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Podcast [The Weekly]: Holt Renfrew Bloor Overhaul Revealed, Downtown Montreal Bay Flagship Redevelopment

This week, Craig and Lee discuss the completion of the facade and two retail levels at Holt Renfrew’s Mink Mile flagship store in Toronto, as well as the redevelopment of the massive Hudson’s Bay department store in downtown Montreal.

The Weekly podcast by Retail Insider Canada is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher, TuneIn, Google Play, or through our dedicated RSS feed for Overcast and other podcast players.

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Background Music Credit: Hard Boiled Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com). Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/

Canadian Retail News From Around The Web For February 25, 2021

Canadian Retail News From Around The Web

Top Stories: National

Central/Eastern Canada News

Western Canada News

Retail Photo Tour: The Ever-Changing Sherwood Park Mall in Sherwood Park, Alberta

Sherwood Park Mall - February 2021 (Photo Avonlea Photography)

Retail Insider continues its Photo Tour series of Canadian malls to provide a window into shopping centres across the country that may be continuing to grow and expand while dealing with the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic. This edition takes us to Sherwood Park Mall, which is located in Sherwood Park, Alberta.

Sherwood Park is a ‘hamlet’ with nearly 100,000 residents and is part of Strathcona County, located just east of Edmonton. The average household income is about $160,000 a year and the average age of residents is 39. The majority of housing is single-detached with many households having at least one young child.

We connected with the team at Sherwood Park Mall for this experience, as it’s important to document this timeframe in Canadian retail history, and will provide a historical glimpse when we look back in years to come.

Our thanks go out to the incredible team at Sherwood Park Mall for their help with this tour, including Rebecca Quinn (Marketing Manager) and Seana Almer (General Manager). We’d also like to thank Devon Riel from Avonlea Photography for the images.

Sherwood Park Mall – Leasing Map Feb 1 2021 – Click for link to Primaris Management Leasing full size document

History of Sherwood Park Mall

To look at the present day mall and discuss future improvements it is important to know the history.

Sherwood Park Mall opened in 1972 under the name “Eastgate Mall”, with a construction price tag of $4 million. Owner, Patrician Land Corporation, went into receivership in 1984, with Joseph Tenenbaum & Northern Telecom taking over the property. They subsequently doubled the size of the mall, added a food court, and changed the name.

In the years since, the mall has undergone renovations and improvements, including modernizing guest and back of house areas. In years past, the Strathcona County Public Library was located on the lower level of the mall with access from the street at the back of the property, as well as from an escalator within the mall. In 2012 the space was converted to a Goodlife Fitness after the library moved to a new building nearby.

On February 1, 2013, Primaris REIT announced a $377 million deal to buy a collection of malls in Alberta, including the Sherwood Park Mall.

New retailers continue to be added amid a changing retail landscape.

Here’s a Look at the Mall and What’s Happening:

Cineplex Cinemas at Sherwood Park Mall – February 2021 (Photo Avonlea Photography)

The Cineplex theatres at Sherwood Park mall opened in November of 2000 under the Galaxy Cinemas banner before being changed to Cineplex. Prior to the pandemic, the Cineplex theatre was a significant draw to the mall. The theatres are currently being renovated to a “VIP” standard, including reclining seats and other features of comfort. Given the number of households with children in the area, Cineplex decided against turning it into an 18+ theatre serving alcohol so as to maintain community inclusivity.

Shoppers Drug Mart at Sherwood Park Mall – February 2021 (Photo Avonlea Photography)

Near the theatre is a 17,125-square-foot Shoppers Drug Mart store (which relocated to its current spot on January 2nd, 2019), which features a prominent Beauty Boutique section housing several ‘prestige’ brands. Included is French luxury brand Chanel, which is said to be seeing strong sales at the Sherwood Park location. Given that Sherwood Park lacks a Sephora store or a beauty floor in a department store such as Hudson’s Bay, Shoppers Drug Mart serves the market with similar brands and price points.

Prior to being occupied by Shoppers Drug Mart, the space was a Chapters book store. It was replaced in 2017 with a new Indigo store in a repurposed space occupied by Target until its exit in early 2015.

Shoppers Drug Mart Photo at Sherwood Park Mall – February 2021 (Photo Avonlea Photography)
Purdys at Sherwood Park Mall – February 2021 (Photo Avonlea Photography)

A Purdy’s chocolate store occupies a prominent location near Shoppers Drug Mart facing the mall’s food court. This Vancouver-based chocolatier’s story started in 1907 and almost 115 years later, you’re able to find locations across Canada, like this one at Sherwood Park Mall.

Sherwood Park Mall is home to several national and international retail tenants, as well as some independents such as Sports Closet in the photo below.

Sports Closet at Sherwood Park Mall – February 2021 (Photo Avonlea Photography)

The sports retail industry in Canada has taken a hit in 2020 and now into 2021, first with the NHL/NBA bubbles and now with most leagues being forced to play in creative modes.

The NHL, for example, has put the Canadian teams into the “North Division” and is conducting a 56-game season playing without fans in attendance. The Toronto Blue Jays played last season out of Buffalo, NY and the Raptors are playing their 2021 NBA home games in Tampa, FL.

This means that retailers like Sports Closet aren’t able to sell new merchandise to fans who aren’t attending games or able to watch sports in bars/restaurants.

2021 was specifically difficult for NHL fans, as the NHL released a hugely popular “reverse retro” line of jerseys that could only be found on a select number of websites and in certain stores. You can actually see those jerseys in the below photo, which makes us want to travel to Sherwood Park Mall for a shopping trip asap.

