Upscale German women’s fashion brand Marc Cain opened a flagship location last week at CF Toronto Eaton Centre. The brand entered the Canadian market in late 2015, and already operates five Canadian stores.
The 2,033 square foot CF Toronto Eaton Centre store is located on the mall’s ‘Level 3’, which includes popular retailers such as Harry Rosen, Ted Baker and an Apple Store. The same mall level features pedway access to Hudson’s Bay/Saks Fifth Avenue to the south, and this fall Nordstrom will open at the north end of the downtown Toronto mall. Marc Cain’s new store features high-gloss finishes with metallic shimmering walls, deep-pile fitted carpets, and large changing rooms.
“We are excited about the launch and rapid expansion of Marc Cain in the Canadian landscape,” says Stephen Belfer, Managing Director for Marc Cain Canada. “We are increasingly seeing a European flair in the clothing choices of Canadian women and thought it was the perfect time to introduce this brand to the market.”
The new store features the company’s core label Marc Cain Collection, as well as the more casual Marc Cain Sport and classic Marc Cain Essentials.
Founded in Bodelshausen, Germany in 1973, Marc Cain operates 204 stores as well as 280 shop-in-stores, 307 ‘custody customers’ and another 1,053 upmarket specialist retail stores in 59 countries. Brokerage Oberfeld Snowcap represents Marc Cain in Canada and according to its website, Marc Cain seeks retail space in enclosed malls, outlets/power and lifestyle centres, and urban streetfronts. Stores will ideally be in the 1,500 square foot to 1,800 square foot range, according to Oberfeld Snowcap.
Canadian retailers and other businesses can now inexpensively and easily create high quality marketing videos with an innovative new platform. This could in effect ‘level the playing field’ for retail marketing, as video has traditionally been expensive to produce and a challenge to create. A company called Magisto created a platform to simplify the video creation process, which is timely, considering that studies show video to be one of the most effective marketing tools available. Some are even calling it ‘the industrial revolution’ of video.
Magisto recently launched ‘Magisto for Business‘, which gives content creators the ‘creative director’ role without any intensive editing or content production. Magisto’s patented A.I. and new Smart Storyboard™ technology allows for filming on a smartphone, and the result is high quality, easy to create marketing videos.
There’s a story behind how the technology was developed. Founder Oren Boiman is both a scientist and a father. After the birth of his first child, Mr. Boiman and his wife took many digital photos and like many new parents, wanted to make home movies. After taking two weeks to create a high quality three-minute video, Mr. Boiman came to the conclusion that there needed to be a better way. At the time, he was a Ph.D. student researching the science of Video Vision and using Artificial Intelligence to create videos, he created the Magisto video platform.
Magisto has already become the world’s most popular smart video storytelling application that uses Emotion Sense Technology™ — a patented story detection that automatically analyzes and edits raw video footage and photos into movies, making video storytelling simple and easy to share. Initially used by individuals, businesses are now jumping on board to use Magisto, which is available for iOS, Android, PC and the Web. Magisto recently did a survey of its users, and 65% of them said that they already used or wanted to use Magisto in their professional lives.
Video is extremely useful to marketers — Facebook recently reported the number of video views increased 10 times over the last year to 8 billion views per day. It’s clear that video engages viewers and because of this, retailers must seriously consider using it to market to current and potential customers.
How it Works: Magisto is driven by patented Artificial Intelligence technology that selects the most compelling moments from a collection of digital videos and photos and automatically edits them together to create powerful, highly shareable movies that vividly express personal stories with customized themes, styles, and music. A new technology called “Smart Storyboard” ™ can be used to influence production value, define scene selection, refine messaging and brand movies without the usual complexities of video editing and production.
Below is a video from a retailer:
“The Smart Storyboard lets the business user focus on how to tell the story rather than worrying about how to edit, produce and create that same story using complicated tools,” said Magisto’s CEO, Oren Boiman. “It’s a bit like giving specific creative direction to your own video production team; that production ‘team’ just happens to be an intelligent machine that works in minutes rather than hours.”
