–15,000 square feet, bring convenience to city
center loca-tions, and specialize in offering a wide range of ready-to-eat-meals.
Tesco Super-stores (up to 50,000 square feet), are the oldest format. In recent
years, the company has added nonfood products, such as DVDs and books, to
improve cus-tomer satisfaction. Finally, Tesco Extra stores (more than 60,000
square feet) are designed to be a one-stop destination, with the widest range of
28
food and nonfood products, from housewares and clothing to garden furniture.

Diversification
A diversification growth opportunity is one in which a retailer operates a new
retail format directed toward a market segment that’s not currently served by the
retailer. Diversification opportunities are either related or unrelated.

Related versus Unrelated Diversification In a related diversification


growth opportunity, the retailer’s present target market or retail format shares
something in common with the new opportunity. This commonality might entail
purchasing from the same vendors, operating in similar locations, using the same
distribution or management information system, or advertising in the same news-
papers to similar target markets. In contrast, an unrelated diversification lacks
any commonality between the present business and the new business.
Through acquisition, Home Depot built a wholesale building supply business,
called HD Supply, that generated over $3 billion annual sales. Management felt
that this growth opportunity would be synergistic with the firm’s retail business,
because its stores were selling similar merchandise to contractors. Thus, Home
Depot viewed this growth opportunity as a related diversification, because cus-
tomers (i.e., contractors) would be similar, and the new market of large contrac-
tors could be serviced using the same warehouse-like format. In addition, Home
Depot would realize cost savings by placing larger orders with vendors because
it would be selling to both retail and wholesale businesses.
In hindsight though, the HD Supply actually was an unrelated diversification.
HD Supply sold primarily pipes, lumber, and concrete—products with limited
146 SECTION II Retailing Strategy

sales in retail stores. Selling these supplies for large construction jobs often in-
volved competitive bidding that reduced margins. So Home Depot sold this unre-
29
lated diversification to concentrate on its retail/small contractor business.

Vertical Integration Vertical integration describes diversification by retail-ers


30
into wholesaling or manufacturing. For example, some retailers go beyond
designing their private-label merchandise to owning factories that manufacture
the merchandise. When retailers integrate by manufacturing products, they are
making risky investments because the requisite skills to make products are differ-
ent from those associated with retailing them. In addition, retailers and manufac-
turers have different customers; the immediate customers for a manufacturer’s
merchandise are retailers, whereas a retailer’s customers are consumers. Thus,
a manufacturer’s marketing activities are very different from those of a retailer.
Note that designing private-label merchandise is a related diversification because
it builds on the retailer’s knowledge of its customers, but actually making the mer-
chandise is considered an unrelated diversification.

Strategic Opportunities and Competitive Advantage


Typically, retailers have the greatest competitive advantage when they
engage in opportunities that are similar to their present retail strategy. Thus,
retailers would be most successful engaging in market penetration
opportunities that don’t involve entering new, unfamiliar markets or operating
new, unfamiliar retail formats.
When retailers pursue market expansion opportunities, they build on their
strengths in operating a retail format and apply this competitive advantage in a new
market. Those retailers that successfully expand globally are able to translate what
they do best—their core competencies—to a new culture and market.
A retail format development opportunity builds on the retailer’s reputation and
REFACT success with its present customers. Even if a retailer doesn’t have experience
Brooks Brothers, a men’s
and skills in operating the new format, it hopes to attract its loyal customers to it.
specialty store chain, sold
For example, as discussed in Chapter 3, some retailers have successfully
the rights to the Polo brand
developed multichannel strategies by seamlessly integrating stores, the Internet,
name to Ralph Lauren.31
and catalogs to provide extra convenience and multiple opportunities for their
current custom-ers to shop. Retailers have the least opportunity to exploit a
competitive advantage when they pursue diversification opportunities.

GLOBAL GROWTH OPPORTUNITIES


International expansion is a market expansion growth opportunity that many re-
tailers find attractive. Of the 50 largest global retailers, 38 operate in more than
32
one country. But international expansion can be risky, because retailers must
deal with different government regulations, cultural traditions, supply chain
consider-ations, and languages. We first discuss the types of retailers that
successfully com-pete globally, followed by a look at some of the pitfalls of global
expansion. Then we examine the key success factors for global expansion and,
finally, evaluate the strategies for entering a nondomestic market.

Who Is Successful and Who Isn’t?