Sports Closet at Sherwood Park Mall – February 2021 (Photo Avonlea Photography)
Caposhie at Sherwood Park Mall – February 2021 (Photo Avonlea Photography)

Vancouver-based fashion retailer Caposhie recently opened at Sherwood Park Mall on November 9th, 2020. The unique retailer is described as showcasing “an ever-changing assortment of limited quantities in a wide variety of curated, effortless clothing, merchandised with our exclusives; from elevated basics in natural fibres, to designer collaborations created using up-cycled fabrics and innovative manufacturing processes.”

The retailer appears to be in expansion mode in Western Canada.

Caposhie at Sherwood Park Mall – February 2021 (Photo Avonlea Photography)
T-Kettle at Sherwood Park Mall (Photo: Social Media)

We are seeing T-Kettle stores open up in vacated David’s Tea locations across Canada, including the one in our past tour at Avalon Mall in Newfoundland and this 793-square-foot location at Sherwood Park Mall.

Sherwood Park Food Court

Famous Wok and TacoTime at Sherwood Park Mall – February 2021 (Photo Avonlea Photography)

The Sherwood Park Mall food court features popular food vendors with a central seating area. Because of the pandemic, seating was removed temporarily from the usually busy space. Since the photographs were taken, Alberta has once again permitted indoor dining.

With room for nine spots, the food court currently offers: A&W, Edo Japan, Famous Wok, Joey’s Urban, TacoTime, and Thai Express. There are two spots vacant for future vendors.

Food Court at Sherwood Park Mall – February 2021 (Photo Avonlea Photography)

Washrooms were relocated several years ago from the area where the hoarding is in the photos below to a larger and more contemporary space nearby.

Food Court at Sherwood Park Mall – February 2021 (Photo Avonlea Photography)
Curbside Pickup Area at Sherwood Park Mall – February 2021 (Photo Avonlea Photography)

Sherwood Park Mall, as with most malls during the pandemic, has had to innovate by offering curbside pickup of purchases ordered online. Some consumers are still hesitant to go into retail spaces, instead seeking contactless options to avoid infection.

In the images below, you’ll find the in-mall marketing that was designed with an eye to simplistic messaging and bright colours. This was a partnership between the mall and the retailers, as safety is a priority and having decals supplied to the retailers showed solidarity and created a “community” feel.

Bath & Body Works at Sherwood Park Mall – February 2021 (Photo Avonlea Photography)

Popular retailer Bath & Body Works operates a busy store at Sherwood Park Mall. The retailer is known for its scented products, including a vast assortment of hand sanitizers.

The popularity of the retailer is evident in the markers on the floor in the mall to direct any lineups that may happen.

Bath & Body Works at Sherwood Park Mall – February 2021 (Photo Avonlea Photography)
Bellissima at Sherwood Park Mall – February 2021 (Photo Avonlea Photography)

Women’s fashion retailer Belissima relocated several years ago to a space near the mall’s food court. The store is one of the pricier women’s fashion stores at Sherwood Park Mall.

La Vie en Rose at Sherwood Park Mall – February 2021 (Photo Avonlea Photography)

Montreal-based Lingerie and swimwear retailer La Vie En Rose was in expansion mode prior to the pandemic, and was seeing success as competitors such as Victoria’s Secret and La Senza began to fall.

Ardene at Sherwood Park Mall – February 2021 (Photo Avonlea Photography)

The mall’s Ardene store relocated on December 1st, 2019 to a much larger location near the mall’s new Indigo store. The former Ardene location near the food court spanned a bit over 3,000 square feet, and the new store is nearly 15,500 square feet.

Ardene’s store footprints have grown substantially amid an increasing product assortment that includes more women’s fashion. Ardene is based out of Montreal.

Ricki’s and Ardene at Sherwood Park Mall – February 2021 (Photo Avonlea Photography)

Retailers Ricki’s, Bootlegger, and Cleo, all operating under Comark ownership, have stores in a row at Sherwood Park Mall. We reported in June of 2020 that Comark had filed for bankruptcy protection.

Below the Belt at Sherwood Park Mall – February 2021 (Photo Avonlea Photography)

Casual fashion retailer Below the Belt, known for its denim, operates a store at Sherwood Park Mall. Below the Belt was founded in Edmonton in 1978 and at one point had many more stores than it does now.

Peoples The Diamond Store at Sherwood Park Mall – February 2021 (Photo Avonlea Photography)

Peoples Jewellers, which celebrated 100 years of business in 2019, occupied a prominent corner location at Sherwood Park Mall. Peoples has over 150 stores in Canada and serves a moderate-priced market below retailers such as Tiffany & Co. and Cartier.

DSW at Sherwood Park Mall – February 2021 (Photo Avonlea Photography)

The 14,000-square-foot DSW shoe store opened at Sherwood Park Mall in September of 2015 and Retail Insider attended the opening. Sherwood Park was DSW’s 10th Canadian store amid a rapid expansion at the time. US-based DSW entered the country by acquiring Town Shoes Ltd. and in 2018, the Town Shoes chain of stores was shut down by the parent company.

Chatters at Sherwood Park Mall – February 2021 (Photo Avonlea Photography)

Chatters is classic Canadian success story, with a pair from Red Deer and Regina coming together to grow the concept from 1991 to 2015. In 2015, the partners strategically partnered with wholly-owned Canadian private equity firm ONCAP and currently have 115 salons across the country and employ more than 1600 staff.

Urban Planet at Sherwood Park Mall – February 2021 (Photo Avonlea Photography)

Canadian value-priced casual retailer Urban Planet opened at Sherwood Park Mall on May 3rd, 2018. The 15,000-square-foot store is located near Indigo at the south end of the mall, featuring a spacious layout with an area with many dressing rooms.

Ardene and the exterior of Sherwood Park Mall – February 2021 (Photo Avonlea Photography)

As part of the mall’s renovations, the new Ardene store gained an exterior entrance in the mall as per the photo above.

Sherwood Park Mall – February 2021 (Photo Avonlea Photography)

The white box to the left in this photo was once a Pier One Imports furniture store. Pier One exited Canada last year and the space is for lease.