Due to the traditionally high cost and complexity of producing high-end video, and the low quality results of most consumer video technology, many small and medium-sized retailers don’t use video as part of their marketing mix. Magisto can change that — with 75 million users and 2.5 billion pieces of content analyzed, Magisto’s AI-based video storytelling platform is evolving rapidly, and the improved technology has pushed the boundaries of the quality, ease and scale of video content that can be created by a machine.
“By extending Magisto to businesses, we’ve reduced the cost of producing a professional video by two orders of magnitude, while making it a thousand times faster because it’s generated by a machine,” said Magisto’s CMO Reid Genauer. “Within the last year, we have seen every major social network optimized for video creating the world’s first effective distribution platform for long-tail business video. “This is the industrial revolution of video and video marketing is no longer a “nice-to-have” — it’s critical for any business,” he continued.
Below is a promotional video for a fashion designer:
Magisto for Business incorporates several features specifically designed for small and medium-sized retailers and other businesses including custom scene selection, scene ordering, scene captioning, speech detection and custom branding. It also offers music licensed for commercial purposes, faster movie creation and unlimited HD downloads. New editing styles and algorithms allow the user to tell the Artificial Intelligence engine what the business use case is, enabling the Emotion Sense Technology (™) to make movies that accurately represent those use cases including; Business Overview, Product Demo, Tutorial, Creative Portfolio and Event Recap. Magisto intends to offer dozens of new business use cases to integrate with e-commerce and vertical marketplaces across numerous categories in 2016.
For more information on Magisto, visit magisto.com.
April 12 marked the one-year anniversary of the closing of Target stores in Canada. In the Jewish tradition, we mark the anniversary of a passing by observing yahrzteit, or remembering.
Although Target might have only lasted about 2 years in Canada (some stores as few as 6 months), because of the size and scale of the operation, it will continue to affect Canadian retail for the foreseeable future. In this essay, I identify some of the long-term impacts and lessons about the Target fiasco in the Far North.
1. Target actually had some better brands of merchandise in Canada than in the US. For example, in its housewares department, Target Canada carried the Joseph Joseph line of high fashion kitchen accessories. Target USA does not carry this line; JC Penney had it the last time I checked (a few months ago). Joseph Joseph is also carried by Hudson’s Bay in Canada and Macy’s in the USA—“next step up” stores.
But I’m not sure anyone noticed and I don’t remember Target making much of an effort to promote this. And Target should have.
Target carries the Kitchen Aid line in its USA stores but Canadian Tire seems to have an exclusive on that line in Canada, meaning that Target couldn’t carry all of the merchandise in Canada that it carries in the USA because of existing agreements between the same suppliers and other stores. (I conjecture this because I don’t see it elsewhere and Target didn’t carry it.)
Even before it opened, Target said it would have some unique products in Canada that it didn’t sell in the US. In the case of housewares, Target “traded up” for some better merchandise but never really announced it. They should have promoted Target Canada exclusives in store and in its advertising and defined exclusive as either not available in Target USA or only available at Target.
2. Target got help screwing up some of its Canadian merchandising. Although Target admittedly has primary blame for its failure in Canada, it actually had help screwing up a number of its departments. As I noted in the previous post (and others have noted, too), Target had a lousy and overpriced merchandise mix—especially in groceries and health and beauty- pharmacy. But in many parts of the country, Target relied on a major local supplier to help with those. Groceries were supplied by Sobeys and, at least in Quebec, pharmacy was supplied by Brunet (part of the Metro group).
I only know about these from what I read in the paper and saw in the stores, but as I understand the situation, they were supposed to provide a Canadian imprint on these departments. The problem is, they put a Sobeys or Brunet imprint on these departments, someone forgot that these are Target departments.
It appears that no comparison was made with the merchandise mix at Target US and Target Canada, something that Target should have overseen and required of its suppliers. Furthermore, it appears that no effort was made to coordinate store brands between the two countries; it appears that Sobeys and Brunet store brand products was merely packaged in Target store brand packaging. So what appeared to be similar or identical products to Target USA on the outside seemed like substantially different products on the inside.
