The Citizen (KZN)

Pick n Pay’s joins the credit offer pack

AIMS FOR MORE CUSTOMERS AND HIGHER SPENDING

-

Retail giant joins Woolworths and others in allowing shoppers to buy groceries more effortless­ly – and spend more.

Pick n Pay is putting up a fight in SA’s competitiv­e retail industry by offering clients the option of purchasing groceries on credit. The grocery retailer will join Woolworths in offering credit facilities that would be accessed by shoppers using a Smart Shopper card.

The Smart Shopper loyalty programme, launched in 2011, has over seven million members and has played a key role in helping to lift Pick n Pay’s bottom line, according to the retailer’s 2017 annual report. It also means Pick n Pay has a wide pool of credit shoppers to select.

The retailer’s pulling out the stops to lure shoppers into stores by offering them favourable credit terms. Shoppers will be offered up to 55 days’ interest-free credit, budget payment options for big-ticket items and active users will be charged monthly store account fees of R10.

“The high cost of credit is a significan­t reason why customers have less disposable income for their grocery shop. Hidden costs such as initiation fees, administra­tion fees, mandatory insurance fees and penalty fees exacerbate the cost of credit,” says Pick n Pay deputy CEO Richard van Rensburg.

Pick n Pay won’t earn income from the credit-granting process, as “we have negotiated a great offer from the credit industry for our customers”.

It anticipate­s that offering credit will drive more feet in stores and an increase in spending by shoppers.

Pick n Pay is in the middle of a turnaround strategy that plans to return the retailer to its former glory after years of neglecting investment­s in stores and losing market share to rivals Checkers, Shoprite and Woolworths.

Its turnaround, which still has around two to three years to go, has focused on retail basics such as improving customer service, cutting costs, revamping stores and lowering prices.

Its foray into store accounts comes at a time when credit providers are batting to collect payments from consumers who remain increasing­ly hard-pressed due to rising living costs and the worrying state of the economy.

Pick n Pay has teamed up with credit provider RCS for the store accounts. It said RCS would be taking all the lending risk as it will be vetting the creditwort­hiness of shoppers, granting credit facilities and taking on potential bad debts.

Pick n Pay also enters a market fraught with regulatory requiremen­ts, with the National Credit Regulator upping the ante on sanctionin­g those that recklessly offer credit to consumers.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa