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RadioShack To Revamp Stores, Offer Services

By Alan Wolf -- TWICE, 9/20/2004

Sidebars:
Wal-Mart, Sears Explain Stalled Sales

FORT WORTH, TEXAS — RadioShack will embark on an ambitious three-year strategic growth plan beginning in 2005 that's designed to boost sales and earnings by revitalizing its stores, expanding its international presence, getting an early lead on new technologies, and selling products and services to other retailers and distributors.

“Over the past couple of years we have focused on the fundamentals of our business by strengthening our supply chain, divesting ourselves of non-core businesses, and becoming a more disciplined organization,” said chairman/CEO Len Roberts. “We are now well-positioned to implement a longer-term growth plan that we believe will bring increases in both our top line and bottom line.”

On the store front, RadioShack plans to “significantly accelerate” the rollout of its Concept 3 retail store format, currently found in 400 of the chain's more than 5,000 company-owned locations (see TWICE, Jan. 9, 2003, p. 78). The new store environment, which features wider aisles, more open space and a central checkout counter, will be accompanied by a merchandise re-assortment that emphasizes the chain's seven core categories — wireless; accessories; power; modern home (A/V, home networking and satellite TV); personal electronics; technical; and services. The assortment will also be tailored to match the needs of local markets.

Roberts, speaking at a Goldman Sachs retailing conference, said the chain would reduce its exposure in other categories by selling those ancillary products online and in select stores, or by eliminating them from the mix completely.

In addition, regional employees, from district and store managers to sales associates, will be retrained based on best practices, and new store processes will be deployed to further ensure a “superior customer shopping experience,” the company said.

RadioShack wouldn't disclose a timetable for the Concept 3 rollout, although Roberts indicated that another 150 stores would be upgraded by the end of the year.

Internationally, the company plans to expand its retail base in Mexico, where it currently operates 88 stores through a joint venture with Mexican merchant Gigante. Roberts said Mexico represents a “growth opportunity,” as demonstrated by the same-store sales gains of its south-of-the-border units, which are outpacing those of their U.S. counterparts. The proximity of RadioShack's Fort Worth, Texas, headquarters to Mexico offers an added advantage, he said.

Ongoing litigation over the sale of its Canadian licensee, InterTAN, to Circuit City in May precluded RadioShack from addressing its plans for Canada.

On the product front, RadioShack wants to accelerate the adoption rates of new technologies early in their life cycles through strategic vendor alliances, much as it did for personal computers and CDMA wireless technology. In exchange for access to its 7,000 stores and 40,000 employees, the retailer hopes to reap certain exclusivity, intellectual property or licensing rights and the ability to benefit from sales through the original equipment manufacturer, Roberts said. One current example is the company's interchangeable itips power connectors, developed jointly with Mobile Electronics for RadioShack's iGo line of power adapters, which will be merchandised with Motorola handsets.

RadioShack also hopes to leverage its product development and global procurement expertise through sales of its proprietary products and brands — such as its LifeWise personal care line and ZipZaps RC toys — to distributors and non-competitive retailers.

Taking the B-to-B concept further, RadioShack will also offer a full compliment of retail services including global sourcing, distribution, logistics, replenishment, repair and even complete turnkey retail operations. The company is already providing some of those services to other businesses, including wireless handset repair out of its Fort Worth repair center and a 10-mall test of Sprint kiosks around the country.

Roberts said the repair operation, which will expand to two additional facilities by year's end, will yield more than $10 million in operating profits this year.

He added that the RadioShack-operated kiosks are capturing new, higher-end customers for Sprint, and that both companies are sharing in the capital expenditures and income. Opportunities exist for other products to be sold through kiosks, he said, and for the kiosks to be placed in other retail stores.

The chain will begin to see the fruits of its three-year plan in 2005, when sales are projected to grow at a 4-percent to 6-percent rate, and earnings per share are expected to grow 19 percent to 21 percent, the company said.

 

Wal-Mart, Sears Explain Stalled Sales

NEW YORK — Among other merchants presenting at this month's Goldman Sachs retailing conference, here, where RadioShack unveiled its three-year strategic plan to analysts, were chain store giants Wal-Mart and Sears.

Wal-Mart's president and CEO H. Lee Scott, Jr. said his company's flat August sales and lowered third-quarter outlook are attributable to rising fuel costs and political uncertainty. Some 20 percent of the chain's customer base is comprised of consumers who live paycheck to paycheck, he noted, and gasoline purchases account for a considerable chunk of their income.

Nevertheless, Wal-Mart is still expecting a strong fourth quarter, he said, and will continue to focus on wringing costs out of the system, particularly in inventory management where the company can save on warehousing and labor.

Glenn Richter, chief financial officer of Sears, said store disruptions from department resets and poor appliance sales led to disappointing spring and summer results. Majaps were impacted by unseasonably cool, wet weather, which slashed Sears' room air sales by half, as well as product shortages stemming from a global run on stainless steel.

Looking ahead, Richter said Sears will enjoy a “broader, richer pipeline” of new Kenmore products this fall, and is also testing a “mega store” appliance approach in higher-demographic markets and upper-end stores. Targeted departments have a larger footprint, an enhanced visual merchandising presentation and a broader assortment, he said.

In CE, Richter described the current reset of its electronics departments, to be completed by month's end, as “fairly significant,” and involving new layouts, signage and product adjacencies. Going forward, Sears will focus on the key categories of video, digital imaging and DVD and gaming software, and will increase its assortment of take-with product to drive growth and transactions.

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