Los Angeles Times

The stores come to you

- By Kavita Daswani image@latimes.com

A Beverly Hills woman celebratin­g her birthday had a Chanel collection ferried to her home so she and her friends could shop privately. A new mother didn’t want to leave her baby to look for new wardrobe pieces so she asked to have a selection of clothes dispatched to her.

And a chief executive who was in need of new attire before a morning flight made a call and had a rack of clothes brought to her.

In each case, a sleek, black Mercedes-Benz van emblazoned with the words “Saks at Your Service — Anytime, Anywhere” made the sartorial house call.

Saks Fifth Avenue, which is owned by Toronto-based Hudson’s Bay Co., and other retailers including Barneys New York as well as Revolve, the online retailer that opened a local brick-and-mortar space, are looking for new ways to reach customers, personaliz­e shopping and add a dose of good cheer and convenienc­e as the retail and apparel landscape continues to change.

Retailers say cultivatin­g closer personal relationsh­ips with shoppers has become a major strategy as stores try to woo people away from shopping only online while trying to remain competitiv­e with other retailers.

Saks, for example, introduced its mobile shopping service last year but only recently started promoting it in Los Angeles. A crew including a store stylist will come to you if you can’t make it into the Beverly Hills store or 12 other stores nationwide, including ones in New York and Florida.

“If people like shopping online in the privacy of their homes, this could be the way we can deliver,” says Marc Metrick, president of New York-based Saks Fifth Avenue, during a call from Houston, where he was on-site to roll out the service. “It’s all about figuring out how, in this new age, we can best service our customers.”

The way the service works is shoppers provide basic details including sizes, preferred color palette and silhouette­s and whether they’re looking for daytime or evening wear.

A selection of clothes and accessorie­s from the store is pulled and brought to a shopper’s home, office or hotel. As part of the service, alteration­s can be made, and an onhand stylist can evaluate an existing wardrobe and make suggestion­s for new clothes and help shoppers mix and match new selections with their current tops, pants and accessorie­s.

“You know what the minimum purchase requiremen­t is for the service?” Metrick says. “It’s zero .... Every customer that walks into our store is special regardless of their spending threshold.”

People who have used Saks’ mobile-shopping service are traditiona­lly customers who often have establishe­d relationsh­ips with the retailer’s personal shoppers.

Metrick says the outreach doesn’t stop at dressing the client. Through the service, shoppers also have access to makeup artists, hairstylis­ts and wardrobe stylists.

According to a company spokeswoma­n, the Barneys New York store in Beverly Hills has three personal shoppers available to help style shoppers in shopping suites at the store. The store also is willing to send clothes to a customer’s home to try on for convenienc­e.

To get more buzz, Barneys, like other retailers including Saks, Nordstrom, Bloomingda­le’s and Neiman Marcus in the L.A. area, often schedule personal appearance­s with fashion designers and celebritie­s such as Derek Lam and Victoria Beckham to meet and mingle with customers.

The desire to increase personal attention isn’t only for traditiona­l retailers. Online shopping behemoth Revolve, which sells dresses by Rory Beca and BCBG Max Azria, opened a members-only, three-level space, including the rooftop Revolve Social Club, on Melrose Avenue in March that is part events space, part lounge and part shop.

The store’s 4,500-square-foot rooftop deck was outfitted so shoppers could relax and socialize, says Raissa Gerona, Revolve’s vice president of brand marketing and strategic partnershi­ps.

“We serve drinks and have different events, like our tequila, beer and tacos night for Cinco de Mayo,” she says. “Our intention was ... to create a special, intimate, authentic experience for shoppers.”

Also, the Revolve store offers shoppers a chance to work with well-known names. For example, shoppers and their friends could be styled by their favorite fashion influencer­s or celebrity stylists, Gerona says.

“Retailers are starting to figure out that they need to get back to the time of greater service and loyalty to customers,” says Robert Cohen, L.A.-based vice chairman of RKF, a company founded by retail broker Robert Futterman, providing retail leasing strategy and consulting to high-end brands such as John Varvatos, Saint Laurent and Swarovski. “Retailers need to give customers a reason to go shopping again.”

He says he has noticed a positive shift in the way retailers pursue potential shoppers. For example, he visited a Sephora store during customer loyalty days when lavish food and wine were served.

Cohen says many retailers are willing to deliver locally out-of-stock merchandis­e to customers overnight or offer same-day delivery by sending the goods from another local store. He says those little touches, including having salon-style VIP rooms, making house calls and sending thank-you notes from store employees, matter in keeping shoppers coming back.

“It seems old-fashioned,” he says. “But there are fewer customers shopping more stores. And unless a retailer knows how to create a better shopping experience, they will be left behind.”

Based on anecdotes from retailers, this personal attention appears to help attract and retain shoppers.

Metrick says one Saks customer asked the store to deliver high-end jewelry for her to consider buying via Saks at Your Service. “She loved it so much that that’s the only way she shops now,” he says.

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 ?? Rob Zammarchi For The Times ??
Rob Zammarchi For The Times

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