Wal-Mart spiffs up in bid to broaden appeal
Massive remodel effort aims to get people to buy more than basics
Interactive |
Wal-Mart spiffs up Compare stores old, new and remodeled as Wal-Mart sets sights on attracting shoppers to more of the store. |
ConsumerMan |
Send Herb Weisbaum an e-mail and he may answer your issue in his upcoming column on msnbc.com. Send an e-mail | ConsumerMan home |
The Bentonville, Ark.-based retailing giant is in the midst of an ambitious plan to spiff up a whopping 1,800 stores over an 18-month period. The project, which is scheduled to be completed by October, is in addition to another 322 full store remodels — slightly more than the typical 300 — that the company completed last year.
The move comes as the nation's biggest retailer is facing sluggish sales growth and other growing pains, prompting the need for change.
Wal-Mart said U.S. sales for the five weeks ended Feb. 2 grew 2.2 percent on a same-store basis, higher than the company's conservative estimates but still lackluster when compared to previous years.
In the December period, an all-important season for retailers, the company reported a meager 1.6 percent gain, while in November, same-store sales actually dipped slightly. Same-store sales, or sales open at least one year, are considered a crucial measure of chain-store health.
The company also is facing a significant criticism over its treatment of workers and other corporate practices and recently weathered a shakeup in its marketing department.
For much of its history, Wal-Mart thrived on the model of offering budget-conscious shoppers, often in rural areas, a huge selection of products at bargain-basement prices, with little thought to frills such as fancy floors or attractive dressing rooms.
But in recent years the company has expanded further into suburban and even urban markets and targeted more middle-income customers to fuel growth.
Retail consultant Howard Davidowitz said many of those coveted middle-income shoppers have been willing to come to Wal-Mart for bargains on staples like toilet paper or socks. But, turned off by things like cluttered aisles and outdated décor, they are unlikely to cross the aisle and consider buying a fancy jacket, piece of jewelry or set of sheets.
“What Wal-Mart has to do is sell those middle-income customers more,” he said.
Wal-Mart says its remodel strategy is aimed at getting customers to shop in other areas of the store they may have previously ignored.
Still, the retailer also takes great pains to note that its overall strategy is to remain a discounter — albeit one whose stores are tailored to better appeal to their surrounding demographic.
“This is not about moving Wal-Mart to go more upscale,” spokeswoman Melissa O’Brien said of the company’s broader strategy. “It’s about where Wal-Mart’s going to be a better store of the community for each community we serve.”
Davidowitz believes the company is right to undertake an ambitious remodel effort, noting that many of the stores appear rundown in comparison to competitors such as Target. Still, he expects it to be some time before the remodels pay off.
“They’ve got a lot to do,” he said. “I think at the end they’ll be better.”
O’Brien, the Wal-Mart spokeswoman, said it’s too early to say whether the remodels are providing a financial boost, but she said anecdotal evidence shows customers are responding well.
The first thing a visitor notices upon entering a fully remodeled giant Supercenter in Yakima, Wash., is the floor. The entryway carpeting, which can quickly grow dingy amidst heavy foot traffic, has been replaced by faux slate tiles, which match the other earth tones that have supplanted the grays, blues and reds more commonly associated with a Wal-Mart.
Click for related content |
The discounter also has scaled back the cluttered, dated signs, instead relying mainly on big, simple posters to direct shoppers to different departments in the store, which is the size of more than four football fields. In many places, displays have been lowered, or walls and barriers removed completely, to allow people to see around the stores more easily and check out things like strollers or furniture.
The company also has widened some aisles to allow shoppers to pass through more easily.
Departments such as apparel and accessories now have faux hardwood floors, to better distinguish them from the parts of the store where people buy things like detergent. The dressing rooms have been given a substantial makeover, and even the shoe area has more seating and mirrors.
In the pharmacy, Wal-Mart has lowered counters and removed walls so people can see and interact with the pharmacist.
The electronics department also has been spiffed up, and now boasts a wall of higher-end televisions as part of the company’s effort to sell more electronic gear.
There are other, smaller changes as well. In stores such as Yakima that sell guns, the display case has been upgraded to a wood finish. Also, many restrooms have been given a touch-up.
- Discuss Story On Newsvine
- Rate Story:
View popularLowHigh - Instant Message
MORE FROM CONSUMER NEWS |
| Add Consumer News headlines to your news reader: |



