National Post (National Edition)

‘Reinvented’ Sears moves on from department store model.

- HOLLIE SHAW

TORONTO • Versace, Tom Ford and BCBG are not brands you’d typically associate with Sears Canada, but the retailer’s latest iteration, with ash wood flooring and exposed brick, doesn’t look anything like a typical Sears outlet.

“Internally, we have banned the word ‘department store’ — we have tried to abolish it, because we are not a department store anymore,” executive chairman Brandon Stranzl said as the company readied its newest store concept, a 2,100-square foot pop-up outlet set to open this weekend on Toronto’s trendy Queen Street West strip.

“The department store’s whole business model is fundamenta­lly broken,” Stranzl said. “I don’t think it will work and in 10 years, it’s probably not going to exist.”

Stranzl is comfortabl­e disavowing what once defined Sears because the Torontobas­ed company has been “reinvented,” he said, following a vast overhaul of its house merchandis­e and pricing model.

Sears Canada also spent last year reconfigur­ing its IT platform and consumerfa­cing website after Sears.ca lost ground to Amazon and other online retailers.

The pop-up store, a concept used by mass brands from Ikea to Target in order to showcase special lines and introduce merchandis­e to urban dwellers who might not otherwise visit the big stores, are also part of the veteran chain’s reinventio­n.

The merchandis­e inside the Queen Street boutique is a small-scale reflection of what consumers can now see inside Sears’ full-size Canadian locations as management attempts to reverse years of poor sales performanc­e: an off-price business intended to compete with Winners and HomeSense in apparel, footwear and home goods.

Sears has also done away with 64 largely irrelevant private-label brands such as Jessica, Nevada and Arnold Palmer and patterned its private-label strategy in the vein of Uniqlo or Japanese retailer Muji, Stranzl said — under the umbrella of a single Sears brand for apparel, footwear and home goods. Kenmore, the company’s appliance brand, is the only non-Sears house label that remains, because it still has some traction with consumers.

How the strategy will fare with consumers or whether shoppers will even realize or care that the changes have happened is another matter, analysts say.

In its third quarter, Sears’ same-store sales fell 7.1 per cent year-over-year, and the company has been exiting unproducti­ve stores and subleasing the square footage of others, though if the urban strategy catches on in Toronto the company could open more small locations with non-traditiona­l assortment­s.

“It’s interestin­g that Sears is trying, but there are issues with both parts of the strategy,” said David Gray, principal at Vancouver-based retail consultanc­y DIG360. “First, the Sears brand has baggage. Why would they use that brand to create affinity with consumers when they are doing something this radical?”

And refashioni­ng onethird or more of Sears Canada’s business to offer flash deals on designer goods priced at 30 to 60 per cent off regular prices could work only if the company had enough time and money to invest in the concept and give consumers a chance to discover it, Gray said.

Winners and its affiliate chains HomeSense and Marshalls already have a highly successful and entrenched position in Canada.

The off-price channel in itself could be shaky: Hudson’s Bay reported this week that same-store sales fell 5.9 per cent in the fourth quarter at its off-price division.

Sears Canada may not have the time required to invest in waiting for its changes to get traction, industry analysts have said, given the broader landscape for department stores and the retailer’s links to troubled Sears Holdings in the U.S., which voiced “substantia­l doubt” in its annual report last month that it would be able to continue as a going concern over time.

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