Retailers with an offering that has universal appeal, based on strong brand images,
distinctive merchandise or low cost, are the most successful at exploiting global
markets. For example, some of the most successful global retailers are specialty
store retailers with strong brand images and/or unique merchandise, such as Star-
bucks, McDonald’s, Zara, and H&M; those that offer deep assortments and low
prices, which appeal to consumers in different cultures; or discount and food
Retail Market Strategy CHAPTER 5 147
retailers with low prices, such as Wal-Mart, Carrefour, Royal Ahold, and
Metro AG. Retailing View 5.3 discusses some of the successes and problems
IKEA has encountered on its way to being a global retailer.
Category specialists and supercenter retailers may be particularly well suited to
succeed globally because of their operating efficiencies. First, these retailers are
leaders in their use of technology to manage inventories, control global logistical
systems, and tailor merchandise assortments to local needs. Second, retailers like
Wal-Mart and Carrefour enjoy scale economies for buying merchandise globally.
Third, despite idiosyncrasies in the global environment, category specialists and

IKEA: Bringing Its Philosophy to a World Market RETAILING VIEW 5.3

IKEA has adjusted its unique furniture retail offering to satisfy the needs of U.S. consumers.

customers to serve
Many consumers need to themselves. The guid-
buy furniture and have so-
ing philosophy is: “You do your part. We do our part.
phisticated taste but either
Together, we save money.”
cannot or do not want to
The stores are designed to put the customer on a
spend lots of money. These
logical buying path. One starts in the living rooms, then
consumers don’t necessar-
moves to bed-rooms, closets/bureaus, then kitchens and
ily want or need furniture
that will last forever. Oper-
ating 254 stores in 35 coun- REFACT
tries, IKEA offers unique,
Approximately 1.1 million
well-designed, functional
customers visit IKEA each day,
furniture at low prices dis- and 150 million Swedish
played in realistic room meatballs are served per year,
settings. or 41,000 each day.33
At IKEA, customers are
encouraged to get actively
involved in the shopping bathrooms. After the furniture has been chosen for the
experience by sitting on the rooms, the accessories are bought: lighting, dinnerware,
sofas and opening and art, rugs, and so on. To complete the shopping experience,
closing drawers. Price and customers pick up their own furni-ture and carry the pieces
product information is clearly to the register. Self-service items in-clude small tables,
marked on large, easy-to- chairs, and other manageable pieces. The larger pieces
read tags, making it easier for that are too large are brought out from another warehouse.
The unassembled furniture is packed flat, suitable for tying
to the top of cars. For those customers that do not want to be as dinner, dessert, or a snack. The food is low priced, and
involved, IKEA offers delivery service and a rec-ommendation custom-ers can even buy some delicacies, such as
for third-party assembly providers. Couple all this activity with Swedish sausages, to take home.
the long checkout lines, and an IKEA shopping trip can run When entering the United States in 1987, IKEA had to make
between four to six hours.Yet IKEA customers see tremendous some functional changes to its products. For example, Scandi-
value in the offering and low prices, so they are happy to make navian beds were the wrong size for American bed linens, Scan-
the self-service trade-off. dinavian-styled bookshelves were too small to hold a television
As a bonus to its customers, IKEA maintains the Swedish- for Americans who wanted shelving
style food offered in its cafeterias. In the onsite restaurant, cus- for an entertainment system, its
tomers can take a shopping break and have breakfast, lunch, glasses were deemed too small for
the super-sized thirsts of Ameri-
cans, and the dining room tables
weren’t big enough to fit a turkey in
the center on Thanksgiving. But
IKEA quickly adapted its products
to meet U.S. market needs.
Sources: www.ikea.com (accessed July 19, 2007); Marianne Barner, “Be
a Socially Responsible Corporation,” Harvard Business Review, July/
August 2007, pp. 59–60; Jérôme Barthélemy, “The Experimental Roots of
Revolutionary Vision,” MIT Sloan Management Review, Fall 2006, p. 81;
R Michelle Breyer, “Marketing Tactics Involve Nuance Within Each
Culture,” DSN Retailing Today, March 27, 2006, pp. 5–6.
148 SECTION II Retailing Strategy

supercenter retailers have developed unique systems and standardized formats


that facilitate control over multiple stores. Fourth, at one time, U.S.-based retail-
ers believed that consumers outside the United States, who were used to high
lev-els of personalized service, would not embrace the self-service concept
employed by category killers and supercenter retailers. However, the experience
of chains such as Carrefour (France) and ALDI (Germany) has shown that
34
consumers around the globe are willing to forgo service for lower prices.
Some U.S. retailers have a competitive advantage in global markets because
American culture is emulated in many countries, particularly among young peo-
ple. Due to rising prosperity and the rapidly increasing access to cable TV that
features American programming, fashion trends in the United States are spread-
ing to young people in emerging countries. The global MTV generation prefers
Coke to tea, athletic shoes to sandals, Chicken McNuggets to rice, and credit
cards to cash. China’s major cities have sprouted American stores and
restaurants, including KFC, Pizza Hut, and McDonald’s. Shanghai and Beijing
have 57 and 95 Starbucks stores, respectively, even though coffee had never
been the drink of choice until Starbucks came to town. But these Chinese urban
dwellers go there to impress a friend or because it’s a symbol of a new kind of
lifestyle. Although Western products and stores have gained a reputation for high
quality and good service in China, in some ways, it is the American culture that
many Chinese con-sumers want.

