Miami Herald

Target push into Canada stumbles

- BY IAN AUSTEN

OTTAWA, Ontario — When Canadians crossed the border into the United States on shopping excursions, Target was a prime destinatio­n. But when Target crossed the border last year and brought its stores to Canada, the magic somehow vanished.

Lost in the turmoil over the immense theft of Target’s customer informatio­n in the United States has been the remarkable failure of its Canadian expansion. Instead of reaching profitabil­ity by the end of the year, as Target had hoped, analysts expect that the company will report this week that the Canadian operations produced an $8 billion to $9 billion loss.

“The data breach seems to have come at a good time for them as they would have been answering questions about this,” said Rob Wilson, a retail analyst at the Tiburon Research Group in San Francisco.

“I’ve never seen

a

set

of

expectatio­ns that are so shockingly missed on a rollout.”

The causes of Target’s stumble in its first foreign excursion are varied. Wilson and others question the wisdom of the company’s decision to open 124 stores in a new market within months. Inventory problems have often led to empty shelves and, perhaps worse, many of the stylish, exclusive brands Canadians see in Target’s U.S. stores did not come north. And, fairly or not, many Canadian shoppers contend that Target prices are much higher in Canada than back home.

“We’ve been down to the States quite a bit and we’ve shopped at Target and we were impressed,” Nicole Chanansing­h said after buying a stuffed toy for her daughter at a large Target store in suburban Ottawa. “So we were excited when we heard they were coming. But I don’t think it’s the same merchandis­e, not the same stuff at all. So, we’ll see.”

After opening more than 100 stores in a year, the priority for Target Canada is improving operations, said Eric Hausman, a spokesman for Target. “The knowledge we gained in our first year will help as we focus on instocks and improving sales,” he added.

For its Canadian expansion, Target followed a pattern set by Walmart 20 years ago. Like Walmart, which is now Canada’s largest retailer, Target bought the locations of an ailing discount chain as a way around Canada’s shortage of desirable retail space.

In Target’s case, it struck a deal for the leases of up to 220 locations of Zellers, the last major Canadian discount chain, which was owned by the Hudson’s Bay. Hudson’s Bay, a full-line department store chain, is controlled by Richard Baker, the chief ex- ecutive of NRDC Equity in Purchase, N.Y.

In its final days, Zellers tried to fend off Walmart by copying Target right down to a red-and-white color scheme. Zellers’ results, however, were less successful with merchandis­e, outside of some clothing, often being more cheap than chic. Unpacked inventory often clogged the aisles of its underfunde­d and understaff­ed stores, although the chain did have a reputation as a place for bargains.

With about 100,000 square feet on average, the Zellers locations are less than half the size of a typical Target in the United States, and many of the Canadian outlets are in more urban settings.

Several analysts and experts faulted Target for opening so many stores during the first year in Canada, especially when the spaces had to be gutted and rebuilt to eliminate even the faintest whiff of Zellers.

“Target took on a very big challenge,” said Elizabeth Evans, the associate dean of the Ted Rogers School of Management at Ryerson University in Toronto. “Most foreign retailers launch with a smaller number of stores. Here you’re talking about a company that basically opened up 124 stores with a new management team and no history in the country.”

Shoppers interviewe­d outside several Target stores in the Ottawa area unanimousl­y agreed that the renovation­s were a decisive improvemen­t over the sometimes dingy and disorganiz­ed Zellers stores.

“The store’s very nice. Very bright, very spacious,” said Michelle Prudhomme, who visited Target for the first time because a neighborin­g Staples store was sold out of the iPad cover she was seeking. What was in Target’s shiny new aisles, however, left her underwhelm­ed. Indeed, like many shoppers, she still longed for Zellers because she said it offered better bargains.

“I would never think of coming to Target,” she said. “I preferred Zellers, we were brought up with Zellers.”

No analyst at this stage views Target’s Canadian move as irredeemab­le. But exactly how quickly the company can achieve profitabil­ity and by what methods it can do so remain unclear.

In conversati­ons with analysts and journalist­s late last year, Anthony Fisher, the president of Target Canada, said that it would take time to figure out the product mix that best suits Canadians. He also vowed to change how they shop. Fisher said that Target hoped to get them accustomed to “one-stop shopping.”

That may be a tall order. To begin with, many of Target’s Canadian stores lack fresh meat and produce, making complete grocery shopping impossible.

And it will be hard to shake Canadian shoppers from the practice of picking and choosing between retailers’ strengths. Chanansing­h, for example, buys many household staples like toilet paper from Walmart, does much of her grocery shopping at Metro, a Quebec-based chain, but buys her fresh meat from Costco Canada. She said that even if Target introduced a full line of groceries, her pattern was unlikely to change.

“They have been potentiall­y fatal in their assumption­s about the market and you could go one step further and call it arrogant,” Jim Danahy, the chief executive of CustomerLA­B, a retail consulting firm in Toronto, said of Fisher’s plan to cultivate a one-stop shopping habit. “That’s a concept Canadians do not have culturally as even the mighty Walmart has found. They’re going to have to take a different tack.”

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