Archive for the ‘blog’ Category

NATIONAL RETAIL FEDERAL LOBBIES OBAMA ON PRIORITIES

Friday, January 13th, 2012

The National Retail Federation is responsible for a massive lobbying effort encouraging President Obama to tout the benefits of the private sector when it comes to job creation and urging him to push Congress to move on its priorities.

A recent letter sent by matthew Shay, the group’s president and CEO and Terry Lundgren, it’s chairman, highlighted the need for businesses of all sizes to create the jobs needed to put America back to work and restore the United States as the leader of the global economy.

The letter added that the retail sector employs twice as many people as health care and four times as manufacturing. The President is urged that in order to keep growing, retailers need sales tax fairness – a legislation that would require states to collect sales tax from online retailers. The NRF also called for corporate tax reform and more free trade agreements.

Shay refers to retailing as the “bright spot” in the economy and the NRF is putting its grass roots and political energy behind the policy priorities outlined in this letter to the White House as part of its “Retail Means Jobs” campaign.

Forum Publishing Company is a long time supporter of the retail industry and hopes the NRF is successful in promoting their agenda that will assist all traditional retailers around the world.

AMAZON.COM IS ON THE ATTACK AGAINST BRICK & MORTAR STORES

Thursday, January 5th, 2012

The mega-retailer Amazon.com is upping the ante against brick and mortar retailers by enticing shoppers to compare prices using their mobile phones while shopping at a rival store. The company is offering a 5% discount to users who try its Price Check mobile app that lets in-store shoppers scan product bar codes to check  Amazon’s online prices.

Talk about killing traditional retailing! This brings us to stores like Best Buy, who had a miserable last quarter of profits. A lot of shoppers have been using Best Buy as a showroom to see and feel the merchandise and then go online to make purchases elsewhere. No retailer can survive by being a showroom and not making sales.  We here at Retailers Forum Magazine would like to know your opinion on this APP from Amazon and if you have experienced shoppers using your store as a showroom. Share with us.

GROUPON – NOT AS EXCITING AS YOU WOULD THINK!

Thursday, January 5th, 2012

The social media marketing sweetheart, Groupon, which went public late last year to not so exciting response turns out to not be all that exciting to the businesses who use the site as well. The model is a mixed bag for businesses. More than one quarter of the vendors offering a daily deal lose money on the venture, and another 18% merely break even. These figures were released by a Rice University study.

Many established online sites like Amazon, Google and even eBay have started their daily deals which makes the quality of the offer more important than ever. It was also pointed out that one-third of all daily deal sites were either bought or went out of business in 2011. Not so great!

I signed up for Groupon and a couple of other daily deal sites and quickly opted out because I was getting a tremendous amount of emails each day from each of them.

Have you had any success with Groupon or other daily deal sites? Share your experiences with our readers here at Retailers Forum Magazine.

FORUM PUBLISHING HONORED FOR 30 YEARS OF SERVICE AT NY VALUE MERCHANDISE EXPO

Thursday, September 15th, 2011

Martin of Forum and Alan of Value Merchandise Expo

The New York Value Merchandise Expo honored Forum Publishing Company on Sunday, September 11, 2011 at their show in a special ceremony open to exhibitors and buyers. Martin Stevens, Publisher of Retailers Forum Magazine and Swap Meet Magazine was given a special award for 3 Decades of service to the wholesale/retail industry.

Forum Publishing was started in 1981 and began as a 16-page local NY newspaper named Flea Market Forum, geared towards flea market vendors. Within a couple of years the paper went national with a major expansion and in it’s eighth year spun off into two magazines, Swap Meet Magazine for flea market vendors and the original magazine became known as Retailers Forum and changed its focus to independent retail store owners and distributors.

Full video of the event can be viewed at: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ES-sdffIC6o&feature=channel_video_title

RETAILERS FORUM MAGAZINE IN 30TH YEAR!

