Title: Kmart 4 Marketing Keys to Success
1Kmart Keys to Success Presented by Robert
ShawYasmin AnandwalaEric FindleyArdita
KalajaWinfield PollidoreSanjay Mengi
2Kmart - Introduction
3Kmart Keys to Success
- Industrial Analysis
- Kmart Profile
- SWOT (Strength, Weakness, Opportunity, and
Threat) - Kmart versus Wal-Mart
- Survey
- 3 Marketing Keys to Success
- Leverage Urban Minority Market Strengths
- Implement CRM Strategy
- Improve Supply Chain Management - IT
- Conclusion
4Kmart - Analysis
- Robert Shaw
- Yasmin Anandwala
5Kmarts Strength
- Clothing lines
- Exclusive Joe Boxer product line
- Route 66
- Carry a variety of products at a low cost
- Martha Stewarts products
- Home Goods
- Store Locations
- Urban areas
- Stores located in easily accessible areas
- Market in the Urban areas effectively
- Able to get a large multi-cultural consumer group
- Offered lay away plan for people who need to pay
on installments
6Kmarts Weakness
- Chapter 11 Bankruptcy Protection
- Low marketing budget
- Many low profit suburban stores
- Ineffective Supply Chain Management
- Negative publicity
- Marketed the suburbs like the urban areas
- Did not change the image of the company as the
demands of the consumers changed - Did not offer variety that appealed to the middle
class
7Kmarts Opportunities
- Re-position store
- Adopt Urban Strategy
- Integrate Supply Chain Management
- Sell to Carrefour (Paris based retailer)
- Need to change the negative image of K-Mart
- Improve the product line carried to keep the
middle class - Design the store to be more organized and
attractive
8Kmarts Threats
- Wal-mart and Target
- Increasing Market Share
- Having to liquidate company
- Suppliers raising prices
- Profits declining
- Martha Stewart getting bad press
- Urban areas are becoming more suburban like
- Youths rejects K-Marts Urban strategy
9K-Mart Opportunity Threat Matrix
Probability of Occurrence
- 1 Credit can be down rated
- 2 K-mart getting bought
- 3 Supplier raise costs
- 4 Martha Stewart pulls out
10Market Share Analysis
11Kmart vs Wal-Mart
- Kmart opened 1962
- (Originally Kressege)
- In 1987, 2,200 outlets
- Market share 34
- In 1994, sales 34 billion
- Wal-Mart opened 1962
- In 1987, 980 outlets
- Market share 22
- In 1994 82 billion in sales
12Retail Preference Survey
- Selection Criteria
- 15 Female and 5 Male
- Wayne County area
- Average age over 35
- All were frequent shoppers
13Survey Results
- 80 people preferred Kmart
- Favorable location
- 100 visited store in last six months
- 50 would not care if Kmart went out of business
- 100 never visited web site
14Marketing Key 1Leverage Urban Minority Market
Strengths
15Facts
- Kmart strongest locations are its urban clusters
(away from Target and Wal-Mart) where Kmart is
uniquely popular among (multicultural population)
African Americans and Hispanic customers - Multicultural consumers represent 39 of the
nearly 30 million people who shop at Kmart each
week. - African Americans and Hispanics alone account for
32 of Kmart's shoppers.