Indigo at Sherwood Park Mall. Photos: R Ramjohn via Google Images

Following Target’s exit from Sherwood Park Mall in early 2015, two retailers moved into the large space. That included Indigo and Safeway, both of which opened in the fall of 2017.

Safeway at Sherwood Park Mall (Photo: Merle Prosofsky via Fillmore Construction)

Pre-COVID Renovation Photos

Wrap Up of the Sherwood Park Mall Photo Tour (February 2021)

And that’s a wrap! Join us for more photo tours in 2021. Retail Insider is enjoying the process of exploring malls across the country during a challenging time for the industry.

Our thanks go out to the incredible team at Sherwood Park Mall for their help with this tour, including Rebecca Quinn (Marketing Manager) and Seana Almer (General Manager). We’d also like to thank Devon Riel from Avonlea Photography for the images.

Brick-and-Mortar Will Continue to Be Critical for Retail in Canada Post-Pandemic: Claude Sirois

A quiet College Street West in Toronto in January 2021. Photo: Dustin Fuhs
A quiet College Street West in Toronto in January 2021. Photo: Dustin Fuhs

As the consequences and repercussions of the COVID-19 global pandemic continue to rage on, retailers across Canada and around the world are pivoting — shifting their focus toward digital enhancements in order to address some of the more predominant trends that have resulted. A significant lack of footfall, combined with a synchronistic acceleration in online shopping by the consumer, has forced many within the industry to make some necessary adjustments toward the support of their e-commerce platforms and the rise in online spending. In many cases, and quite rightly given current circumstances, considerations related to the digital retail experience have taken precedence over that of the physical in-store environment. However, as we collectively, with cautious optimism, progress nearer to a successful vaccine rollout and post-pandemic world that offers us at least a glimpse of normalcy, brick-and-mortar retail is set to play a more critical role than ever in anchoring and strengthening the overall retail experience.

“There’s no question that the pandemic has disrupted how we shop,” recognizes retail and real estate industries expert, Claude Sirois. “It’s been represented by a major shift in the channels in which we spend our money, with a significant increase in transactions happening online. All of this has created a wave of negative headlines with respect to the health and viability of brick-and-mortar retail. But what many are failing to appreciate is the fact that impacts of the pandemic have not divided or split the physical and digital retail environments. It’s actually bringing the online and physical experiences closer together. And those that have proven to be successful through the pandemic are the retailers that have managed to work effectively with both channels to create a seamless experience. The perception of today’s consumer concerning retail is changing. They don’t view online and physical as two separate channels, but rather as one marketplace where they get to decide each of their steps on their path to purchase.”

Claude Sirois

Brick-and-Mortar Central to Industry Success

Sirois stresses the importance of the physical store, describing it as “vital” in providing consumers with another means by which to interact with retailers, complementing and rounding out the marketplace that he refers to. However, in light of recent gains in e-commerce sales across the country, he suggests that the greater significance of brick-and-mortar retail might be lost in the numbers for some. According to recent Statistics Canada data, total retail sales for Canadian retailers at the end of 2020 amounted to $606 billion, representing a decrease of 1.4% from 2019 and the largest annual drop since the economic recession of 2009. Ontario was the hardest hit of all the provinces, experiencing a 3.4% decrease in sales, followed by Alberta (-2.5%) Nova Scotia (-2.0%), Saskatchewan (-1.1%) and Quebec (-0.4%). In contrast, retail e-commerce in the country boomed last year. The direct result of mandatory business shutdowns and drastically changing consumer shopping habits, online sales reached a record high in December, registering $4.7 billion and an increase of 69.3% year-over-year for the month. All told, retail e-commerce in Canada surpassed $35 billion in 2020, accounting for an increase of 70.5% over 2019. They are gains that are being lauded throughout the industry, and to the casual onlooking bystander might seem to go a long way toward supplementing for the shortfall in physical retail spend. But Sirois points out that it isn’t exactly the case.

“E-commerce activity in Canada is currently skyrocketing,” he says. “But the inconvenient truth about online sales for retailers is the fact that when you carve out all of the costs that are associated with the online business, including fulfillment, logistics and returns, they don’t make a lot of money doing it. So, what that means is that, at the end of the day, retailers, and the industry as a whole, needs physical retail, not only to complement the experience they offer, but to also differentiate it from the online experience. When consumers leverage the physical space to pick up product that they’ve purchased online, either in the store or by curbside, they can offer something different, engage with the consumer, upsell, and improve the profitability and margins of online transactions. In this way going forward, the physical retail storefront is going to serve an even greater part toward ensuring the health and strength of the industry.”

Bringing the Consumer Back

The COVID-19 pandemic has not only accelerated the evolution of a consumer who is channel agnostic, however. Sirois also notes that the uncertain and unpredictable nature of the current situation has also resulted in frail and fractured loyalty to retail brands, one that’s been shaken by the convenience and choice found in the online environment and the consumers’ willingness to shop within it. In fact, according to a recent Deloitte report titled ‘COVID-19: Voice of Canadians and impact to retailers’, 52% of consumers in the country say that they have become more likely to make purchases online since the onset of the pandemic. It’s a statistic that corresponds with findings of a PwC survey in which 44% of respondents stated that they are not comfortable visiting a physical retail store while impacts of the pandemic linger. And, without any clear indication as to the length of time this behaviour might be sustained, the stresses and pressures on retailers to generate traffic to their physical storefronts are greater than they’ve ever been.

“First and foremost, for retailers to start bringing people back into the physical store, they’re going to need to help restore confidence in the consumer by ensuring safe environments to browse and shop in,” asserts Sirois. “And this also means that in order to offer that differentiated, more engaging experience of brick-and-mortar, retailers are going to need to adapt their physical spaces. Gone are the days of the static shopping environment. Going forward, a different kind of movement and flow will be required in-store, while providing the emotion and human connection of the experience.”