3. Target might not have lasted, but mall upgrades made to accommodate it have. Before Target announced its entry into Canada, many Canadian malls—especially in the Class B and Class C ranges—had delayed necessary renovations. Malls like CF Galeries d’Anjou in Montreal and Bayshore Shopping Centre in Ottawa appeared stuck in the 1990s, both in terms of appearance and lackluster store mix.
Expecting greater foot traffic from Target, however, these malls finally entered the second decade of the new millennium. They remodelled their interiors, updating colour schemes, furnishings, and decorative elements. They reworked their store mixes. The updated malls appeared more fashion-forward and reflective of the times.
4 . Target might not have lasted but upgrades to its competitors leave them in stronger positions long-term. Target thoughtfully gave Canadian retailers two years’ warning of its arrival and the retailers used that time to significantly up their game. And most major retailers did, with Canadian consumers benefitting long-term, even if Target didn’t last. Consider these long-lasting improvements to some iconic Canadian retailers:
• Canadian Tire: Strengthened its coverage of the basics and customer service, and re-emphasized its place in Canadian communities to maintain its place as the go-to-store for anything basic in the household, the place that Target tried—and ultimately failed—to supplant. Instead, Canadian Tire seems to have strengthened its role as the go-to store for anything basic in the household.
• Hudson’s Bay: Transitioned from a ho-hum four-century-old operation to one that looks relevant and new. (Of course, the $1.2 billion it received from selling its Zellers leases to Target helped.) It emphasized higher end and quality fashion and home furnishings to distinguish it from the cheap chic expected from Target.
• Loblaws: Strengthened the design appeal of its housewares (looking chicer than Target’s while offering similarly low prices) and launched the Joe Fresh clothing line, which challenges Target’s on price and style.
In a bit of tit-for-tat, Loblaws tried to strike back by launching Joe Fresh in the USA. As Target failed in Canada, so Joe Fresh seems to have quickly gone stale in the US: its relationship with JC Penney cut short and its Fifth Avenue flagship in New York quickly closed.
• Metro: The central and eastern Canada grocer continued to focus on groceries, but upscaled the experience. It brought all of its stores under the Metro brand (previously limited to Quebec) and reworked its logo Metro also expanded its prepared foods, strengthened its store brand, and launched an American-style grocery store loyalty program (Metro et moi / Metro and me).
• Sears Canada: Although on a self-inflicted death spiral, Sears made some nominal moves to counter Target, including a couple of store remodels in malls where Target would also locate (like CF Galeries d’Anjou in Montreal).
But Sears most interesting moves came after the store closed, when it offered jobs to Target employees. Admittedly, that was a head scratcher, as Sears has been laying off employees with increasing regularity. But in the end, Sears is still here and Target isn’t.
• Walmart: Already having had upped its design game for US stores to compete against Target’s admittedly diminished housewares (which suffering from the departure of major designers like Michael Graves), Walmart decided to primarily compete with Target in the grocery department, expanding many of its existing Walmart (which have a small grocery section) to Walmart Supercentres (which have full-line grocery stores in addition to all of the other departments).
PHOTO: TARGET CANADA
5. Target might not have lasted, but some of its empty storefronts will serve as long-term reminders of the failure. One of the long-term problems of Target leaving is that it also leaves lots of empty space: about 2 to 3% of all retail space in Canada. About a third of its leases were picked up within 9 months—some by Walmart, some by Lowe’s, some by a gym—but the majority are vacant and are likely to remain that way.
That’s because the demand for 120,000 square foot stores is limited. A few malls are rebuilding the space so they can lease smaller stores.
But in a climate whose medium-term outlook for the next few years is flat, absorbing all of that still-vacant space remains a challenge.
So shadows of Target signs remain on walls in and out of malls that look like Target bullesyes but aren’t any more.
And nothing looks more creepy than a big vacant store.
6. Target needs to revisit its playbook for entering a market, especially if it tries again to enter international markets with bricks-and-mortar stores. Target likes to enter new markets by making a splash and launch a number of stores all at once.