Keys to Success
Four characteristics of retailers that have successfully exploited international
growth opportunities are (1) a globally sustainable competitive advantage,
35
(2) adaptability, (3) global culture, and (4) financial resources. A
hypothetical evaluation of international growth opportunities appears in the
appendix to this chapter.

Globally Sustainable Competitive Advantage Entry into nondomestic


markets is most successful when the expansion opportunity is consistent with
the retailer’s core bases of competitive advantage. Some core competitive
advantages for global retailers are shown in the following table:

Core Advantage Global Retailer Example


Low-cost, efficient operations Wal-Mart, Carrefour, ALDI
Strong private-label brands Starbucks, KFC
Fashion reputation H&M, Zara
Category dominance Office Depot, IKEA, Toys ’R Us

Thus, Wal-Mart, Carrefour, and ALDI are successful in international


markets in which price plays an important role in consumer decision making
and a distri-bution infrastructure is available to enable these firms to exploit
their logistical capabilities. In contrast, H&M and Zara are more successful in
international mar-kets that value lower-priced, fashionable merchandise.

Adaptability Although successful global retailers build on their core compe-tencies,


they also recognize cultural differences and adapt their core strategy to the needs of
local markets.36 Color preferences, the preferred cut of apparel, and sizes differ across
cultures. For example, in China, white is the color of mourning, and brides wear red
dresses. Food probably has the greatest diversity of tastes around the world. Carrefour is
an expert at understanding and integrating itself in local regions, such as its early
realization that the merchandising of fish differs for each local market. In San Francisco,
fish is dead and filleted; in France, the fish is
Retail Market Strategy CHAPTER 5 149
dead but whole on ice with the head still intact; and in China, fish is sold live.
However, consumers in the middle and western parts of China have more confi-
37
dence in frozen fish, because they are so far from the ocean.
Selling seasons also vary across countries. In the United States, many stores
experience a sales increase in August, when families stock up on back-to-school
supplies and apparel; however, this month is one of the slowest sales periods in
Europe, because most people are on vacation. Back-to-school season in Japan
occurs in April.
Store designs and layouts often need to be adjusted in different parts of the
world. In the United States, for instance, discount stores are usually quite large
and on one level. In other parts of the world, such as Europe and parts of Asia,
where space is at a premium, stores must be designed to fit a smaller space and are
often housed in multiple levels. In some cultures, social norms dictate that men’s
and women’s clothing cannot be displayed next to each other.
Government regulations and cultural values can also affect store operations.
Some differences, such as holidays, hours of operation, and regulations governing
part-time employees and terminations, are easy to identify. Other factors require a
deeper understanding. For example, Latin American culture is very family ori-
ented, so traditional U.S. work schedules would need to be adjusted so that Latin
American employees could have more time with their families. Boots, a U.K.
drugstore chain, has the checkout clerks in its Japanese stores standing up because
it discovered that Japanese shoppers found it offensive to pay money to a seated
clerk, but retailers have to provide seating for checkout clerks in Germany. Retail-
ers in Germany also must recycle packaging materials sold in their stores. Also in
Germany, seasonal sales can be held only during specific weeks and apply only to
specific product categories, and the amount of the discounts are limited.
Starbucks has been pleasantly surprised at how quickly consumers around the
world have accepted the products it sells in the United States. In terms of assort-
ment, there isn’t great variation from country to country. Outside the United States,
food is a bigger part of business—much more important in China, Japan, and the
United Kingdom than it is in the United States. Frappuccino-type products, how-
ever, are popular everywhere, though Starbucks has developed some unique drinks
for different markets. For example, the green tea Frappuccino, sold only in Taiwan
and Japan, is the best selling Frappuccino in those countries, and a strawberries-
38
and-cream Frappuccino was developed expressly for the United Kingdom.
Global Culture To be global, retailers must think globally. It is not sufficient
to transplant a home-country culture and infrastructure into another country. In
this regard, Carrefour is truly global. In the early years of its international expan-
sion, it started in each country slowly, which reduced the company’s
ethnocentrism. Further enriching its global perspective, Carrefour
has always encouraged the rapid development of local management
and retains few expatriates in its overseas operations. Carrefour’s
management ranks are truly international. One is just as likely to
run across a Portuguese regional manager in Hong Kong as a
French or Chinese one. Finally, Carrefour discourages the classic
overseas “tour of duty” mentality often found in U.S. firms. Inter-
national assignments are important in themselves, not just as step-
ping stones to ultimate career advancement back in France. The
globalization of Carrefour’s culture is perhaps most evident in the
speed with which ideas flow throughout the organization. A global
management structure of regional “committees,” which meet
regularly, advances the awareness and implementation of global best practices. Coffee was not the drink of
The proof of Carrefour’s global commitment lies in the numbers: It has had more choice until Starbucks came
than 30 years of international experience in 30 countries, both developed and to China. But now Shanghai
and Beijing each have more
39
developing. than two dozen Starbucks.
150 SECTION II Retailing Strategy

