Big box woes end at home
Red-hot housing market helping to offset online shopping at home improvement stores
TORONTO — Big box retailers’ vast merchandise selection has been challenged for years by the endless availability of goods sold online, but thanks to Canada’s redhot housing market, one sector has remained relatively immune to that trend: Home improvement.
The country’s largest retailer in the category, Home Depot Canada, has seen 23 consecutive quarters of same-store sales growth while the overall category has remained robust in the last year, with sales at retailers of building materials, outdoor and garden supplies jumping 11.8 per cent for the year ending April 30, according to Statistics Canada.
“When Canadians stay in a home or when the value of a home appreciates, we do see greater (customer) spending on renovation,” said Jeff Kinnaird, president of Home Depot Canada, which has 182 stores and an estimated $7.7 billion in annual sales.
“And staying on trend has shortened the cycle of renovation.”
Home Depot is keen to find new avenues of growth in the face of heightened competition from rival Lowe’s, which completed its purchase of No. 2 player Rona last year.
Home Depot and Lowe’s are both embracing so-called omnichannel strategies, said Michael McLarney, managing director of the North American Retail Hardware Association’s Canadian division, and president of the Toronto-based industry publication Hardlines, a term that refers to the blending of online and in-store modes of shopping.
“Home improvement retailers are somewhat sheltered from Internet sales, but not completely protected, by virtue of the fact that they sell a lot of high ticket, largesized items that require a lot of expertise to purchase and use,” he said.
“Despite people’s best efforts to do research, that level of expertise is not always easily available on the Internet — it comes from the store.”
While Lowe’s and Home Depot aggressively court the contractor market, logistics still limit the number of online transactions, McLarney added.
“Home Depot and Lowe’s are both busy trying to figure out how to service the contractor customers and get those products right to the job site. A lot of them can be unwieldy to ship.”
Home Depot, which opened in Canada in 1984, has a fairly saturated store network in the U.S. and Canada, where it has no current plans to build more stores.
To that end, Home Depot Canada has added 2 million new square feet of supply chain space over the last three years and optimized its warehousing and delivery capabilities, Kinnaird said.
“We transformed our supply chain so that we can bring greater value to our customers, and we continue to expand the supply chain for e-commerce. We are really working to connect our stores to our website and to connect our website to our stores.”
Sylvain Prud’homme, president of Lowe’s Canada, said figuring out how to better serve customers is critical in the digital era, because customers who are price-driven are not particularly loyal.
“The average consumer in our sector will shop at four different (home improvement) stores in one year,” Prud’homme said at a Retail Council of Canada convention last month. “The Internet gives them the ability to pick and choose the experience they need.”
Lowe’s Canada has estimated annual sales of $6.9 billion and more than 600 stores across Canada, including 54 big box locations.
It made a wise move in hiring the Quebec-born Prud’homme in 2013, said Maureen Atkinson, a retail consultant at J.C. Williams Group, given that the company’s end game was to acquire Quebecbased Rona, which came to fruition in 2016.
“They did what Target didn’t do. They recognized that maybe Canada was a country that they didn’t know very well and put in someone at the helm who wasn’t just dropped in from head office.”