But it overlooks Target’s history: how Target entered new markets in the US. It reads just like the playbook for Target Canada. When possible, Target would buy the real estate of a distressed competitor, such as Richway in Atlanta and Ames in Boston. If necessary (as it was in Atlanta), Target waited until after the store liquidated its merchandise and formally laid off its staff, before bringing in the construction crews and hiring teams to open a new Target.
That’s what happened with Target’s purchase of Zellers leases.
The massive construction-then-massive-launch approach might work in the US, where communities are increasingly similar in their day-to-day needs, and, except for some local variations, the company would still retain its basic supplier relationships, operating logistics, and HR practices (with minor adjustments for local laws and customs).
But even though the population of Canada is about the same size of California (or about 5 Target market areas), it’s a different country and Target could have considered an entirely different playbook.
Rather than buying the leases, emptying the stores, laying off all of the talent, and investing in reconstruction, Target could have purchased Zellers’ outright, taken advantage of its expertise, supplier relationships, ongoing operations, and, significantly, functioning inventory control system, then made adjustments as it learned the market and slowly but surely convert the Zellers stores to the Target nameplate, learning from the successful lessons of Walmart’s successful entry into Canada at Woolco stores.
7. Although Target’s policies are written to value human resources, its choices in Canada suggest that a bridge still exists between what’s written on paper and what’s practiced in the business. One reason that Target had chosen to wait to occupy a former retailers’ space rather than merely take over its business as described above is that Target is a non-union company and most of the stores it has replaced had unionized staffs. Without going into the pro- or anti-union issue, which is beyond the scope of this discussion, practical considerations suggest that addressing broader business needs might necessitate rethinking this employment practice.
In this particular situation, Zellers was a functioning business and Target would have rebuild all of that from scratch.
But Target also ignored the practical limitations of the real world when choosing to do so, because the company made three other choices that rely on effectively managing human capital dimensions and, in both cases, made disastrous choices.
The first two choices are related: planning to open 133 stores across Canada within three years and launching a two significant pieces of technology–an inventory control system and a point-of-sale system–both of which touch on every part of the organization. Both timetables were unrealistic, but especially the inventory control system, on which the entire operation of Target depended.
Anyone with passing knowledge of enterprise systems knows that such a comprehensive system cannot be launched in two years, no matter how smart the people working on the team or how experienced the systems integrator (Accenture in this case.) Canadian Business has an amazing post-mortem of the situation. Both systems probably could have been successful if management had been realistic about the schedules for systems planning, installation, customization, and implementation. And they could have been realistic, because a wide body of experience with enterprise systems in general, and inventory and point of sales systems, in particular is available. But management chose to ignore that almost all of that history suggests that a successful implementation requires three to five years. In other words, they ignored one of the most basic principles of human performance: the best predictor of future performance is past performance.
The third choice Target made was to shortchange training. I had been aware of that problem; I had spoken informally with certified trainers whom Target lured from other Canadian retailers. But the trainers I spoke to were hired on contract and told me that, as soon as initial training was complete, Target dismissed them. Ironically, these trainers provided training on their systems.
That might not have been as serious of a problem in Target USA, the company not only has functioning inventory control and point-of-sale systems, but also has experienced workers who can provide the development needed to bridge the gap between classroom training and the job.
But all of Target Canada’s employees were new and, as happens in situations like these, relied on incidental, on-the-job learning rather than close supervision and mentorship, some of which was not feasible because of the general inexperience of the Target Canada staff, but some of that supervision and mentorship not feasible because the company chose to provide less rather than more training, when learners could be observed performing successfully before they return to the workplace.
And some of the informal lessons learned turned out to be how to game the system. In doing so, staff exacerbated an already public and humiliating problem with inventory. As reported in Canadian Business:
Business analysts (who were young and fresh out of school, remember) were judged based on the percentage of their products that were in stock at any given time, and a low percentage would result in a phone call from a vice-president demanding an explanation. But by flipping the auto-replenishment switch off, the system wouldn’t report an item as out of stock, so the analyst’s numbers would look good on paper. “They figured out how to game the system,” says a former employee. “They didn’t want to get in trouble and they didn’t really understand the implications.”
