Skip to main content

Sales & Marketing

  • Dolce & Gabbana to open flagship in SoHo

    New York -- Dolce & Gabbana will open a flagship store in the 15,000-sq.-ft. 155 Mercer Street building in the SoHo area of New York City.

    Thor Equities leased the entire building to the Italian luxury fashion house, which plans to re-create the original brownstone façade.

    Originally built in 1855 as Firemen’s Hall, the historical property was most recently home to dance performance venue the Joyce Theater. The four-level building includes 50 ft. of frontage on Mercer Street.
     

  • Shopping Cart Abandonment: Scourge of Online Retail Sales

    By Steve Weber, nChannel

    Shopping cart abandonment is a problem that costs retailers nearly $20 billion each year, according to a study by SurePayroll. If you’re putting effort into attracting customers and enticing them with products they’d like to buy, only to have them stop short of the finish line, you’re leaving money and opportunities for repeat business on the table.

  • New Shoes.com takes aim at Amazon, Foot Locker

    The new owner of Shoes.com is not wasting any time in its quest to compete in a market dominated by Amazon and Foot Locker.

    Shoeme, the parent company of OnlineShoes.com and Shoeme.ca, has formally re-launched Shoes.com after buying the website in December with a refreshed design and expanded product offering, now with more than 450 brands.

  • Coach to open Paris flagship

    New York -- Coach announced it will open its first Paris flagship, timed to coincide with the brand’s 75th anniversary. The store, located on the famed Rue Saint-Honoré, is expected to open this fall.

  • Tech Guest Viewpoint: How to Drive Grocery Sales in a Consumer World

    By Kent Smith, Galleria RTS

    Well-stocked shelves and falling sales is a dilemma faced by many retailers today. New technology advancements such as mobile discount apps are the latest threat to grocery retail sales. Many people simply complete their grocery shopping from the convenience of their own home.

    Retailers are finding it hard enough to survive, let alone thrive with channel and segment blurring making it a consumer world. The message is simple, have what you want, when you want it and at the price you want to pay.

  • Michaels' next project: art teacher

    Michaels is hoping to turn wanna-be crafters into bonafide artists with its new digital education partnership.

    The arts and crafts retailer has joined with craft instruction website Creativebug to offer online arts and crafts classes taught by top instructors and industry experts through an exclusive partnership with Michaels.

  • New stores boost Q2 profit at Village Super Market

    Springfield, N.J. – The impact of two replacement stores and a same-store sales increase of 2.5% helped boost net income at Village Super Market Inc. 146% to $6.6 million in the second quarter of fiscal 2015, from $2.8 million in the same quarter a year earlier. Sales rose 5% to $411.2 million, from $392.24 million.

    Village Super Market expects same store sales in fiscal 2015 to range from a 1.5% to 2.5% increase.
     

  • Ascena Retail misses Street in Q2

    Mahwah, N.J. – Higher selling, general and administrative (SG&A) expenses, including asset impairment charges primarily related to lower-than-expected operating performance at the struggling Justice banner, cut into profits at Ascena Retail Group Inc. during the second quarter of fiscal 2015.

    Ascena, the operator of Justice, as well as stores under the Lane Bryant, Cacique, Maurices, Dressbarn, and Catherines banners, said combined same store sales declined 2% during the quarter, ended Jan. 25, due to sluggish sales at Justice.

X
This ad will auto-close in 10 seconds