Experience Is Key

The implementation and adherence to proper health and safety measures tops the list of consumer concerns according to a recent study developed by Ipsos, which found that 82% of Canadians consider it to be the most important factor when thinking about returning to a retailer. To address this, Sirois emphasizes the need for a more holistic approach by retailers toward the management and execution of their various channels, suggesting that the internet and online experience serve as the central access point for brands, with social media providing the thrust required to cultivate and renew a sense of confidence and trust within the consumer, driving interest and traffic to the physical space. He admits that achieving the perfect balance won’t be an easy feat. But he says that, looking forward, a post-pandemic world is likely to yield big opportunities for the industry to capitalize on a retail renaissance of sorts, one that the physical store is best suited to realize the true benefits of.

“A lot of attention is being paid at the moment to the use of technology and the enhancement of the digital retail environment,” he says. “But what will prove to be one of the most interesting collateral impacts of the pandemic will be a renewed interest in traditional marketing strategies around creating events and providing a catalyst to generate the traffic, resulting in opportunities to engage with the consumer. Pretty soon, we’re all going to be approaching two years of this “Zoom life” or “screen life”. And once that level of comfort is renewed within the consumer, their need to interact and make human connections will be overwhelming, resulting in an explosion of the experience economy.”

A Confluence of Channels

In a recent report developed by KPMG Canada titled ‘Keeping up with the Canadian consumer’, following concerns about safe shopping environments, the most important consumer consideration made by consumers with respect to their return to a physical retail store is the “experience” offered, with 65% regarding it as a major influence on their decision to return to brick-and-mortar locations. And, it’s in a post-pandemic environment that Sirois says an interest in the retail experience will only increase, allowing retailers to leverage the full potential of their physical spaces, where a confluence of channels, technologies and data can inform a more personalized and enriched experience for the consumer. He recognizes that the notion of “experience” is a complex one, and that it is something that resonates differently within everyone. But he says that those who are able to continue developing a deep understanding of their customers will benefit in a big way when traffic to the physical retail space is restored.

Sirois also suggests that a more thorough understanding and knowledge of consumer preferences and behaviours will benefit retailers in their efforts to evolve their physical networks to create a more seamless interaction with their brand and product. He says that the pandemic has, among so many other things, accelerated the need for retailers to reevaluate their existing physical presence and make the changes necessary to expand the range of experiences and options that consumers are calling for.

“There will be a total rethink and reassessment of the entire retail footprint in the months and years to come,” he states. “The use of the physical space will change and will include centres for fulfillment, and will provide ways for the customer to view and interact with the product in a different way. There’s no questioning how meaningful the physical retail space will be going forward in retailers’ quest to meet the evolving shopping behaviour of the consumer. As a result, they’ll continue investing in the technologies that will facilitate their understanding of their consumers desired journey, allowing them to cater their physical presence accordingly.”

Strengthened Partnerships

With respect to the data that’s generated, Sirois also suggests that greater sharing of the data between tenant and landlord is required going forward in order to support success and the creation of a more transparent relationship. The tenant-landlord relationship, one that has remained, generally speaking, very traditional for a number of years is another aspect of the brick-and-mortar operation that has been brought into sharper focus since the onset of the pandemic. And Sirois believes that one of the more positive consequences that could result is improvements made to strengthen the partnership between retailers and their landlords.

“When we talk about the traditional retail lease, we’re talking about something that was developed in the industrial era which was a completely different environment,” he explains. “With the advent of the multiple channels that are available for consumers to shop today, the structure of the retail lease needs to be revisited, refreshed and revamped. In an omnichannel world, where the consumer is channel agnostic, the use of the physical space has changed. But the metrics used to measure the performance of a store have not and have quickly become outdated. This is one of the things that the pandemic is highlighting. What it could result in is a true partnership between retailers and their landlords that goes beyond what we’ve become accustomed to, one that involves the sharing of data and marketing strategies from both sides in order to ensure success for everyone.”

Retail Redefined?

Everything considered, it’s evident that retailers have their work cut out for them looking ahead toward the next 12 to 18 months as the impacts of the past year continue to persist. However, Sirois points out that the industry is a resilient one, having proven so time and again through decades past. And he believes that soon enough, despite the negativity that surrounds the industry at the moment, creativity and innovation will result in a real rejuvenation of the brick-and-mortar experience and retail industry as a whole.

“It might sound counterintuitive to some, but there has actually never been a better time to start thinking forward and to develop new concepts and ways of doing things. Impacts of the pandemic have, unfortunately, resulted in the loss of some of our better known and loved retailers in the country. However, that creates more room for a new wave of retailers that can help enhance and elevate retail to another level. Consumers across the country are already becoming incredibly hungry for experiences. There’s an increasing appetite growing within them to be ‘wowed’. And the retailers that are able to offer something new within a safe and engaging environment will only succeed and grow, and inspire something of a redefining of the retail experience.”

Canadian Retail News From Around The Web For February 24, 2021

Canadian Retail News From Around The Web

Top Stories: National

Central/Eastern Canada News

Western Canada News

BRIEF: Daiso Opening 1st Corporate Store in Canada, Montecristo Jewellers Opening in Vancouver’s ‘Luxury Zone’

Retail Insider Brief
Retail Insider Brief

Japanese Variety Retailer Daiso to Enter Canada with Corporate Stores

Popular value-priced Japanese variety retailer Daiso is expanding into Canada this year with its first corporate store set to open this spring in downtown Vancouver. It’s part of a national store rollout for Daiso in Canada which signals a positive outlook for brick-and-mortar retail generally.