Financial Resources Expansion into international markets requires a long-


term commitment and considerable upfront planning. Retailers find it very
diffi-cult to generate short-term profits when they make the transition to global
retailing. Although firms like Wal-Mart, Carrefour, Office Depot, and Costco
often initially have difficulty achieving success in new global markets, these
large firms generally are in a strong financial position and therefore have the
ability to keep investing in projects long enough to become successful.

Evaluating Global Growth Opportunities


In their efforts to grow, many retailers have sought opportunities to open stores in
REFACT other countries. However, some countries represent better opportunities than
China sells more washing 40
machines and television sets
others. Exhibit 5–5 shows the top 20 countries ranked by overall opportunity.
than the United States, while These rankings are based on a weighted score according to their growth (55 per-
Indians buy more refrigera- cent), risk (25 percent), and market size (20 percent).
tors and televisions than China, India, Japan, Australia, and Malaysia—all Asia-Pacific countries—
Germans.41
are in the top 10. Following the lifting of international restrictions on foreign
invest-ments international food retailers (Auchan, Carrefour, Ito-Yokado,
42
Metro, Tesco, and Wal-Mart) have already entered China. Although much of
REFACT this retail devel-opment has been in the largest cities of Shanghai and
India’s compounded annual Beijing, international retail-ers are now moving into interior cities. Doing
population growth rate is business in China is still a challenge, however. Operating costs are
expected to be 1.12 percent increasing, managerial talent is becoming more dif-ficult to find and retain,
between now and 2020— and an underdeveloped and inefficient supply chain predominates.
more than double the fore- India is an attractive market for retailers because it has a population of over 1
cast for China for the same billion, solid economic growth, rising affluent urban middle-class, and it has
period. If these rates con- 43
rescinded some restrictions on foreign investment. The challenge facing global
tinue, India will have more retailers in India is that the majority of the population, especially in rural areas,
people than China by 2035.
still prefers small, family-owned shops. In addition, despite some loosening of the

EXHIBIT 5–5 2006 Ranking Country Index*


Global Retail
Opportunity Rankings 1 China 76
2 United States 63
3 India 61
4 Russia 59
5 United Kingdom 57
6 Malaysia 48
7 Japan 46
8 Australia 46
9 Canada 44
10 Spain 41
11 Philippines 40
12 Turkey 40
13 South Africa 40
14 Germany 40
15 France 39
16 Taiwan 39
17 Vietnam 38
18 Thailand 37
19 Netherlands 36
20 Sweden 35

*Weighted index.
SOURCE: Ayuna Kidder, “Global Retail Outlook,” Columbus, OH: Retail
Forward, Inc., March 2007.
Retail Market Strategy CHAPTER 5
151

For a country to be a viable option for a new market entry, firms must
assess its transportation, distribution channels, communications, and
commercial infrastructure.

limitations, India restricts foreign invest-


ment, so the majority of ownership still
must reside with Indian nationals.
Although Russia and the United King-
dom are highly ranked, other European
countries have slipped in the rankings due
to their relatively slow growth. Russia in
particular has strong growth and con-
sumer demand, coupled with falling infla-
tion.44 Like India though, except in big
cities like Moscow and St. Petersburg,
smaller, family-owned retailers still ac-
count for about 86 percent of retail sales.
Doing business in Russia can be challeng-
ing due to its poor transportation infra-
structure, bureaucracy, and corruption.
The rankings for Latin and South
America and Africa are mixed. Brazil,
Argentina, and Mexico have the highest
rankings in South and Latin America, whereas South Africa shows the
strongest opportunity for retailers in Africa. Yet business risk remains high in
many coun-tries in these parts of the world.
The three opportunity ranking dimensions—growth, risk, and market size—are
used to portray the top 30 countries graphically in Exhibit 5–6. The horizontal axis
represents growth, the vertical axis represents risk, and the size of the circle repre-
sents market size. The United States, United Kingdom, Taiwan, and Malaysia fall into
the “Best Opportunity” quadrant (upper right). Australia and Canada are on the fringe
of this quadrant. China, India, and Russia dominate the lower-right