16Kmart Market Profile by Race
17Demographic Trends
- Hispanic population going to increase at a faster
rate than the rest of the nation - Multicultural consumers control 1.2 trillion in
joint-purchasing power at a market segment growth
rate seven times faster than the general
population - Urban African-American community's 560 billion
in buying power - Urban youth consumer has become big business
because of their buying power (300 billion) and
influence over the mainstream consumer market
18Market Trends and Attitudes
- Shoppers are increasingly bypassing its aging
mall stores to shop at newer urban and suburban
strip malls - Emerging trend of retail development in
inner-city districts around the United States
19Market Trends and Attitudes
- Urban youths
- Tend to be individualistic, they dont respond to
anything outside of their reality - Dont care about the status quo
- Urban youth consumers tend to be trend and style
conscious
20Market Trends and Attitudes
- "What works in urban cities, works in suburbia,
but not vice versa," - Generation X Y influenced by urban culture (70
of hip-hop music sold to whites living in
suburbs) and fashion that characterizes its
identity - Minority groups last year accounted for 27.3
percent of the suburban population in the 102
largest metropolitan areas
21Urban Minority Strategy Recommendation
- Kmart develop niche marketing strategy to
concentrate on Urban and Minority Gen X and Gen Y
Market - Make Kmart the hottest place to shop trendy
place to shop - Eventually strategy will penetrate Suburbia
- Partner with rap/music artist and professional
sport players to endorse and promote shopping at
Kmart - Youth market responds well to role models and
celebrities (Master P and Converse) - By capturing the urban market you can capture the
mainstream market
22Popular Apparel Urban Brands
- Kmart would do best to understand and promote
brands similar to those represented by Urban
Minorities - Popular Urban Brands
- Phat Farm
- FUBU
- Rocawear
- Ecko
- Sean John
23Other Popular Apparel Urban Brands
- Other Popular Brands
- Levis
- Nike
- Kangol
- Kenneth Cole
- Rockport
24Urban Minority Strategy Recommendation
- In understanding and targeting urban minorities
- Kmart needs to tailor its products to each
communitys ethnic mix - Give store managers autonomy to stock merchandise
that suits their customers tastes since urban
trends change quickly - To stay popular Kmart may want to change its
image from discounter to reflect premium
discounter (Urban discounted Marshall Fields)
25Marketing Key 2Implement CRM Strategy
- Ardita Kalaja
- Winfield Pollidore
26K-Mart CRM
- What is CRM?
- Customer Relationship Management
- CRM Process
- Discover
- Assemble
- Deliver
- Does partnership make sense?
27K-Mart CRM
28K-Mart CRM
- How can CRM help K-Mart
- Refine the Customer Focus (Positioning)
- Create value for the Customer
- Enhanced Automated Checkout
- Personal Online Shopping (EchoMail)
- Re-Focus the Retailer approach
- Targeted Incentives vs. Visible Incentives
29CRM-Creating value for the Customer
- Recognizing the importance of creating
- unique ways to delight the customers
- - Self-Service Technology
- (NCR Self-Checkout, Pre-Cashier
Checkout) - - Bilingual Capability Meets Needs
- of More Shoppers
-
30Personal Online Shopping (EchoMail)
- Link the Blue Light Special to In Store
Incentives - Personalization tools help customers
- with purchases and let merchants cross sell
- The product keeps track of customers' actions
over time, building a broader base of knowledge
about the individual and driving proactive
marketing, such as prompting new offers at the
site or triggering E-mail advertising
31K-Mart CRM-Recommendations
- K-Mart should recognize the importance of
creating unique ways to delight the customers - Targeted Incentives vs. Visible Incentives
- Effective ways to personalize Online Shopping.
- Identify every non-value-added cost from each
element of its supply
32Marketing Key 3Improve IT Supply Chain
Management
33K Mart IT Incompetence
- Five CIOs in seven years
- (One step forward, another step back)
- Incompetence SCM technology in retail industry
- In 2001, 195 million write off in H/W S/W
- Real time data not shared with suppliers
34Wal Mart IT Facts
- Information technology matterswhen it delivers
"everyday low prices" - Mastery of technology by treating IT as core
competency - Just-in-time inventories - Best SCM in retail
industry - Continuous improvement in technology by
intelligent IT spending - Over 5 Year period invested over 600 million in
IT - Running technology with a vision
35Wal-Mart IT Integration
- Real time data and mission-critical information
shared with suppliers worldwide - Wal-Mart use telecommunications to link directly
from its stores to its central computer system
and from that system to its supplier's computers.
This allows automatic reordering and better
coordination - Some 3,800 vendors now get daily sales data
directly from Wal-Mart stores - 1,500 have the same decision and analysis
software that Wal-Mart's own
36Trend of Weak Supply Chain Management
Customer Demand
Order Size
Time
37Local and Global Optimization in Supply Chain
38Push-Pull Supply Chains
PUSH STRATEGY
PULL STRATEGY
Push-Pull Boundary
39IT Recommendations
- Involve suppliers during system development and
enhancement - Share On-line data with suppliers
- Engage best CIO in retail industry and sign long
term contract - Adopt offshore model to reduce substantial IT
cost
40Conclusion
- Restate Recommendations
- Urban Strategy
- Introduce clothing line which continue to appeal
the youth - Locate stores in newer strip malls
- CRM
- Focus on putting customers first
- Make shopping easier on line and in the stores
- IT Integration
- More involvement with suppliers
- Use a electronic system to replenish stock