Daiso’s first corporately-owned Canadian store will open at 810 Granville Street, a few doors south of Robson Street, in a 4,700-square-foot space formerly occupied by books and gift retailer ‘Indigo Spirit’. CBRE Vancouver’s Urban Retail Team negotiated the lease deal under the guidance of Mario Negris, Nolan Toigo, and Martin Moriarty.

Daiso store exterior. Photo: Daiso
Daiso store exterior. Photo: Daiso

In Canada, Daiso once had a franchised store that operated for years at the Aberdeen Centre in the Vancouver suburb of Richmond. That store was converted to an Oomomo nameplate last year as that Vancouver-based Japanese variety retailer continues with its own store expansion throughout Canada.

Daiso will compete with a range of similar variety retailers that have entered the Canadian market in recent years including Miniso, Mumuso, Yoyoso, Ximivogue, and others. They are competing for market share carrying a range of household goods, clothing, jewellery, cosmetics and beauty products, toys, and other small goods. Other chains continue to expand which means Canada could see a saturation point in the coming years. At the same time, Chinese retailer Miniso has closed many of its Canadian stores amid controversy.

Montecristo Jewellers to Open Store in Vancouver’s Downtown ‘Luxury Zone’

Exterior of soon-to-open Montecristo Jewellers in Vancouver. Photo: Gaurav Mehra
Exterior of soon-to-open Montecristo Jewellers in Vancouver. Photo: Gaurav Mehra

Vancouver-based multi-brand luxury jeweller Montecristo has begun construction on a new store in a prime location in Vancouver’s ‘Luxury Zone’. The store at 1037 Alberni Street replaces the Italian Kitchen restaurant that relocated nearby in 2017.

The space has sat empty since then, and Montecristo Jewellers is said to have secured the lease while letting the space sit vacant for nearly four years. CBRE’s Vancouver Urban Properties Group, under the direction of Mario Negris and Martin Moriarty, negotiated the deal.

Montecristo jewellers was founded by entrepreneur, Pasquale Casano, in 1978 with a storefront at Victoria Drive and East 41st Avenue. Rolex became an important brand a year later. The company eventually opened a flagship store at 852 W. Hastings Street at the corner of Hornby Street in a heritage building. The retailer operates a storefront at the busy Metropolis at Metrotown in Burnaby. An Oakridge Centre location recently shuttered for the mall redevelopment, and that location was recently replaced with a storefront at CF Richmond Centre.

Exterior of soon-to-open Montecristo Jewellers in Vancouver. Photo: Gaurav Mehra
Exterior of soon-to-open Montecristo Jewellers in Vancouver. Photo: Gaurav Mehra

Brands carried at Montecristo’s flagship include Breguet, Blancpain, Corum, Glashutte, Harry Winston, Longines, Omega, Mikimoto, Roberto Coin, Wellendorf, and others. Rolex and Bulgari were once carried in the store before both brands opened downtown storefronts (Bulgari’s being inside of Holt Renfrew). The Metrotown location carries Pomellato and Bulgari and the CF Richmond Centre store features a Rolex area.

Montecristo will compete with Birks which operates a storefront at the southeast corner of Hastings and Granville Streets, and expanded in 2019 by opening standalone Graff and Patek Philippe boutiques in the Luxury Zone on W. Georgia Street. Various mono-brand jewellery boutiques are located in the Alberni Street Luxury Zone including Tiffany & Co. and Hublot, with Cartier to join them later this year.

In March of 2019, the South China Morning Post reported that Montecristo Jewellers would have to pay a significant tax bill after it was found that the retailer was helping international visitors avoid paying sales tax by classifying certain sales as “exports” by arranging delivery to customers at Vancouver International Airport before boarding flights out the country. The scheme was attributed for about 30 percent of sales with as many as 300 annual deliveries.

Pasquale Casano also owns a third of Toronto-based beauty brand Deciem, whose founder Brandon Truaxe died tragically in January of 2019. Casano’s ownership is being sold to Estée Lauder according to an exclusive report on Tuesday in WWD — beauty Behemoth Estée Lauder owned a third of the company and announced a bid for the entirety of Deciem, which has stores in the Toronto and Vancouver markets as well as in selected global markets.

Rabba Opens a Paramount Butcher Counter in Mississauga

Paramount Butcher Counter at the Meadowvale Town Centre Circle. Photo: Google Images
Paramount Butcher Counter at the Meadowvale Town Centre Circle. Photo: Google Images

Building on a partnership first announced last year, Rabba Fine Foods has launched the Paramount Butcher counter inside its Meadowvale Town Centre Circle location in Mississauga, Ontario.

Rabba Fine Foods describes it as a “scaled-down version” of a Paramount restaurant, featuring take-home menu items from the Middle Eastern restaurant chain. It also includes Halal poultry and deli options, complemented by an assortment of Paramount dips and spreads.

“Our business is in a constant state of flux and we’re happy to find in Paramount Fine Foods a partner that is nimble and, at the same time, committed to quality products and service,” said Rabba Fine Foods CEO Rick Rabba. “We’re determined to help our customers in whatever way we can and expanding this partnership with Paramount is an example of that commitment.”

In 2012, Paramount launched its Paramount Butcher Shop division and serious expansion began throughout North America in 2015, followed by entry into the Middle Eastern and European markets in 2016. It describes its offering as a blend of “premium cut meats to go with premium quality restaurant recipes from the Paramount Fine Foods restaurants”.

Retail Insider reported in December that Rabba and Paramount were partnering to open a prepared food offering called Rabba Kitchen — By Paramount in Toronto’s Regent Park neighbourhood. The company said it plans to roll out the concept in other stores in the near future.

RW&CO. Spring 2021 Campaign Features CBC Dragons, Small Businesses, and a Partnership with TED

RW&CO. Spring Campaign 2021
RW&CO. Spring Campaign 2021

Canadian retailer RW&CO. is celebrating the beauty and resilience of the entrepreneurial spirit with its new Spring 2021 campaign.