Although presented in the magazine as a technology issue, the situation sounds like a classic human resources management and development problem.
By all accounts, despite these problems, Target had a committed and engaged workforce according to the Canadian Business report. But a committed and engaged workforce can only go so far when the system sets that workforce up for failure.
8. Bankruptcy is ugly. It humbles even the great. In bankruptcy, Target violated its own century-old values as a corporation and seriously tarnished its image in the Canadian community. It wrote checks to community organizations just before the bankruptcy that bounced when the community organizations tried to cash the checks within days of the bankruptcy. It laid off nearly 18,000 of its own workers, and cost thousands more their jobs. It ruined suppliers. It raised questions about its own ethics by the choice of bankruptcy statute to use in its filing. The manner in which it tried to get out of its leases further tarnished its reputation and the company found itself in protracted court proceedings over its bankruptcy plan.
In other words, Target lost more than billions of dollars in this failure; it lost a part of its soul, even if most of that news was only covered in Canada and received far less coverage in the USA.
9. Target USA does seem to be recovering. Although the stated reason for departing Canada is that the company saw no path to profitability before 2021, if even then, part of the reason has to be that its US stores needed primary attention.
Although everyone talks about how lousy the Canadian stores were, the USA stores weren’t so wonderful. Sales were flat. The chic had departed and, even in harsher times, cheap alone wasn’t attracting customers. And with a data breach of massive proportions, the company lost the trust of its customers, too.
Around the time of the Canadian departure, Target executives announced efforts to revitalize the product line and shopping experience. The proof would have to show itself on the showroom floor.
And it is starting to. The housewares section has been reimagined and the displays are impressive. I have seen pictures of a reimagined grocery section, which is supposed to have a strengthened focus on healthier foods. If those pictures of the prototypes eventually appear in the grocery department, that department, too, should show new signs of life.
In other words, closing the Canadian stores to concentrate on the American stores was not only a good business decision, it also appears to be one bearing fruit for Target. (That some post-Canada earnings reports have shown signs of life further supports that decision.)
10. Target does not seem to have learned all of its lessons about international retailing. Although Target got many things wrong when it tried to enter Canada, it did recognize that, at the least, it needed to be culturally sensitive to shoppers in Quebec and made a strident effort to understand its culture. The problem was, Target didn’t understand the local shopping habits and just assumed people would change them, just because Target is Target. Target was wrong.
Similarly, although Target acknowledges that it failed in Canada, it seems to have ignored anything that could have been learned from the experience when the store opened an international website.
The site allows visitors to shop at Target.com and ship to countries outside the USA. But this international website offers the same value proposition as its Canadian stores—fewer products available at much worse prices.
On the one hand, I doubt many Canadians will shop there. On the other hand, visiting the site and seeing the crappy selection and lousier prices gives us a nice chuckle.
Perhaps that was the point? (Probably not, but just in case…)
ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Montreal-based Saul Carliner is an associate professor at Concordia University, has published widely on training and development and professional communication, and blogs about shopping and museums. He has been featured in the Globe and Mail, Les Affaires, Montreal Gazette, CBC, Global News, CTV Montreal, and CNBC Asia.
Oxford Properties has revealed a partial list of the retail tenants that it has secured for the next expansion of Toronto’s Yorkdale Shopping Centre, in a new wing that will be anchored by a 196,000 square foot Nordstrom store. The mall is Canada’s top selling with $1.2 billion in annual sales, with Canada’s highest mall productivity of $1,610/square foot annually.
The 300,000 square foot, $331 million expansion wing is scheduled to open on October 18 of this year, and it will be located on the mall’s east side. Oxford Properties confirms that the following stores will open in the new expansion wing:
More retailers will be announced this spring as details become available — about 30 retailers will eventually open in the new 112,000 square foot (excluding anchor) Nordstrom wing.
