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OPERATIONS / SUPPLY CHAIN

  • Lowe’s names SVP customer experience design

    Mooresville, N.C. -- Lowe’s announced that Lara Lee will join the company as SVP customer experience design, effective Feb. 25. She will report to Robert J. (Bob) Gfeller, customer experience design executive.
     
    Lee joined Lowe’s from global design and innovation firm Continuum, where she served as chief innovation and operating officer.

    Lee will be responsible for translating business strategies into integrated, multichannel experiences that deliver value to home improvement consumers.

     

  • Foot Locker names Build-A-Bear Workshop chief to board

    New York -- Foot Locker announced Wednesday that it has appointed Maxine Clarke, recently retired Build-A-Bear Workshop CEO, as a member of its board of directors.

    Clark has also served as president of Payless ShoeSource, and spent 19 years as an executive with May Department Stores Co.

     

  • Former Wal-Mart chief named to CarCharging board

    Miami Beach, Fla. -- Electric vehicle charging company Car Charging Group said Wednesday that former Wal-Mart Stores president and CEO Bill Fields has been appointed to its board of directors.

    Retail veteran Fields has also led Blockbuster Entertainment Group as its chairman and CEO and also served in the same capacity at Hudson’s Bay Co.

     

  • It's Official: OfficeMax and Office Depot to merge

    New York -- OfficeMax Inc. and Office Depot have formally announced an agreement under which the two companies would combine in an all-stock merger that would transform the office supply sector of retail. The merger, which creates a single company with nearly $18 billion in revenue, was unanimously approved by the board of directors of both chains.

  • Tennessee sex-discrimination claim against Wal-Mart dismissed

    Nashville -- A federal judge in Nashville said Wednesday that Wal-Mart Stores’ female employees in Tennessee and four other southern states cannot pursue sex-discrimination claims against Wal-Mart through a class action lawsuit. The class action is denied because it was filed too late.

    According to U.S. District Judge Aleta Trauger, the class claims are “time-barred,” citing a 1988 decision by the federal appeals court in Cincinnati in a separate case, known as Andrews v. Orr, which blocks the women from joining a new class action.

  • Best Buy to make holiday price-matching permanent year round

    New York -- Best Buy Co. is making its holiday price-matching guarantee a year-round program. Taking aim against the increasingly popular practice of “showrooming,” the consumer electronics chain will match online prices starting March 3.

    Best Buy’s permanent price match has been expanded to cover almost all categories of merchandise. It does not cover phones purchased under contract.

    Best Buy will also decrease its merchandise return policy from 30 days to 15 days

     

  • Stater Bros. names senior operations executive

    San Bernardino, Calif. -- Stater Bros. announced Monday that it has promoted Dan Meyer to EVP retail operations, charging him with oversight of retail operations for all 167 Stater Bros. supermarkets and the corporate training center.

    A 42-year veteran of the company, Meyer most recently served as SVP retail operations.

     

  • Report: C-store saw traffic bumps in 2012

    Houston -- A report released Tuesday by research company NPD Group found that the convenience store sector experienced marked gains last year, as visits increased 4.6% in the fourth quarter and grew an average of 3.7% per month for 2012.

    Traffic gains were spread among all type of c-stores, according to NPD’s Convenience Store Monitor, which tracks the consumer purchasing behavior of more than 51,000 convenience store shoppers in the U.S.  

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