Manjit Minhas and Lane Merrifield of CBC’s Dragons’ Den helm the campaign as mentors alongside 13 entrepreneurs from coast to coast. Furthering their commitment to community and innovation, the brand is also debuting a content hub in partnership with global organization, TED. The collection launched on February 22, 2021 in all RW&CO. stores across Canada and online at rw-co.com.

RW&CO. Spring 2021 “Ready to Reimagine”: The Future is Bright

This season, RW&CO. is paying tribute to local entrepreneurs who are daring to reimagine and reinvent their businesses for today’s realities. Supporting innovation, quality, and community has always been integral to RW&CO., so sharing its platform with other businesses was a natural fit.

“There is no better time to lead with purpose, test passion-driven concepts, inspire with creativity, and empower with community,” says Michele Slepekis, VP of Marketing at RW&CO. This is an initiative near and dear to the proudly Canadian brand – after all, RW&CO. started as a small, family-run Quebec venture too.

Manjit Minhas and Lane Merrifield are sharing the spotlight with 13 other Canadian founders including:

“My biggest inspiration has to be those entrepreneurs I watched see this challenge, pivot their business, and are more successful than ever as a result,” says Merrifield on his fellow ambassadors.

RW&CO. Reimagines Workwear

Clothing for the Next Normal Embodying Spring by revitalizing the brand’s classic workwear DNA, the new collection is inspired by customers’ ever-evolving needs for versatility, ease, and comfort without sacrificing style. Both living and working at home is a reality for many for the foreseeable future, and this is reflected in the new collection with growing loungewear, casual, and versatile offerings.

RW&CO. Partners with Ted

The campaign is also the perfect springboard for a year-long partnership between RW&CO. and global organization TED. TED passionately believes in “the power of ideas to change attitudes, lives, and ultimately, the world”, echoing RW&CO.’s commitments to innovation and community. Beginning in March 2021, TED will further amplify these shared values through ‘Always on the Rise’, an RW&CO.-branded hub on the TED website that will feature content tailored for the RW&CO. community, giving customers a front row seat to globally-renowned speakers through TED Talks.

Accurate Shoe Sizing From Home Using Only a Smartphone

Xesto Fit app. Photo: Xesto
Xesto Fit app. Photo: Xesto

Computer vision startup, Xesto, has announced the launch of Xesto Fit, the first and only 3D foot sizing app that uses a smartphone to recommend shoe sizes across 150 brands.

The startup, which came out of the University of Toronto, has developed the technology to allow customers to scan themselves within 1.5mm accuracy in the comfort of their own home using their own iPhone FaceID camera. The customer takes four photos of each foot and in under a minute, Xesto creates 3D reconstructions of their feet. Xesto Fit allows shoppers to select their own size across 150 brands and growing, all free of charge. Xesto’s sizing app can be accessed directly from the App Store.

“Xesto will change shopping forever with smartphone cameras the way Uber changed transportation with GPS. Today’s 3D smartphone cameras are more powerful than ever, but their applications have been limited to unlocking phones, emojis and augmented reality filters. Xesto will turn your phone into a fitting room without you leaving your home.” said Sophie Howe, CEO of Xesto.

E-commerce purchases are expected to increase by 160 percent post pandemic, and as online sales increase, fit related returns increase as well. These returns decrease retailers margins while increasing waste. Xesto Fit reduces the environmental cost of e-commerce by sizing users accurately using an Apple device. The online footwear industry sees returns of approximately 40 percent and approximately 80 percent of online returns are due to poor fit, making the lack of personalized sizing tools a leading sustainability problem in the fashion industry. Xesto Fit eliminates size uncertainty, thus reducing the environmental impact of e-commerce.

Xesto was selected for the first Canadian Women Only Trade Delegation to South Korea in 2020, awarded Toronto’s Best Startup in 2019 (Timmy Awards), and in 2017 was named one of the 10 Canadian AI Start-Ups to Watch by Nuadox.

The app is available in the App Store and via Xesto’s website. To download the app or learn more, please visit https://xesto.io

Read More Briefs From Retail Insider:

How an Independent Fashion Retailer in a Small Alberta Town Is Seeing Explosive Sales Growth Through Online Channels Despite the Pandemic

Elle's Closet
Elle's Closet

Over the course of the past eleven months, a period in Canadian retail besmirched by the impacts of the pandemic, the industry’s landscape has become riddled with casualties. By and large, just about every sector has suffered from the fallout of government-imposed lockdowns and restrictions. Some have suffered more than others, the severity of the impacts ranging across a spectrum. Those most dramatically impacted, however, seem to be the operations of small and independent businesses, most of which have been paralyzed by significantly reduced traffic to their stores and a general lack of activity in the neighbourhoods that surround them. With limited opportunities to engage customers in the physical environment, Canada’s small business community has come under enormous pressure to evolve, lest they become devolved. A considerable portion of the evolution required involves the digitization of the retail operation and a broadening of the ways that are enlisted to communicate and interact with the consumer. And if any doubts remain concerning the enabling force of digital channels, there isn’t a better example of the ways it can help to transform a business than Athabasca-based women’s apparel boutique, Elle’s Closet.

Enhanced Digital Efforts

Founded in late 2013 by Michelle Bishop, the boutique carries an impressive selection of fashion-forward apparel for women, including everything from sweaters, hoodies and blouses to denim, loungewear and dresses, and a host of products in between. In addition, it also offers collections of swimwear, outerwear and footwear, as well as a range of beauty products, jewellery and other accessories. The assortment and selection that Bishop’s small shop boasts had allowed her to cultivate a loyal community of followers prior to the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, and to grow exponentially in the short amount of time that she’s been in business. And, unlike many other stories that have been dominating headlines with messages of a more negative and discouraging nature, since rolling government-imposed lockdowns, social restrictions and protocols started to take hold across the country, her sales have more than doubled. It’s an incredible feat for the retailer servicing a community with a population of less than 3,000 people. And it’s one that the owner of the burgeoning boutique says was supported at the heart by enhanced and sustained digital efforts.