Saturday, April 23rd, 2011

IT all started in the basement of a printing plant in Great Neck, NY. After graduating from art school in 1978, Martin Stevens worked entry-level positions as a graphic artist at newspapers and magazines throughout New York. In 1979, after his first marriage he decided to launch out with his own graphics arts company, housed in the basement of a printing plant in Great Neck, Long Island. As with any start-up, things were slow and Martin was barely grossing $10,000 annually as he built the business. Sometime in 1980, his free rescue cat Ralph got sick and needed expensive medical attention, which added to mounting credit card debt.

THE need for extra income was pressing and with no retailing history, Martin entered the flea market business as a vendor selling gifts and novelties. Rather than start with one location, Martin arranged for three different markets (very spread out) and worked one booth while his wife and an employee worked the two others. Martin recalls the hardest part of the flea market business was finding merchandise. There was no internet (1980) and no magazines for vendors. The only source of merchandise was a small area of the Sunday NY Times that had “Offerings to Buyers” where Martin sourced merchandise.

DURING the Christmas season of 1980, with a grueling 7-day work week Martin had the light bulb moment! After talking with many fellow vendors about how they source their merchandise he thought about a newsletter for flea market vendors.

WITH $100 and a lot of determination, Martin wrote and photocopied a sales letter that he mailed to wholesalers around the tri state area to convince them to try an advertisement in his new newsletter, Flea Market Forum. The initial printing costs for the first run would be $800 and distribution would be hand-done by Martin on the weekends at various flea markets. Martin mailed the letters and waited for the checks to roll in. Without the funding from the new advertisers the newsletter was not going to happen. So, there was a lot of anxiety.

WEEKS went by and enough money and ads came in to print the first issue, which was a 12-page newsprint magazine. May of 1981 was the first issue of the magazine and the rest, as we say is history.

WITH no competition and the availability of his own graphics equipment and talent, Martin was able to grow the magazine every month, doubling the revenue for the first several years of the magazine. Eventually the graphic arts business took a back seat to the publication and as new technology came out, computers and the start of the internet, the small business had quickly grown into a multi-million dollar operation by the 1990’s.

FROM a small basement office space the company expanded twice until it settled into its corporate offices in beautiful Centerport, Long Island. The company has expanded over the years to publish two independent magazines, Retailers Forum (specializing in independent stores) and Swap Meet Magazine (servicing the flea market industry). In addition to the magazines, the company has over two dozen trade directories, search engines, a full service printing company as well as a marketing and sales company.

THE wholesale/retail industry has seen many changes over the 30 years that Forum has been publishing and one thing that has been consistent is Forum Publishing. Martin established the first magazine to connect retailers and wholesalers and has paved the way for many other fine magazines and websites who service the community.

Forum Publishing wants to thank everyone in the industry for their support and encouragement as they enter their 31st year in the business. We invite all interested in our company to visit our main website: www.RetailersForum.com and view our latest issue as well as partake of our content.

TOP EXECUTIVES AND CEO’S MEET AT THE WORLD BUSINESS FORUM IN NEW YORK CITY

Tuesday, February 22nd, 2011

The home of the famous Rockettes, Radio City Music Hall, was turned into a business conference full of movers and shakers in the world of commerce.

The 2011 World Business Forum opened Tuesday, October 5. This Forum is the largest business event in the United States where business, political and academic leaders present innovative strategies on doing business.

This special event, attended by over 4000 attendees from over 50 countries, of which 80% are at VP level or above, provides a forum of incredible speakers sharing their knowledge and business experience.

The business climate around the world has undergone massive changes over the last few years. Whether it is the global financial markets, social media, healthcare or the future of globalization, this event updated attendees with the latest thinking directly from those who are setting the agenda.

In this article, Forum Publisher Martin Stevens, shares some of the information available at the conference with our readers.

Over a dozen speakers gave presentations over the two day event. In this article I have summarized some of the key highlights of each speaker.

Al Gore

Former Vice President of the United States, congressman, Vietnam veteran and journalist

Mr. Gore spoke of a topic near and dear to him, Global Affairs with relation to climate change. In his presentation, Mr. Gore advised leaders that business models need to be retooled with more of a long-term strategic vision than is currently in force.

