Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

QVC’s parent company seeks new customers to boost sales

- Ellie Silverman

Despite a tough quarter, QVC’s parent company continues trying to attract “new generation­s of customers” with investment­s in platforms beyond television along with unique products and storytelli­ng, Qurate Retail Group CEO Michael George told analysts on a Thursday conference call.

The company has said its core customer base is women between the ages of 35 and 64. And Mr. George touted certain improvemen­ts to analysts, such as a digital first launch of an exclusive fashion collection with QVC that attracted 80% of its new customers from the 25- to 44- year- old demographi­c.

Still, Qurate struggled in the second quarter of this year, or the three months ending June 30, as the company’s total revenues fell 4% to $ 3.1 billion.

Qurate Retail Group acquired QVC’s main rival, St. Petersburg, Fla.- based Home Shopping Network in 2017, and is looking for ways to bring the two together. Revenues from QVC and HSN, which the company calls QxH, fell 1% to $ 19 billion. QVC Internatio­nal revenue decreased 2% to $ 640 million.

The company bought Seattlebas­ed Zulily in 2015 to reach younger women, but the unit recently laid off an undisclose­d number of employees amid announceme­nts of an internal restructur­ing. Zulily’s revenue plummeted 13% to $ 363 million in the quarter, the company reported.

“I think it’s still a little bit unclear what really drove the deteriorat­ion over the last, I would say, two or three quarters in the Zulily business,” Oliver Wintermant­el, an analyst with Evercore ISI, said on the call, while asking the management how they plan to fix it.

Mr. George replied that the company needs to find “more effective forms of marketing” beyond Facebook and must improve the customer experience with “freshness” of products and the website.

E- commerce revenue represente­d more than 55% of combined QVC and HSN sales, showing executives that the Qurate customer is coming to the brand across channels. Mr. George said they are rebuilding the digital options “to be more mobile- friendly,” including launching a new checkout platform.

“We can present her a lot of great video content on the go,” he told analysts, referring to the company’s typical customer. “When she’s standing in the Starbucks line,” he said, the customer can watch live programmin­g.

At the same time, QVC2 and QVC3 channels saw 8 million additional homes and HSN reached 19 million more homes as of June 30, Mr. George said.

“While TV viewership doesn’t correlate directly with sales, we do see it as a positive indicator of overall engagement with our brands, especially at a time when TV viewership more broadly is declining,” Mr. George said.

 ?? Philadelph­ia Inquirer ?? QVC’s logo outside its West Chester, Pa., studios.
Philadelph­ia Inquirer QVC’s logo outside its West Chester, Pa., studios.

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