“I’ve been using social media to engage with our customers online for about five years, and really increased my efforts two-and-a-half years ago when the Elle’s Closet website was developed and launched,” she explains. “I became pretty active, posting multiple times every day. I thought I was using it really well, but in actuality, I wasn’t. It just wasn’t a focus of the business then. We were running our store in Athabasca as well as another in Edmonton. They were both doing well, and I was spending most of my time driving back and forth between the locations. I just didn’t have the time to focus on our digital communications. But then COVID hit, and I suddenly found that I had all the time in the world to focus on these channels and the number of ways that are available to engage and interact with the customer and grow the Elle’s Closet brand. Results have been incredible, significantly changing our focus and the way we run the business.”

Elle's Closet Founder, Michelle Bishop. Photo: Elle's Closet
Elle’s Closet Founder, Michelle Bishop. Photo: Elle’s Closet

A Necessary Shift

The results of her brainy pivot, Bishop has managed to roll with the pandemic’s punches, leveraging social channels to support her loyal community of shoppers and the significant growth of her e-commerce business. And, according to a recent report published by the Canadian Federation of Independent Business, it’s a pivot toward the use of digital communication that many other small businesses are starting to recognize as a necessary one for them to make if they are to survive this brutal period and grow for the future. The report, titled ‘Connecting With Customers During the Pandemic’, finds that since the beginning of the virus’ spread, two in five (41 percent) small businesses have reduced in-person communication with their customers, while six percent stopped meeting with them entirely. As a result, in efforts to find ways to continue engaging with their clientele, half of small business owners (51 percent) anticipate a greater need for the use of digital communications over the coming year and beyond.

The report identifies significant shifts by small businesses in their start or increased use of email (48 percent), video conferencing (39 percent) and social networking platforms (32 percent) since the start of the pandemic in efforts to maintain communication and meaningful relationships with their customers. But, although digital channels are providing a means for small businesses to achieve this goal, the report also recognizes some of the challenges that are involved in implementing digital communication strategies. Among them, one in three (35 per cent) of small business owners say they don’t know how to adopt digital channels into their business, while nearly half (46 percent) say they are overwhelmed by the time and effort that’s required to monitor all of the communications and messages. They are challenges that are understood by Bishop. Despite them, however, she says that small business owners need to embrace this time and the disruption that’s occurring as an opportunity to try something new and add value to the experience they offer their customers.

“I realized as soon as repercussions of the pandemic started to impact our business that I really needed to focus more of my efforts on social media and begin leveraging those channels as effectively as possible,” she asserts. “I’m fortunate enough to have already developed an online presence prior to COVID-19. But, because physical traffic to my store has now pretty much vanished, nearly all of my activity and communication with customers is being done digitally. When you know which channels your customers are on, and you’re able to continue interacting with them and showcasing your product, the potential to grow your reach and broaden the awareness of your brand and offering is incredible.”

The Power of Social Media

One of the staples of Bishop’s digital communication is Instagram stories. With an audience of nearly 50,000 followers – one that continues to expand every day – she’s able to continue engaging, informing and entertaining customers. Posting stories just about every day, Elle’s Closet customers receive frequent updates about new and existing product, allowing the retailer to continue driving interest in its offering and traffic to its website and e-commerce platform. In addition, Bishop also hosts an Elle’s Closet Facebook livestream shopping event every Thursday evening, during which clothes are modelled, style recommendations are suggested, and purchases are made. It’s all a reflection of the accelerated shift in consumer activity from physical store environments to online channels. Bishops says that at least 90 percent of Elle’s Closet’s business is happening through e-commerce, adding that, in addition to the shift in sales to online, her overall business actually started to grow as a result of her enhanced digital efforts.

In fact, the growth in online sales that Elle’s Closet began experiencing shortly after the onset of the pandemic was so significant and quick that she was forced to make changes to her business in order to sustain her escalating success. To support the shift and increase in her online business, Bishop decided to close her Edmonton location, and in June 2020 reinvested the money into the opening of a 2,000-square-foot shipping and receiving warehouse. The space has enabled Bishop and Elle’s Closet to cope with the increase in demand for her product. And, anticipating further growth, she’s already looking to upgrade and is currently exploring the construction of a 10,000-square-foot warehouse.

“My business has changed so much over the course of the past year,” she says. “The challenges that the entire industry has faced really made me stop and reevaluate where I was putting my money and the reasons that I was putting it into certain areas of the business. After a bit of reflection, it was pretty clear that there were some adjustments that were necessary in order for my business to grow with the increased demand. Our sales easily doubled over the past year. That success wouldn’t have been possible without our warehouse to hold products for customers who are ordering from all across the country.”

Exterior of Elle's Closet in Athabasca. Photo: Google Images
Exterior of Elle’s Closet in Athabasca. Photo: Google Images

Hyper-Personalized Experiences

In addition to the tremendous sales that Elle’s Closet has generated during the pandemic period, Bishop says that the digital channels have provided her with the opportunity to hyper-personalize her brand and the experience that she offers customers. She describes it as the perfect platform for merchants to show customers exactly who they are, representing themselves with transparency in order to resonate with their social media audiences and engage them in ways that may not have been considered previously. And, the key to social media success, she says, is to simply be yourself.

“With respect to the Instagram stories that I post and the livestreams that I host, I’m 100 percent me,” she explains. “If you’re genuine in your approach and presenting yourself as who you truly are, you’ll give yourself and your business the opportunity to meaningfully connect with people. My customers know about my children and my husband, because I share things about my life with them. Customers really welcome that level of honesty and openness and appreciate the fact that there’s a more intimate and personal relationship that’s being built, as well as simply knowing that there’s a real person behind the brand and the product.”