Growth, Risk, and Market Size of the Top 30 Countries EXHIBIT 5–6
Low
Risk

Best Opportunity Quadrant


Switzerland
Sweden
Germany
Netherlands
Japan
United United
France Kingdom States
Belgium Canada Taiwan
Australia

South Korea Malaysia

Spain

Thailand
Italy

South Africa India


Poland
Turkey
Brazil

Indonasia China
Western Europe Mexico Philippines Russia
Central & Eastern Europe Argentina
North America
Latin America Vietnam
Asia–Pacific
High Nigeria
Risk
Low Growth High Growth

SOURCE: Ayuna Kidder, “Global Retail Outlook,” Columbus, OH: Retail Forward, March 2007. Used by permission of TNS Retail Forward.
152 SECTION II Retailing Strategy

quadrant because they have high growth but relatively high risk. Although
most of the Western European countries remain stable, their growth is
stagnant, putting them in the upper-left quadrant. The appendix to this
chapter describes a process for evaluating growth opportunities.
Moving into global markets requires all the same success factors as starting any
business—a good strategy that is sustainable, a strong financial position, and a little
luck. But global expansions require a lot more. First, firms must act like they are local
and understand their customers’ needs. 45 For example, France-based Carre-four and
U.K.-based Tesco makes sure that more than 90 percent of the merchan-dise they
sell is produced in the country in which it is sold. 46 Second, retailers must understand
and act appropriately in response to the subtle nuances between markets and
countries. For instance, Spanish and French retailers work under government-
controlled operating hours and must mind policies prohibiting mid-season sales.
Average rental space in the United Kingdom is more than twice as much as that in
Spain. Spain also has a $4.70 minimum wage, compared with almost $11.00 in
France. Third, retailers must ensure their timing is right. In 1995, for example, the
Japanese retailer Yachan opened one of the world’s biggest de-partment stores in
Shanghai and planned to open 1,000 more stores in China. But at that time, the
affluent market was too small to support the store, and in 1997, Yachan filed for
bankruptcy. Fourth and finally, a global retailer must be selective. Tesco has opened
convenience stores in California but is avoiding supermarkets, because the food
retailer believes this market is saturated.

Entry Strategies
Four approaches that retailers can take when entering nondomestic markets
47
are direct investment, joint venture, strategic alliance, and franchising.
Direct Investment Direct investment occurs when a retail firm invests in and
owns a division or subsidiary that operates in a foreign country. This entry
strategy requires the highest level of investment and exposes the retailer to
signifi-cant risks, but it also has the highest potential returns. One advantage of
direct in-vestment is that the retailer has complete control of the operations. For
example, McDonald’s chose this entry strategy for the U.K. market, building a
plant to pro-duce buns when local suppliers could not meet its specifications.
Joint Venture A joint venture is formed when the entering retailer pools its
resources with a local retailer to form a new company in which ownership, con-
trol, and profits are shared. Examples of successful joint ventures include Carre-
four (France) and Sabanci Holding (Turkey); Metro AG (Germany) and Marubeni
( Japan); Monsoon (United Kingdom) and Charming Shoppes (United
States); Shell Petroleum (Denmark) and Alliance Group (Ukraine); and Wal-
Mart (United States) and Bharti (India).
A joint venture reduces the entrant’s risks. In addition to sharing the
financial burden, the local partner provides an understanding of the market
and has access to local resources, such as vendors and real estate. Many
foreign countries, such as India, require joint ownership, though these
restrictions may loosen as a result of World Trade Organization (WTO)
negotiations. Problems with this entry ap-proach can arise if the partners
disagree or the government places restrictions on the repatriation of profits.
Strategic Alliance A strategic alliance is a collaborative relationship
between independent firms. For example, a retailer might enter an
international market through direct investment but use DHL or UPS to
facilitate its local logistical and warehousing activities.
Franchising Franchising offers the lowest risk and requires the least invest-ment.
However, the entrant has limited control over the retail operations in the
Retail Market Strategy CHAPTER 5 153
foreign country, its potential profit is reduced, and the risk of assisting in the cre-ation
of a local domestic competitor increases. The U.K.-based Marks & Spencer, for
example, has franchised stores in 30 countries. 48 The Franchising appendix at the
end of the text provides a thorough discussion of this ownership approach.

