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  • NRF: Customers not buying EMV technology

    While the financial industry is supporting the use of chip-and-signature cards to meet the upcoming Oct. 1 EMV mandate, consumers are less convinced.

  • Online footwear retailer sprints toward faster delivery

    Vancouver-based specialty online footwear retailer Shoes.com is sprinting toward new levels of fast delivery.

    Shoes.com is offering home and office delivery in two hours or less on select items on its Canadian website.

    The service costs $19.95 per order and launches Thursday, Sept. 17 in Vancouver and Toronto and surrounding municipalities, with plans to expand to Calgary, Edmonton, Montreal and Ottawa by the end of 2015.

    Shoes.com will use a network of local fulfillment centers that have access to the retailer’s technology, operations and marketing.

  • Webinar on how Saks’ million-dollar energy savings started with data

    New York -- Learn how Saks Fifth Avenue used data as the foundation for its energy efficiency initiatives at a Webinar on Thursday, September 24, 2015, at 2 p.m. (EST).  

    Gary Levitan, senior manager of energy and utilities for Hudson’s Bay Company, parent of Saks Fifth Avenue, will explain how Saks used data — and how it efficiently identified and leveraged the right data — to make the business case for an efficiency initiative that drove the following benefits:   

  • Walmart strategy boosts mobile engagement

    Walmart has figured out how to tap into its shoppers’ offline habits to drive more engagement online, according to a new report from Quartz.

    Walmart has managed to do something very few retailers have accomplished: Convince millions of people its mobile app is useful enough to snag a prime spot on their phones’ home screen.

    Read more about Walmart's strategy by clicking here.

  • Levi Strauss store tests RFID

    Levi Strauss & Co. knows that the most valuable service store associates can provide is serving customers.

    The specialty apparel retailer is working with Intel on a pilot concept at one of its store in San Francisco to give associates near-real-time visibility into store inventory, reducing the time they spend managing inventory.

  • Target workers form first union in company's history

    A group of pharmacy workers within Target Corp's store in Brooklyn, N.Y., have won a vote to form a microunion, making it the first unionized store at the retailer since its inception in 1902, according to Reuters.

    Reuters was first to report on Wednesday that a group of pharmacists and pharmacy technicians won an initial ballot, 7-2, to form the union, according to a filing on the National Labor Relations Board website and union officials.

  • Macy's has a new omnichannel payment option

    Macy’s Inc. is getting in touch with a new omnichannel payment option.

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