“This expansion will signal a new era in the evolution of the Canadian retail landscape,” said Claire Santamaria, Yorkdale Shopping Centre’s General Manager. “We have been strategically expanding to meet shopper demand for a retail environment unlike any other in Canada. This investment is designed to cater to that demand and attract new shoppers seeking exceptional choice and diverse retailers.”
Nordstrom’s Yorkdale store is scheduled to open on Friday, October 21, with a charity gala to be held two days prior. Yorkdale will be Nordstrom’s second Toronto store, following the opening of its highly anticipated 220,000 square foot CF Toronto Eaton Centre flagship on September 16 of this year.
Yorkdale’s Nordstrom wing expansion isn’t the last for the centre, however. Preparations are already underway for a westward expansion towards Dufferin Street, which will see the addition of a 69,000 square foot RH (aka Restoration Hardware) store as well as smaller retail units.
Yorkdale has become decidedly upscale, particularly in the mall’s new ‘luxury wing’ near Holt Renfrew. Yorkdale was Canada’s first suburban shopping centre to feature a significant luxury retail component, housing free-standing locations for brands such as Cartier, Bulgari, Mulberry, Jimmy Choo, Moncler, David Yurman, Montblanc, Versace, Salvatore Ferragamo, Hugo Boss, and others. Last spring, French luxury brand Longchamp opened a new store across from Holt’s and in the fall of 2015, luxury timepiece brand Jaeger-LeCoultre opened one of two Canadian locations at Yorkdale. Holt Renfrew, itself, features mall-facing concessions for luxury brands Chanel, Prada, Gucci and Louis Vuitton, as well as internally-accessed concessions for Dior, Giorgio Armani and others.
Toronto-based market research firm BrandSpark International has revealed its 2016 list of most trusted Canadian retailers, based on its annual Canadian Shopper Study. The study ranks retailers by category as well as national and regional ranking.
Over 7,500 Canadians participated in the study, ranking what retailers that they considered their ‘most trusted’ in 16 household and personal shopping categories. Listed directly below are the national winners by category.
Several retailers lead their categories from coast to coast, including Canadian Tire (auto parts and accessories), TJX-owned HomeSense (home decor), Sport Chek/Sports Experts (sporting goods), Toys “R” Us (toys and games), and Best Buy (electronics). Shoppers Drug Mart is most popular in English Canada for beauty and personal care as well as health and pharmacy, while Jean Coutu is Quebec’s most trusted choice.
Quebec had several unique ‘most trusted’ retailers, including Tanguay for furniture, Yellow for footwear, and Bouclair for home decor (a tie). Rona is Quebec’s most trusted retail brand for home improvement, while Home Depot ranks first in the rest of Canada.
Regional differences were present for grocery retailing as well, with Loblaw-owned No Frills earning top spot in Ontario and IGA in Quebec. The Loblaw-owned Real Canadian Superstore brand comes out on top in the rest of Canada, in a tie with Sobeys in Atlantic Canada. The study notes that Quebec and Atlantic Canada’s top grocery pics weren’t price-focused, as was the case for the rest of Canada.
The study also notes that American behemoth Walmart has become a trusted destination for low priced goods generally, and particularly for housewares and children’s clothing.
In the study, Canadian shoppers also revealed what determines their trust in a retailer. According to the study’s findings, Canadian shoppers expect consistently strong value (often driven by low prices or high-value promotions), a strong selection of quality products, and a consistent and convenient shopping experience from their most trusted retailers. One Ontario shopper gave their reason for citing No Frills as their most trusted supermarket: “The prices are cheap for a variety of foods, and [the stores are] mostly clean, depending on the branch. They have a wider selection of international grocery items.” Meanwhile, a Sobeys shopper wrote: “I trust [Sobeys] the most due to overall cleanliness, friendly staff, and great tasting, fresh products.”
Montreal-based men’s street wear fashion brand Atelier New Regime has opened its first brick-and-mortar store in Montreal’s St. Henri area. Located at 4632 Notre Dame Ouest, the store’s interior is almost completely orange in colour.