THE STRATEGIC RETAIL PLANNING PROCESS


The strategic retail planning process entails the set of steps a retailer goes
through to develop a strategic retail plan 49 (see Exhibit 5–7). It describes how re-
tailers select target market segments, determine the appropriate retail format, and
build sustainable competitive advantages. As indicated in Exhibit 5–7, it is not always
necessary to go through the entire process each time an evaluation is performed
(step 7). For instance, a retailer could evaluate its performance, find that its present
strategy is working well, and then go to step 5 to update its objective.
The planning process can be used to formulate strategic plans at different
levels within a retail corporation. For example, the corporate strategic plan of
Tesco indicates how to allocate resources across the corporation’s various
divisions, such as Tesco, Tesco Extra, Tesco Express, Tesco Metro, Tesco
Homeplus, and One Stop. Each division, in turn, develops its own strategic plan.
As we discuss the steps in the retail planning process, we will apply each step to
the planning process Kelly Bradford is undertaking. Kelly owns Gifts To Go, a small,
two-store chain in the Chicago area. One of her 1,000 square foot stores is located in
the downtown area; the other is in an upscale suburban mall. The target market for
Gifts To Go is upper-income men and women looking for gifts in the $50–500 price
range. The stores have an eclectic selection of merchandise, includ-ing handmade
jewelry and crafts, fine china and glassware, perfume, watches, writing

EXHIBIT 5–7
1. Define the business mission
Stages in the Strategic
Retail Planning Process

2. Conduct a situation audit:


Market attractiveness
analysis Competitor
analysis Self-analysis

3. Identify strategic opportunities

4. Evaluate strategic alternatives

5. Establish specific objectives and allocate resources

6. Develop a retail mix to implement strategy

7. Evaluate performance and make adjustments


154 SECTION II Retailing Strategy

instruments, and a variety of one-of-a-kind items. Gifts To Go also has developed


a number of loyal customers who are contacted by sales associates when family
anniversaries and birthdays come up. In many cases, customers have a close
rela-tionship with a sales associate and enough confidence in the associate’s
judgment that they tell the associate to pick out an appropriate gift. The turnover
of Gifts To Go sales associates is low for the industry, because Kelly treats
associates as part of the family. The company pays for medical insurance for all
associates, and they share in the profits of the firm.

Step 1: Define the Business Mission


The first step in the strategic retail planning process is to define the business
mis-sion. The mission statement is a broad description of a retailer’s
50
objectives and the scope of activities it plans to undertake. Whereas the
objective of a publicly held firm is to maximize its stockholders’ wealth by
51
increasing the value of its stock and paying dividends, owners of small,
privately held firms frequently have other objectives, such as achieving a
specific level of income and avoiding risks rather than maximizing income.
The mission statement defines the general nature of the target segments
and retail formats on which the firm will focus. For example, the mission
statement of an office supply category specialist, “Serve the customer, build
value for share-holders, and create opportunities for associates,” is too
broad. It fails to provide a sense of strategic direction.
In developing the mission statement, managers need to answer five questions:
(1) What business are we in? (2) What should our business be in the future?
(3) Who are our customers? (4) What are our capabilities? (5) What do we
want to accomplish? Gifts To Go’s mission statement is “The mission of Gifts
To Go is to be the leading retailer of higher-priced gifts in Chicago and
provide a stable in-come of $100,000 per year for the owner.”
Because the mission statement defines the retailer’s objectives and the
scope of activities it plans to undertake, Gifts To Go’s mission statement
clarifies that its management won’t consider retail opportunities outside the
Chicago area, for sell-ing low-priced gifts, or that would jeopardize its ability
52
to generate $100,000 in annual income.

Step 2: Conduct a Situation Audit


After developing a mission statement and setting objectives, the next step in
the strategic planning process is to conduct a situation audit, an analysis of
the op-portunities and threats in the retail environment and the strengths and
weaknesses of the retail business relative to its competitors. The elements in
53
the situation analysis are shown in Exhibit 5–8.

