The Chronicle Herald (Metro)

Ikea assembles e-commerce investment

Some stores will be modified for distributi­on role

- ANNA RINGSTROM

STOCKHOLM — Ikea retailer Ingka Group is spending three billion euros through 2023 on new and existing stores, much of it to modify its trademark out-of-town outlets so they can double up as e-commerce distributi­on centres.

Tolga Oncu, retail manager at the group that owns most Ikea stores worldwide, told Reuters the money would be spent across all regions, though about a third is earmarked for London, a test bed for new store formats and logistics setups.

“Most of it will be in our existing stores, since we talk about transformi­ng, redesignin­g the purpose of the square metres,” Oncu said in an interview.

In the past few years, Ingka has adapted to the rise in online shopping by developing smaller stores, revamping its website and rolling out a new app, as well as digital services such as remote planning tools.

“We feel we have a catch-up to do on the back end of our operation (and) we have realized that by including stores in our last mile and fulfilment design network we can create a win-win situation,” Oncu said.

Shipping online purchases from the warehouse sections of nearby out-of-town stores will mean faster and cheaper deliveries, with lower emissions, than by shipping from a few logistics centres, he said.

“Instead of building central warehouse capacities for online buys, why don’t we send it from our Ikea stores?”

Automating existing outof-town stores’ warehouse sections will account for a lot of the investment­s, Oncu added.

The plan comes as many businesses turn cautious in the face of geopolitic­al tensions, high inflation and worsening consumer confidence. But Oncu said that for Ikea, which is funded by its owner foundation­s, the timing couldn’t be better.

“I agree the outlook (for consumer spending overall) looks a bit gloomy,” he said.

“That means value for money and time, affordable solutions that are of good quality, function and design, and sustainabl­e will increase in demand.”

During the pandemic, Ikea has seen record demand for its cut-price home furnishing­s as people spent more time at home.

Over the past three fiscal years, Ingka has invested around 2.1 billion euros in new and existing stores in its 32 markets.

The latest spending will also focus on new traditiona­l “blue-box stores” in Romania, China and India, and new city stores, as well as planning studios, in Canada, Denmark, Italy, India, the United States and other countries.

 ?? REUTERS FILE ?? A woman shops at an Ikea store in Mumbai, India.
REUTERS FILE A woman shops at an Ikea store in Mumbai, India.

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