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Winning at Retail
Book

Winning at Retail

Developing a Sustained Model for Retail Success

Wiley, 2004 更多详情

自动生成的音频
自动生成的音频

Editorial Rating

7

Qualities

  • Applicable

Recommendation

Montgomery Ward, Woolworth’s and Pets.com stumbled into irrelevancy before they knew what hit them. Authors and retail consultants Willard Ander and Neil Stern explain what went wrong and tell retailers how to stay alive and thrive. They prescribe their theory, called "Est," as in the superlative suffix. Be the best, they say, in assortment (biggest), price (cheapest), customer service (easiest), speed of service (quickest) or fashion (hottest). Being "pretty good" at everything no longer works. The abundance of choices in today’s transparent, digital marketplace has spawned information-overloaded, fickle, demanding customers. The authors tend to generalize about what good companies are doing right rather than describing how also-ran retailers might turn things around, but there is plenty of advice here for those who are willing to take it. getAbstract recommends this glib pep talk of a book - if for no other reason than to jolt retailers out of believing they’re doing everything possible to keep customers coming back.

Take-Aways

  • To stay in business over time, a retailer must be the best at delivering at least one key value proposition that is important to a specific group of customers.
  • The key values that count are speed, style, variety, convenience and cost.
  • Commit employees to one of these and focus everything - from hiring to strategy to advertising to checkout - on delivering it to customers.

About the Authors

Willard Ander and Neil Stern are senior partners at McMillan/Doolittle, international retail consultants. Ander consults on retail strategy, new store development and retail best practices. Stern consults on strategic planning and development of new retail concepts. He also edits the firm’s Retail Watch newsletter.


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