Martin Lindstrom

One of the World’s 100 Most Influential People in 2009, according to TIME, Martin Lindstrom is the author of Buyology-Truth and Lies About Why We Buy, a New York Times and Wall Street Journal bestseller.

Mr. Lindstrom ran a very interesting segment on marketing. His term “neuromarketing” was explained as the future of what marketing will be like in the next decade or two. He feels that 85% of people’s buying decisions take place in the non conscious part of the brain. His system explains how to combine science with the latest technologies and marketing insights. His interesting observation disputing the myth that “sex sells” explains that when we market using sexy images the consumers brains are so hard-wired to be seduced by sex that we tend to forget everything around the marketing and just remember the sexy bits.

We’ve all heard the phrase “retail therapy” and Mr. Lindstrom believes that when people shop their body releases dopamine to their brain, which can make them feel good. This is the same neurotransmitter that is released when someone is on drugs.  So, shopping can be addictive. He goes on that many top retailers use neuromarketing as a tool to make consumers buy.

This segment was extremely informative for all of us who are involved in the retail industry.

David Gergen

Former White House advisor for 30 years, David Gergen was director of communications for President Reagan, and served as counselor to President Clinton on both foreign policy and domestic affairs.

Mr. Gergen, who was an advisor to four US Presidents has observed first hand some of the most powerful leaders on the planet. He is in a unique position when it comes to assessing the traits and habits of the most successful leadership practices.

In his seminar, Mr. Gergen explained that while he did not always agree with the conservative views of Ronald Reagan, he was one of the single most impressive leaders he ever met. A great leaders knows his beliefs and core values and does not waver. In comparison was Jimmy Carter who Gergen called wishy-washy and undecided of direction.

It is Gergen’s belief that those who are “steady in principle, flexible in means” make great leaders. If you are leading your company and want to be successful you need to be optimistic,  enthusiastic and sure of your focus and direction.

When it came to our current President Obama, Gergen explained that there is widespread disappointment in the business community. Instead of bringing the country together, as promised, it continues to be divided. Obama is being lauded as a historic president, but there is very little confidence in him from the business world.

When asked if he felt there was any indication that Obama might change, Gergen responded that he sees nothing to indicate that at the moment.

A.G. Lafley

A.G. Lafley is the former Chairman of the Board, President and Chief Executive Officer of Procter & Gamble, the world’s largest consumer goods company.

According to Mr. Lafley, the era of the consumer always being right is over! Before you get too excited, his next statement was that: Now the consumer is boss!

Following that mantra, during his leadership at P&G, sales doubled and profits quadrupled.

He explained that in retailing and other service businesses the “customer is always right” referred to exchanging products of refunding purchases without question, or taking the extra step to provide a little better or more service.

The intent of “customer is boss” was is more comprehensive and more disruptive. At P&G they turned the organization chart upside down to have the consumer at the top and the CEO at the bottom. The consumers played a big part in developing the company as P&G became more consumer centric.

The key for all businesses that deal with the public is to be connected and communicate and interact with them. It’s simply called “open innovation” and it can work for all size companies.

He also called upon companies, especially manufacturers to know when to retire items that have outlived their purpose. His biggest failure, maybe you remember this, was Fit, the fruit and vegetable wash. Knowing when to back off a product is as important as knowing when to promote one.

Vijay Govindarajan

Vijay Govindarajan is widely regarded as one of the world’s leading experts on strategy and innovation and has authored seven books on the subjects.

According to Mr. Govindarajan, the future of innovation lies in the developing countries of Asia, Africa and Latin America. He spoke at the Forum about reverse innovation.

Innovation is very broad, it could be product innovation or process innovation. We are told not to confuse innovation with creativity. Innovation is commercializing creativity. It is 1% inspiration  and 99% perspiration. The 1% is creativity.

Reverse innovation is to innovate in poor countries like India and China and then bring the innovations to rich country’s like the US. It is logical to see why a poor man would want a rich man’s product: a rich man has a car – the poor man wants a car; the rich man has a cell phone – the poor man wants a cell phone. But it is not easy to see why a rich man would want a poor man’s product and that is what reverse innovation is all about.

This innovation is the oxygen which is going to fuel the future growth of developed countries. We need to win in the emerging markets or simply decay and wither away.

