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Retail

  • Online legwear leader creates premium promo

    OnlyLeggings.com is borrowing a page from the playbook of Costco and Amazon to create a membership-based program to appeal to those who regularly purchase leg wear.

  • All Boxes Are Not Created Equal: Packaging Optimization Is Key to Big Supply Chain Benefits

    By Rich Thompson, managing director of supply chain & logistics solutions for the Americas at Jones Lang LaSalle

  • Obamacare glitch represents retail opportunity

    Walgreens, Walmart and Kroger were among major retailers quick to implement temporary new programs designed to help customers coping with one of the many glitches associated with the roll out of the Affordable Care Act.

  • eMeals offers retailer-specific digital menus

    Birmingham, Ala. — Online meal planning service eMeals is offering retailer-specific make-at-home menus of 500 calories or less per serving as part of its new Low Calorie Menu Plan. Consumers can specify a store such as Aldi, Kroger, Publix, Safeway, Target, Walmart or Whole Foods to take advantage of sale prices that help shape eMeals' weekly menus.

  • NPD: online a better destination for deals

    New research from NPD conducted during the 2013 holiday season suggests shoppers believe better deals are to be had online than in stores.

    That not good news for retailers under relentless pressure to generate store traffic with all manner of urgency oriented promotions such as the ubiquitous one-day sale or other types of limited duration activities.

  • Retailers appeal credit card swipe fee settlement

    Washington -- The National Retail Federation Thursday formally filed an appeal of a controversial antitrust lawsuit settlement covering credit card swipe fees, asking the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to overturn a lower court’s ruling.

  • Mainstays “made in China” product recalled

    The case for domestic sourcing received a boost this week after Walmart was required to recall 73,400 five-piece card table and chair sets sold under its Mainstays brand.


    The recall was initiated after Walmart said it received reports of 10 injuries including one instance of a finger amputation and several fingertip amputations. The product was manufactured by the Heshan Camis Industrial Co. Ltd., of Guangdong, China, according to the Consumer Products Safety Commission.

  • 2014 sees upturn in consumer confidence

    The new year is off to a solid start with an upturn in consumer confidence. After two months of decline in the wake of the partial government shutdown, the Conference Board has found that consumer confidence has bounced back to its highest level since September.

    December's index came in at 78.1, up from an upwardly revised figure of 72.0 in November and 72.4 in October.

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