Preparing for Future Growth

The incredible growth that Elle’s Closet experienced throughout 2020, growth which continues unabated today, is certainly testament to the transformative potential that’s posed by channels of digital communication and the benefits that could result for businesses. However, it’s more so an inspiring example of ingenuity, and a reminder of the capacity of small business owners across the country to cope with change and overcome adversity. With respect to the savvy and innovation shown by Bishop, she says that she’s incredibly proud of the choices that she’s made for her business. But she isn’t going to dwell on her recent achievements, explaining that she’s got one eye on the future already.

“There will come a day soon when people will start to feel more comfortable and will go out to shop at their favourite stores again. And we’ll be ready to welcome our customers back to the physical Elle’s Closet environment when that happens. A piece of my heart will always be in the physical store which will remain available for our local customers. But what the pandemic has taught me is that the greatest potential for the growth of my business is online. That’s where I’m going to be putting the majority of my focus, continuing to build and engage with the Elle’s Closet community on social media and expanding our presence beyond Canada and into the United States. I see so many possibilities to continue growing and developing the Elle’s Closet brand and improving on the experience we provide for our amazing base of current customers, as well as those who might not be aware of us yet.”

Special Edition 27: The Future of Ecommerce and Digital Retail with David Nagy of eCommerce Canada

An off-schedule podcast discussion with David Nagy, Founder of Calgary-based eCommerce Canada. Craig and David discuss the eCommerce marketplace, challenges, and the pitfalls new entrants will encounter competing online.

Interview Details

The Weekly podcast by Retail Insider Canada is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher, TuneIn, or through our dedicated RSS feed for Overcast and other podcast players.

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Canadian Retail News From Around The Web For February 23, 2021

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How a Shopping Centre in Wetaskiwin Is Being Repurposed Amid a Changing Retail Landscape

Wetaskiwin Mall. Photo: Google Images
Wetaskiwin Mall. Photo: Google Images

Shopping centres across the country have been undergoing a transformation in recent years to adapt to the changing trends in consumer behaviour and that transformation has become increasingly more important for secondary malls.

The Wetaskiwin Mall, owned by Calgary-based Avenue Living Asset Management, and located just outside of Edmonton, is a perfect example of what’s happening in Canada as landlords adjust to the changing realities of the retail marketplace.

Leasing efforts and strategy are focused on repositioning the shopping centre and breathing new life into an older property.

Ben Volorney
Ben Volorney

Ben Volorney, Principal with commercial real estate firm Avison Young, which is leasing the Wetaskiwin Mall, said prospective tenants want to be part of a larger story.

“If we’re speaking to applicants, if it’s a medical user or an entertainment type user or anything really that can bring some life or bring a bit of activity back to an older mall, we typically make it about strengthening an existing community hub,” said Volorney.

“A lot of these older malls that were built in the mid-80s are at a pretty critical point in their lifespan. Some of them are successfully repositioned to have a strong medical component. Some of them have added density by way of multi-residential or a transit hub and some fade away unfortunately.

Wetaskiwin Mall sign. Photo: Wetaskiwin Mall
Wetaskiwin Mall sign. Photo: Wetaskiwin Mall

“What we want to do when we get involved in a mall is tell a bit of a story about how we’re trying to turn a corner and to almost bring a mall back to a place of relevance where it certainly can get to. But it gets there with a vision and that usually involves having groups that are like-minded find a reason and want to reposition the assets.”

Volorney said many of the older enclosed malls are being redeveloped to attract people back to the shopping centre.

For the Wetaskiwin Mall, in particular, the idea is to create a community hub with medical-related and entertainment/experiential-related tenants.

The Wetaskiwin Mall is a major regional shopping centre with exceptional exposure to Highway 2A and convenient access from the surrounding townships. The primary trade area extends north and south along Highway 2A to capture a population base just over 90,000 people. Wetaskiwin Mall is being repositioned as a retail, service, and medical destination for the trade area. Anchor tenants include Sport Chek, Scotiabank, The Brick, Giant Tiger, Alberta Health Services, and Dollarama.

“Once things start to turn the corner, we’re confident that certain gathering points will continue to thrive,” said Volorney.

“Retail has changed and we’ve seen it accelerate obviously in the last 12 months with COVID and because of that a lot of these malls are in a position now where they have to truly reinvent themselves. Footprints are changing. A lot of retailers are, I like to use the term, right sizing versus downsizing . . . But as far as these enclosed malls, some of them are kind of past the point of no return where they may need to be completely redeveloped. A lot of them if they’re well situated, if they’re central in the community already and there’s an opportunity to either add density or add something experiential or get something that brings people and gives them a reason to come there, like medical or post-secondary educational, then a lot of these malls have a lot more years added to their lifespan which is what we’re trying to do.”

Jordan Martens, Director of Commercial Asset Management with Avenue Living, said the company’s agenda at the Wetaskiwin Mall is to have a health and medical focus.

Jordan Martens
Jordan Martens

“In a perfect world we pull in family doctors, pharmacy. We’ve got AHS (Alberta Health Services) already in the mall with their home care unit. Then we double down on that and we’re getting vibes that in time we would be probably the preferred choice for unloading some stuff out of the hospital so radiology, injury and some blood work potentially,” said Martens.

“It’s great for medical because it’s got a ton of parking. Wide aisles. Big clear space. The ease of getting medical at scale, kind of a one-stop shopping.

“To be honest, every interior mall is looking for medical as a bit of a saviour. It’s become clear that the retail landscape, especially with COVID, has really changed. The pace of change has accelerated. So medical is a great solution.”

The Wetaskiwin Mall, which was built in the early 1980s, is 158,000 square feet. Avenue Living bought the mall in 2017.