Consider that when you drop the price of a product, for example a lap top computer, people simply buy more lap tops – one for the office, home, kid, spouse, etc.

One of the highlights of my time at the World Business Forum was meeting former Chairman and CEO of General Electric. Heralded as one of the greatest CEO’s in history, Mr. Welch was a delight to speak with as well as be privileged to hear some of his business missives.

Jack Welch

The most admired CEO in the world. During his 20 years as Chairman and CEO of GE, he transformed the company into a powerhouse and increased GE market value by $387 billion.

I have been a long-time fan of Jack Welch, who is the consummate CEO and one of the most well-respected businessmen in the world. It was a pleasure meeting him this year, as he was not able to make last year’s meeting due to illness. Mr. Welch looked great, was in great spirits and I was able to speak with him briefly between his broadcast interviews at the Forum with Bloomberg News and his seminar.

Mr. Welch is a big believer in “telling it like it is” when it comes to work and worker quality. While he doesn’t like the term “Rank and Yank” he believes that too many company managers keep under-performing employees hoping that they will improve. This hurts businesses.

He refers to it as lack of candor when supervisors do not provide accurate feedback to subordinates in the misguided effort to be “nice” to them.  At GE, Mr. Welch would rank employees and when making reviews, the bottom 10 percent would be fired. While it sounds harsh, he goes on that people get ranked in school when they are graded. Why do we give grades only to kids and not adults?

When asked how Mr. Welch defines a winner, he responds “Today , I see winning as people defining their objectives and fulfilling them. Not being a victim. You define where you want to go and then you go for it. You can’t win all the time and in your career you’ll sometimes go from a prince to a pig!”

This special report brought to you by the leading magazine for wholesale merchandise, Retailers Forum Magazine.

OUTLOOK FOR RETAILING IN 2011. ONE MAN’S OPINION.

Monday, December 27th, 2010

Having been in the wholesale/retail industry since 1981, and having paid attention to trends I honestly can say that I think our industry is going to see a much better year in 2011. All of the important factors point to the positive trending in the marketplace. It was hit or miss until the holiday season started to unfold. Many large national retailers surprised Wall Street by posting better than expected earnings. This, in turn, boosted the stock market, which in turn boosted many 401K plans. It is quite a circle, but at the end of the day the result is that we see consumer confidence at it’s highest level in some time. This all translates to an improved economy for 2011.

I have never been one to write flowery overly-optimistic articles like many of our competitors who have spent the last few years with blinders on, cheering the economy and telling us, and this is my favorite, when they review a trade show saying that “there were less buyers, but that gave more of a chance to interact at the booths!”  The bottom line is that our industry has endured the toughest times that many of us have ever been through and those of us who are still standing will prosper over the coming months.

With consumer confidence returning we will see more shoppers in the market place, OUR market place, buying OUR merchandise and services. When people are comfortable that their nest eggs  are growing again, they will start to spend. And, from the early numbers this holiday season we can see that we are indeed on the road to improvement.

All retailers need to get their act in gear and start planning their year ahead. If you have old, stale merchandise on your shelves, sell it off. Discount it, donate it or sell it to a closeout dealer, but move it out. When the shoppers are back in the game they want to see new merchandise, not dusty old products that have been sitting on your shelves for the last several years. We all need to excite our shoppers and that means with new merchandise lines as well as spruced up store displays and spaces. Take advantage of the momentum in the markets and capitalize on it by reinventing “your” wheel.

And, wholesalers: It is important that you start sourcing new merchandise to stay competitive. If you are still peddling the “drinking bird” novelty it is time to take a trip to your manufacturers and see what is new and fresh for 2011. The same-old is not going to fly this new year. It was fine up till now because goodness knows no one was spending and none of us had funds for new items. But we are turning the corner and heading in a new direction. A direction of more prosperity for our businesses and those who step up will be fruitful.

Retailers Forum Magazine is proud to be bringing news and opinion for the industry since 1981 and hopes that all of our readers and advertisers have a successful start to 2011. We look forward to a great year for everyone and hope you check back often to our continually updated web site.