The edgy, youthful brand was founded in Montreal in 2009 and is owned by a three-man team — Setiz Taheri, Koku and Gildas Awuye. Much of its product is branded and until last week, was only available at a number of retailers through Atelier New Regime’s wholesale channels. Recently, the brand teamed-up with Montreal retailer Off the Hook on an all-velour capsule collection, for example.
The new Montreal store measures about 600 square feet, according to Mr. Taheri, and is in a retail space that was formerly occupied by a tailor who retired after 25 years. The store’s facade will continue to feature orange-covered windows for the next two weeks to continue to build interest in the area. Contractors involved in the store’s construction were a collective by the name of Les Projets Deraspe, said Mr. Teheri, and the racks, hangers and furniture were custom made by Montreal-based The Make Co.
Farla Efros, President of leading retail consultancy HRC Advisory, said that the bold colour combination will stand out and draw in Millennials and those classified as ‘Generation Z’. These youthful consumers will in turn Tweet, Snapchat and Instagram about the store. She thinks that the new store will draw curiosity and help establish a new customer base, while also noting that Montreal is a city which has spawned many successful designers and retail concepts.
Atelier New Regime
Although there are no immediate plans to expand by opening new freestanding stores, Mr. Taheri said that Atelier New Regime will continue to expand its wholesale distribution Canada-wide.
Montreal’s working-class St. Henri area hasn’t been traditionally an address for retailers, though that appears to be slowly changing. The centrally located neighbourhood is just west of downtown Montreal, and is directly south of affluent Westmount.
All photos are via Atelier New Regime.
Atelier New RegimeAtelier New RegimeAtelier New Regime
Vancouver-based multi-discipline performance training and fitness brand RYU has secured retail space for its second store location. The store will open in the summer of 2016. The company plans to open as many as 17 Canadian locations as part of its North American expansion that will see 100 stores by the year 2025.
RYU’s first retail location opened at 1745 W. 4 Avenue in Vancouver in November of 2015. The 5,600 square foot store acts as the brand’s global flagship.
“After initial success with our flagship store in Kitsilano – the athletic hub of the city – Robson was the next logical location,” said Marcello Leone, CEO, President and Chairman of the Board for RYU. “As Vancouver’s premiere shopping destination it attracts shoppers from all corners of the city and beyond.”
RYU’s second location will measure about 1,100 square feet at 805 Thurlow Street, in a retail space formerly occupied by a White Spot ‘Triple O’s’ restaurant. The store will feature the same industrial/modern aesthetic as the West 4 Avenue flagship, which was designed by award-winning AA Roberts Architects.
Founded in Portland, Oregon, RYU or ‘Respect Your Universe’, is an athletic tech-style apparel brand engineered for the fitness, training and performance of the multi-discipline athlete. Marcello Leone, son of the founders of Vancouver-based multi-brand luxury retailer Leone, took the company over in 2014 and spearheaded an overhaul which saw its headquarters moved from the United States to Canada, choosing his hometown of Vancouver to be its new corporate address. RYU’s intention is to become the world’s top multi-discipline performance training and fitness brand, according to Mr. Leone.
Upscale Austrian fashion brand Wolford has opened its third freestanding Canadian store. A source with the company says that a fourth location will also open this fall, with more expected to follow as Wolford expands its Canadian operations.
Wolford produces and sells tights and stockings for women and men, bodysuits and underwear for women, as well as women’s clothing (such as skirts, tops, shirts, and pullovers) and accessories. The company was founded in 1950 and is headquartered in Bregenz, Austria, and operates stores worldwide — some franchised and some corporately owned.
According to Ontario Regional Manager Valerie Neill, Wolford will open its fourth freestanding Canadian location this fall at Toronto’s Yorkdale Shopping Centre. The boutique will be less than 1,000 square feet, according to Ms. Neill — similar in size to Square One’s new Wolford. Yorkdale will open a 300,000 square foot expansion wing this fall that will be anchored by a 196,000 square foot Nordstrom store, as well as other exciting retailers such as Uniqlo and Muji.