EXHIBIT 5–8
1ST
Elements in a
Situation Audit
VIRONMENTAL
FACTORS CTORS CTORS RENGTHS
Size rriers to entry chnology D WEAKNESSES
Growth rgaining power of onomic anagement capabilities
Seasonality ndors gulatory ancial resources
Business cycles mpetitive rivalry cial cations
erations
erchandise
ore management
stomer loyalty
Retail Market Strategy CHAPTER 5 155
Market Factors Some critical factors related to consumers and their buying patterns
are the target market size and growth, sales cyclicity, and seasonality. Market size,
typically measured in retail sales dollars, is important because it indi-cates a retailer’s
opportunity to generate revenues to cover its investment. Large markets are
attractive to large retail firms, but they are also attractive to small en-trepreneurs
because they offer more opportunities to focus on a market segment. Some retailers,
however, prefer to concentrate on smaller markets because they face less
competition. Cato, for instance, sells value-priced women’s fashion in more than
1,000 stores located in 31 U.S. states, primarily in small towns. 54
Growing markets are typically more attractive than mature or declining mar-
kets. For example, retail markets for limited assortment, extreme value retailers
are growing faster than are those for department stores. Typically, the return on
investment is higher in growing markets because competition is less intense than
in mature markets. Because new customers are just beginning to patronize
stores in growing markets, they may not have developed strong store loyalties
and thus might be easier to attract to new outlets.
Firms are often interested in minimizing the business cycle’s impact on
their sales. Thus, those retail markets for merchandise affected by economic
conditions (such as cars and major appliances) are less attractive than retail
markets unaf-fected by economic conditions (such as food).
In general, markets with highly seasonal sales are unattractive because a lot
of resources are needed to accommodate the peak season, but then resources
are underutilized the rest of the year. To minimize problems due to seasonality,
ski resorts promote summer vacations to generate sales during all four seasons.
To conduct an analysis of the market factors for Gifts To Go, Kelly Bradford went
on the Internet to get information about the size, growth, and cyclical and seasonal
nature of the gift market in general and, more specifically, in Chicago. On the basis of
her analysis, she concluded that the market factors were attractive; the market for
more expensive gifts was large, growing, and not vulnerable to business cycles. The
only negative aspect was the high seasonality of gifts, with peaks at Valentine’s Day,
June (due to weddings), Christmas, and other holidays.

Competitive Factors The nature of the competition in retail markets is


affected by barriers to entry, the bargaining power of vendors, and
55
competitive rivalry. Retail markets are more attractive when competitive
entry is costly. Barriers to entry institute conditions in a retail market that
make it difficult for other firms to enter the market, such as scale economies,
customer loyalty, and the availability of good locations.
Scale economies are cost advantages due to a retailer’s size. Markets domi-
nated by large competitors with scale economies are typically unattractive. For
example, a small entrepreneur might avoid becoming an office supply category
specialist because the market is an oligopoly dominated by three large firms:
Staples, Office Depot, and OfficeMax. These firms have a considerable cost
advan-tage over the entrepreneur because they can buy merchandise cheaper
and operate more efficiently by investing in the latest technology and spreading
their overhead across more stores. However, Retailing View 5.4 discusses how
some small retail-ers develop sustainable advantages over national chains with
significant scale economies.
Retail markets dominated by a well-established retailer that has developed
a loyal group of customers also are unattractive. For example, Home Depot’s
high customer loyalty in Atlanta, where it has its corporate offices, makes it
hard for a competing home improvement center to enter the Atlanta market.
Finally, the availability of locations may impede competitive entry. Staples, for
instance, attributes part of its success over its rivals in the northeastern United States
to its first-mover advantage. The Northeast has a preponderance of mature but stable
retail markets, so finding new locations is more difficult there than it is
156 SECTION II Retailing Strategy

in most of the rest of the United States. Because Staples started in the
Northeast, it was able to open stores in the best locations.
Entry barriers are a double-edged sword. A retail market with high entry barri-
ers is very attractive for retailers presently competing in that market, because
those barriers limit competition. However, markets with high entry barriers are
unat-tractive for retailers not already in the market. For example, the lack of good
retail locations in Hong Kong makes this market attractive for retailers already in
the region but less attractive for retailers desiring to enter the market.
Another competitive factor is the bargaining power of vendors. Markets are less
attractive when only a few vendors control the merchandise sold in it. In these
situations, vendors have the opportunity to dictate prices and other terms (like de-
livery dates), reducing the retailer’s profits. For example, the market for retailing
fashionable cosmetics is less attractive because only two suppliers, Estée Lauder
(Estée Lauder, Clinique, Prescriptives, Aveda, Jo Malone, Bumble and Bumble,
Tommy Hilfiger, MAC, and Origins) and L’Oréal (Maybelline, Giorgio Armani, RedKen,
Lancôme, Garnier, and Ralph Lauren), provide very desirable premium brands.
Because department stores need these brands to support a fashionable im-age, the
suppliers have the power to sell their products to retailers at high prices.
The final competitive factor is the level of competitive rivalry in the retail market.
Competitive rivalry is the frequency and intensity of reactions to actions undertaken
by competitors. When rivalry is high, price wars erupt, employee raids occur, adver-
tising and promotion expenses increase, and profit potential falls. Conditions that