VAT TAX MAY DESTROY RETAILING IN THE UNITED STATES!

Thursday, October 14th, 2010

Piling a European-style sales tax on top of the existing U.S. tax structure would immediately destroy 850,000 jobs and damage retail spending for years to come, according to an economic analysis commissioned by the National Retail Federation, a leading trade group.

The report studied the potential effect of a 10.3 percent value-added tax, or VAT, a form of sales tax applied at every stage of production. The tax is ubiquitous around the world, having been adopted in more than 130 countries.

NRF president Matthew Shay said the study is intended to push back against what he views as a rising tide of interest in the VAT in Washington, where policymakers are eager to reduce record budget deficits.

“Supporters claim a VAT is the solution to the nation’s economic ills, but nothing could be further from the truth,” said Shay, who represents an industry that has long opposed a value-added tax. “This report has found that a VAT would have negative economic consequences for most working Americans alive today.”

The study, conducted by Ernst and Young and economic research firm Tax Policy Advisers, assumed a VAT would cover most consumer goods and services but exempt home sales, rent, groceries, medicine, health care, financial services and education to ease the impact on low-income families. Such a tax, they said, would raise close to $400 billion a year, a sum that would significantly reduce budget deficits projected to hover around $1 trillion over the next decade.

However, the economic consequences would be dramatic, Shay said, with 850,000 jobs lost in the first year alone. Retailers, such as those represented by NRF, would be among the hardest-hit sectors of the economy, losing $2.5 trillion in business over the first decade.

The overall economy would also suffer at first, the study found, with gross domestic product dropping slightly – by 0.2 percent – in the first year. However, the economy would benefit from a value-added tax by the 10th year, the study found, because “lower deficits and debt would have positive long-run effects.”

The report argues that reducing government spending by a comparable amount – $400 billion a year – is a preferable option for reducing deficits because it would boost economic growth by 0.1 percent in the first year and 0.7 percent in the 10th year. But cutting such a sum would be the equivalent of wiping out Medicare, and therefore politically difficult.

Shay said the NRF will submit the study to the bipartisan commission President Obama has appointed to develop a deficit-reduction plan. The commission is scheduled to issue its report in December. Shay said his group grew nervous about the value-added tax after seeing public comments from commission members, including co-directors Erskine Bowles and Alan Simpson.

“We take this very, very seriously,” Shay said. “We think it’s essential that policymakers understand the ramifications of this proposal before they go any further into conversation about approaches they might take to reduce the deficit.”

Bowles and Simpson have declined to rule out a VAT, saying all options are on the table in the commission’s discusions. Bowles also said on Fox News in April that one could make “good arguments for a value-added tax.” But Bowles suggested that a VAT should be considered as an alternative to taxing wages, not as an add-on to the current system. And Simpson has said flatly, “You can’t do a value-added tax without dealing with the income tax.”

Commission executive director Bruce Reed laughed when asked about the prospect of the commission’s 18 members – including six GOP lawmakers – recommending a VAT. Under the commission’s charter, 14 members must agree for any policy to be adopted.

“The U.S. Senate got only 13 out of 100 members to support that policy,” Reed said, referring to an April sense-of-the-Senate vote. “It seems unlikely that we could get 14 out of 18.”

BACK TO SCHOOL SALES OUTLOOK

Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010

Los Angeles, Calif., PriceGrabber.com(r), a part of Experian, just released the results of its Back to School Shopping Forecast survey, which includes responses from 1,718 online consumers and was conducted between May 12 and June 1, 2010. Survey data reveals that many consumers do not plan to save for back-to-school shopping this year but are starting their shopping early and spending the same amount as they did last year.

Consumers plan to begin shopping early and distribute their purchases

Summer just started, but survey data reveals that consumers already are thinking about back-to-school shopping. According to PriceGrabber.com survey data, 26 percent of back-to-school shoppers plan to make purchases before July 2010. Thirty-one percent plan to begin their shopping in July, and 38 percent plan to start in August.