Ms. Neill noted that changes could also be coming to Wolford’s Toronto Yorkville operations, as the current 126 Cumberland Street boutique might either be renovated or replaced by a new location. There are no confirmed plans for either at this time, however.
All of Wolford’s Ontario stores are franchised. Wolford’s only Canadian corporate store is located in Vancouver’s 755 Burrard Street retail complex.
Popular off-price multi-brand American footwear retailer DSW Designer Shoe Warehouse has revealed six new Canadian locations, all scheduled to open in the fall of 2016. Two of these will be first-to-market locations in the Vancouver area. After they all open, DSW will operate 23 Canadian stores, well on its way to a goal of between 40 to 50 Canadian locations.
DSW is also in the process of opening four other Canadian locations this spring, with a Regina location set to open on April 14.
The six new stores will average about 20,000 square feet and will be located in British Columbia, Alberta, and Ontario:
The Vancouver-Lower Mainland will see its first two DSW locations as part of this expansion (Tsawwassen and Richmond), and the Ancaster and Burlington stores will both serve the Hamilton area in Southern Ontario. The Edmonton store will be a third for Northern Alberta, following the opening of DSW stores at West Edmonton Mall and Sherwood Park Mall last year.
DSW’s first Canadian locations opened on August 7 of 2014, in the Greater Toronto Area. In December of 2014, DSW announced a new Whitby, ON location as well as its first for Western Canada. DSW also sells online, and its Canadian e-commerce site launched in the winter of 2014.
As DSW continues to expand across Canada, it is ideally seeking Canadian retail space in the 18,000 to 24,000 square foot range. Each Canadian DSW store will have over 22,000 pairs of shoes, as well as an extensive selection of handbags and accessories. DSW is extremely popular in the United States with over 470 locations in that country. Its name indicates its business model – it sells designer shoes at discounted prices. The company has hundreds of millions in cash and no debt.
Quebec-based swimwear and beachwear retailer Bikini Village has revealed a new look for its stores, a new logo, and plans to expand its operations into Western Canada. Bikini Village was purchased by Canadian lingerie retailer La Vie En Rose in the spring of 2015, after Bikini Village sought bankruptcy protection due to millions in losses and as part of the deal, Bikini Village would continue to operate almost all of its locations.
“After 12 months of hard work and investment to realign the buying, strategic direction and positioning, and launching an online store, it was time to highlight a new era with a revamped logo and a new store design,” said François Roberge, President and CEO of Boutique La Vie en Rose Incorporated. “Looking in to the future, we have chosen a branding with a modern profile and a sumptuous metallic colour reminiscent of the sun, warm sand, and golden tans. The breath of fresh air that we are bringing to Bikini Village with a product offer featuring coveted brands and combined with an updated visual identity will increase the retail chain’s notoriety and allow us to expand.”
Bikini Village (Rendering: Bikini Village / La Vie En Rose)
Farla Efros, President of leading retail consultancy HRC Advisory, said that given the current volatility in Canadian retailing, the timing is right for Bikini Village’s overhaul. She explained how Millennials and ‘Generation Z’ consumers are increasingly seeking experiences, and how the overhaul will help better attract these youthful shoppers to its stores. Customer frequency and retention are key to retailers’ success, and the fresh new stores will help gain the loyalty of new consumer groups.
Bikini Village’s stores will be renovated to reflect a sleek, modern look inspired by cabanas, with interiors designed to showcase the retailer’s colourful products. At the end of May, 2016, its renovated Montreal CF Galeries d’Anjou unit will reopen and in the summer of 2016, renovated locations will reopen at Montreal’s Carrefour Angrignon and at Ottawa’s Bayshore Shopping Centre. Bikini Village currently operates stores in Quebec, Ontario, New Brunswick and Nova Scotia.
Bikini Village (Rendering: Bikini Village / La Vie En Rose)
Bikini Village will also expand its operations into Western Canada this year, beginning with a new store location this June at West Edmonton Mall. The company will further expand its operations with plans to open stores in key Western Canadian markets, with more details to follow.