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Mass Merchant

  • Market focus: Chicago’s shifting retail landscape

    Chicago is one of the nation’s leading retail markets and a new report from Mid-America Real Estate details the area’s evolving growth patterns, retailers driving development and hot properties.

  • Walmart wants you – if you’re a start-up with good ideas

    Walmart is looking for innovative technology ideas – and casting a wide net to find them.

    The discount retailer is launching a “Technology Open Call” aimed at retail technology start-ups. Walmart will consider technology spanning all of retail, including capabilities around the store shopping experience, associate experience, logistics, big data, security and/or social media.

  • Whole Foods Market reveals highlights of its new value-priced 365 chain

    Expect the 365 by Whole Foods Market store format to look much different than the traditional Whole Foods store.

    The concept, debuting in late May in Los Angeles, will feature a no-frills design, low fixtures and all-digital price tags, reported Business Insider, which was given a sneak peak of the format.

    To see renderings of 365 and learn more about its details, click here.

  • Ace nails grocery rewards

    Ace Hardware Corp. is best known for selling home improvement merchandise, but also operates a growing grocery channel.

    Using technology from ProLogic Retail Services, a provider of loyalty marketing solutions specializing in independent grocers, the retail cooperative is enabling its Ace Rewards loyalty program in co-located grocery stores. Ace operates grocery in both “store-within-a-store” configurations and adjacent storefronts with grocery partners.

  • Amazon’s expanding footprint includes new fulfillment centers, college pickup locations

    Amazon.com continues to expand its fulfillment center network along with its fleet of college pickup locations.

    The e-tail giant will open two new fulfillment centers in New Jersey, in Florence and Carteret. The new centers will create more than 2,000 new full-time jobs in the Garden State, where Amazon already employs more than 5,500 full-time workers.

  • GBT acquires key retail site in Oklahoma

    Plans are being finalized for a new 100,000-sq.-ft. retail re-development in Enid, Oklahoma, across from the city’s Oakwood Mall, according to developer GBT Realty Corp.

  • Sports Authority to liquidate

    It’s closing time for Sports Authority, which is giving up on reorganization.

    An attorney for the sporting goods retailer told the judge in bankruptcy court on Tuesday that the company is no longer pursuing reorganization and exiting Chapter 11. Instead, it will look for buyers to purchase some or all of its remaining stores.

    “It has become apparent that the debtors will not reorganize under a plan but instead will pursue a sale,” company attorney Robert Klyman said in court.

  • Sears announces another closing — but this one doesn’t involve stores

    Sears Holdings will shutter its apparel design office in New York City.

    The struggling retailer will shutter the 154-employee office in July, reported the New York Post, which cited a Department of Labor filing.

    Sears will move approximately 40 positions to an existing site in San Francisco, with the remainder positions to be cut, according to the report.

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