This early launch of back to school shopping can be attributed in part to the 49 percent of back-to-school shoppers planning to spread out their purchases in order to distribute the cost over a longer period of time

Most shoppers are not planning to save up for back-to-school purchases

Early shopping trends and efforts to make purchases over an extended period of time may be affecting consumers’ short-term saving patterns. When back-to-school shoppers were asked when they planned to begin saving for purchases this year, 64 percent of consumers revealed that they are not planning to save. Nineteen percent of consumers started saving before April 2010. Seventeen percent started saving between April and July 2010.

“We are not surprised to see this new, optimistic trend of consumer frugality extend to back-to-school shopping,” stated Laura Conrad, president of PriceGrabber.com. “Further analysis of the data supports the idea that consumers are trying to absorb back-to-school spending in their monthly budgets by starting their shopping early to distribute their purchases.”

Consumers plan to spend the same amount or less as last year

While consumers are not planning to save for back-to-school shopping, they will continue to be budget-conscious when it comes to their purchases. Of the consumers who are shopping for back-to-school items this year, 45 percent plan to spend as much as they did last year and 41 percent plan to spend less, compared with last year. Fourteen percent plan to spend more this year because of the anticipated economic recovery.

“The data is clear that consumers are still focused on spending the same amount or less on back-to-school purchases this year, even with the expected lift in the recession,” said Barbary Brunner, chief marketing officer at PriceGrabber.com. “However, instead of saving a little bit each month for back-to-school shopping and then making their purchases at once, we are seeing consumers engage in layaway-like behavior by purchasing a few items each month.”

Follow PriceGrabber.com on Twitter @PriceGrabber.

About PriceGrabber.com

PriceGrabber.com, a part of Experian, is a leading online shopping site with more than 23 million unique shoppers monthly. At PriceGrabber.com, savvy shoppers can instantly find and compare millions of unique products and services across 25 categories with more than 11,000 merchants. Compare products side by side to find the right retailers at the best prices within popular categories, such as Digital Cameras, Electronics, Computers, Clothing, Books, TVs and more. PriceGrabber.com provides shoppers with the right product from the right merchant at the best price anytime, anywhere. Visit us at http://www.pricegrabber.com. This article brought to you by the number one leader in sourcing wholesale merchandise, Retailers Forum Magazine.

WHILE WE READ OUR IPADS, CHINESE FACTORY WORKERS COMMIT SUICIDE

Sunday, June 6th, 2010

Well, in America’s never-ending search for more profits through exploitation, a rash of suicides has broken out at the Shenzhen, China factory where ipads are being made. While we leisurely read our books on the $500+ devices, the Chinese assembly line workers (250,000 of them) toil to keep up with the production of the units.

In doing so, it appears that the stress and monotony of the job has caught up with at least ten of the plant’s employees, who committed suicide. Maybe if we delve into the working conditions we can understand things better. First off, conversation on the assembly lines is prohibited. Workers are given a 10-minute bathroom break every two hours, and the workers are yelled at frequently by management.

Sounds like wonderful working conditions. But, of course let us remember that these factory workers are lucky to be making the ipads because they are being paid much more than workers at other factories…$293 a month! Imagine, two months of round-the-clock work to even think about buying an entry-level ipad! Oh, they are treated real nice there!

The workers are put up in living dormitories as many as 8 to a room. The 1.16 square mile facility run by Foxconn has its own hospital and restaurants — everything you need to keep the workers on base. But let’s not think that the company isn’t being proactive when it comes to the suicides… we have learned that Foxconn has recently installed netting around the outdoor stairwells of the dorms to prevent people from jumping. Well done, problem solved! And, in the Corporate America way to resolve any problem — they will throw some money at it by increasing wages for the employees around 30%. Good deal.

Just another example of corporations squeezing profits on the backs of others. With two million ipads sold within 60 days, Apple has been seemingly able tobuy two workers for an entire month for less than the cost of one entry-level ipad. So, read your books, enjoy yourself this summer knowing that the nets will be there to catch the employees who assembled your reading device!

Retailers Forum Magazine reports on current news and provides opinion on related news stories that our staff gathers from reporting bureaus. To read the entire article of ipad, check out Bloomburg Business June 7-13 issue.