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Neiman Marcus

  • Executive shake-up at Abercrombie & Fitch; suspends search for CEO

    There’s been a top-level shakeup at Abercrombie & Fitch Co., with the company announcing a big promotion for one executive and the departure of another.

    The retailer elevated the head of its Hollister brand, Fran Horowitz, to the newly created role of president and chief merchandising officer with responsibility for all brands. It also announced the departure of Christos Angelides, who has served as president of the Abercrombie brand since October 2014. And it said that it has suspended its active hunt for a CEO.

  • Neiman Marcus exec moving to Tuesday Morning

    On the heels of naming a new CEO, Tuesday Morning Corp. has appointed a new finance chief as well.

    The company named Stacie Shirley as executive VP, CFO and treasurer, effective January 18, 2016. Most recently, she served as senior VP - finance and treasurer of the Neiman Marcus Group. She started at Neiman Marcus in 2001.

    Prior to Neiman Marcus, Shirley served in various positions with CompUSA.

    Tuesday Morning recently names a former board member, Steve Becker, as its new CEO.

  • Study: Omnichannel experience has a ways to go

    Retailers need to improve several aspects of their omnichannel customer engagement strategies if they want to truly satisfy customers.

  • Iconic Fifth Avenue women’s store to create greater sales space

    One of New York City’s most iconic luxury apparel stores is getting bigger.

    Bergdorf Goodman will relocate its executive offices and other non-sales related functions to 4 West 58th Street, adjacent to its iconic Fifth Avenue location. The move will create an additional 25,000 sq. ft. of retail space in the retailer’s flagship, including the entire 8th and 9th floors.

  • Neiman Marcus hit by department store slump

    The strong dollar’s influence on tourism and store traffic led the Neiman Marcus Group to report a decline in same-store sales for the first time in six years.

  • Tech Bytes: Three Lessons from Cyber Week Site Fails

    Looking back on the 2015 edition of Cyber Week, we can reminisce on big traffic, big sales … and big fails?

    Several high-profile site outages hit major retailers during a period of historically heavy online shopping. While nobody would call these positive events, they do offer retailers a few valuable lessons about the need to stay one step ahead of digital customer demand.

    Not Too Big to Fail

  • Simon center and Neiman Marcus team up on ‘fantasy gifts’ displays

    Roosevelt Field in Garden City, New York, is offering shoppers an up-close look at some unusual and pricey holiday gift suggestions.

    The center, owned by Simon, has teamed up with Neiman Marcus for the first ever Neiman Marcus' 2015 Fantasy Gifts public installation.

  • Retailers give thanks for Cyber Week

    Despite a few hiccups with site availability, Cyber Week 2015 on the whole was a huge success for the retail industry and bodes well for the remainder of the holiday season.

    According to data from Adobe, from Thanksgiving Day through Cyber Monday, consumers spent $11 billion online. This marked a 15% increase from Cyber Week in 2014 and represented 30% of a total $39.5 billion in November online sales. Adobe predicts consumers will spend $1 billion a day online every day from Dec. 1- Dec. 18.

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