5.4 RETAILING VIEW Competing Against the Giants


Both the big box retailer and the small local retailer thus
When small businesses compete for the ap-pear to have found room in the market. Depending on
same customers as big box retailers, the what the customer is searching for, he or she prefers one
story goes, they lose. But a small paper retailer over the other. However, the service and unique,
goods, office furnishing, and gift shop high-end products that the small retailer provides appear to
called Quill & Press, located near a Sta- be offerings that prompt true customer loyalty.
ples megastore in Acton, Massachusetts,
in the Boston area, has managed to Source: Davis Bushnell, “Thriving Retailer’s Personal Stamp,” Boston
achieve great results.
The small store offers niche products Globe, April 12, 2007. Reprinted by permission of The
that cannot be found in Staples. Its prod- Boston Globe.
uct assortment ranges from a 35¢ ball-
point pen to a $3,500 fountain pen by
Graf von Faber-Castel. To its upscale
customer base, the retailer offers special
products available only in the store, in-
cluding top-of-the-line stationary, invita-
tions, leather goods, art supplies, and
writing utensils.
This small retailer manages to keep
35,000–40,000 items in inventory, but its
assortment differs significantly from that of
Staples, which appeals to the mass mar-
ket. Whereas Staples offers convenience
for customers shopping for basic office
and school supplies, the small retailer stocks more emotionally
valuable products, like a $2,500 ergonomic leather desk chair.
Customers value the special service that they receive from the
small retailer; it knows its clientele better, so it not only stocks
products they desire but also helps them navigate the product
selection. As another perk, customers feel as though they are
supporting local businesses rather than a national chain. The local
retailer makes contributions to local schools and ballet activities—
investments a national chain is not likely to support.
Retail Market Strategy CHAPTER 5 157
may lead to intense rivalry include (1) a large number of competitors that are all about
the same size, (2) slow growth, (3) high fixed costs, and (4) a lack of perceived
differences between competing retailers. Dunkin’ Donuts and Starbucks have an in-
tense rivalry in some markets. Starbucks has extended its food/lunch menu, while
Dunkin’ is encroaching on Starbucks’ gourmet coffee turf. Pricing for similar items is
close, though Starbucks is still more expensive. To provide easier accessibility, Star-
bucks is offering Dunkin’-style drive-through windows in some locations.
When Kelly Bradford started to analyze the competitive factors for Gifts To Go,
she realized that identifying her competitors wasn’t easy. Although there were no
gift stores carrying similar merchandise at the same price points in the Chicago
area, there were various other retailers from which a customer could buy gifts.
She identified her primary competitors as department stores, craft galleries,
catalogs, and Internet retailers. Kelly felt there were some scale economies in
developing customer databases to support gift retailing. The lack of large
suppliers meant that vendors’ bargaining power wasn’t a problem, and
competitive rivalry was minimal because the gift business was not a critical part
of the department store’s overall business. In addition, merchandise carried by
the various retailers offered consid-erable differentiation opportunities.

Environmental Factors Environmental factors that can affect market attrac-


tiveness span technological, economic, regulatory, and social changes. When a
re-tail market is going through significant changes in technology, existing
competitors are vulnerable to new entrants that are skilled at using the new
technology. Many traditional store-based retailers were slow to develop their
multichannel Internet strategies fully. For instance, in the 1990s, few retailers
offered the ability for cus-tomers to purchase over the Internet and return
merchandise to a store. Today, however, the larger multichannel retailers set the
standards for services provided through technology.
Some retailers may be more affected by economic conditions than others.
Dur-ing tough economic times, retailers that offer a perceived high value offering,
such as discount, off-price, warehouse clubs, and extreme value retailers, are in
a much better position than retailers specializing in luxury goods, such as jewelry
stores, designer apparel specialty stores, and gourmet and organic grocers.
Government regulations can reduce the attractiveness of a retail market.
For example, until recently, government regulations have made it difficult for
56
foreign-owned retailers to open stores in India. Also, many local
governments within the United States have tried to stop Wal-Mart from
entering their markets in an at-tempt to protect locally owned retailers.
Finally, trends in demographics, lifestyles, attitudes, and personal values affect
retail markets’ attractiveness. Apple specializes in developing aesthetically designed
products in areas of popular technology. Its stores also mimic the high-tech design of
its products and are known to have “Apple Style.” The products are appealing to
aficionados of technology, as well as to nontechnological consumers. Apple Stores
are simple to navigate and friendly, and the architecture is similar to a fashion or
luxury store. The stores feature circular signage inspired by the thumbwheel on the
iPod and hosts the “Genius Bar” that staffs technical support. Apple has part-nered
with AT&T to make it the exclusive distributor of the iPhone.57
Retailers need to answer three questions about each environmental factor:
1. What new developments or changes might occur, such as new technologies
and regulations or different social factors and economic conditions?
2. What is the likelihood that these environmental changes will occur? What
key factors affect whether these changes will occur?
3. How will these changes affect each retail market, the firm, and its competitors?
Kelly Bradford’s primary concern when she did an environmental analysis was
the potential growth of Internet gift retailers such as RedEnvelope. Gifts seem

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