Login  |  Register          Free Newsletter Subscription
Subscribe to TWICE Magazine
Email
Print
Reprint
Learn RSS

Georgia On BrandsMart's Mind As Chain Enters Atlanta

By Alan Wolf -- TWICE, 10/11/2004

Sidebars:
Atlanta Market Heating Up

Doraville, Ga. — After years of planning, BrandsMart USA, the Southeast Florida CE, majaps and housewares discounter, opened its first mega-store outside the Sunshine State earlier this month, setting the stage for what could become a bruising battle for market share in Atlanta (see sidebar, below).

The new, 130,000-square-foot emporium is located here, on a busy highway intersection just minutes from Buckhead, on an otherwise vacant 17-acre property that previously held a General Motors parts distribution center. BrandsMart may lease the extra acreage to restaurants to help drive traffic and further establish the zone as a destination site.

The mega-store is the first of at least three planned units that will circle the city, all to be supported by a 200,000-square-foot regional warehouse that is expandable to 1 million square feet. The second BrandsMart is scheduled to open in one year, executive VP Larry Sinewitz said.

The store retains BrandsMart's signature multitiered circular design, but with several unique changes. Most obvious is a ceiling-height conveyor belt that carries merchandise from the back room over the selling floor and down a two-story corkscrew slide to the center of the store. The concept, borrowed from the United States Postal Service, has reduced off-load time from hours to 20 minutes per trailer, Sinewitz said, and may be retrofitted into at least one of BrandsMart's five Florida stores.

Other differences include kitchen vignettes, brighter ceiling lights, a larger assortment of flat-panel and microdisplay TVs, the use of indirect lighting in the video department, and the absence of glass counters in the digital imaging section. Many of those concepts will also find their way back to Florida, Sinewitz said.

BrandsMart soft-opened the store eight days before the official grand opening, which was heralded with TV, radio and newspaper advertising, and celebrated with an industry soirée. Sinewitz had predicted some 20,000 visitors over the opening weekend, which led to record sales for the chain.

 

Atlanta Market Heating Up

Doraville, Ga. — BrandsMart USA is the latest in a trio of out-of-town regionals to extend their reach into the Atlanta market.

The Florida discounter arrived just weeks after the opening of the first of two area Fry's Electronics superstores. Although the first Fry's is situated well north and east of BrandsMart in Duluth, Ga., the chains share similar assortment, merchandising and display practices.

Both retailers will have to play catch-up to H.H. Gregg, the midtier Midwest white- and brown-goods chain, which has established itself in the Atlanta market by opening eight of 11 planned area stores over the last 18 months.

The regionals are filling a CE and majaps void left by the demise four years ago of Roberds, the Ohio-based electronics, appliance and furniture chain, which also operated eight stores in Atlanta — some now occupied by H.H. Gregg.

Apart from HiFi Buys, now run by the Tweeter Home Entertainment Group; The Home Depot, which is headquartered here; and Kmart, which may relocate here, Atlanta has no major indigenous white- and brown-goods chains, relying instead on national players like Best Buy, Sears and Circuit City to satisfy its CE and majaps needs.

Now that regional retailers are finally rushing in, could Atlanta be getting too much of a good thing? Bill Trawick, executive director of the NATM Buying Corp., which was once home to Roberds, H.H. Gregg and BrandsMart, says the jury's still out. “This market is really heating up,” he observed during BrandsMart's pre-opening party for the trade. “The question is, can it sustain all this growth?”

Michael Perlman, president/CEO of BrandsMart, believes it can. “There's plenty of business here,” he said. “We have a different customer, a different demographic. We're looking to stimulate the market, not hurt anyone.”

Email
Print
Reprint
Learn RSS

Talkback

We would love your feedback!

Post a comment

» VIEW ALL TALKBACK THREADS

Related Content

Related Content

 

By This Author

Sponsored Links





 
Advertisement
Sponsored Links

More Content

  • Blogs
  • Podcasts
  • Photos

Blogs


Sorry, no blogs are active for this topic.

» VIEW ALL BLOGS RSS

Photos

  • TWICE On The Scene: Panasonic Is Going Green
    Matsushita gave TWICE a tour of its eco-friendly house design this week that featurews a home energy-management system that advises homeowners on how and when to use household appliances.
  • China Photo Blog
    TWICE Editor Steve Smith is attending SinoCES this week in Qingdao, China. Here are some shots of what he has seen so far.
  • TWICE on the Scene: Aerosmith
    The legendary rock band Aerosmith was in New York City's Times Square last week to help launch Guitar Hero: Aerosmith. (Photos by Lisa Johnston)
Advertisements





NEWSLETTERS
Click on a title below to learn more.

TWICE Daily E-mail Update
TWICE Retail
©2008 Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Use of this Web site is subject to its Terms of Use | Privacy Policy
Please visit these other Reed Business sites