首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Wal-Mart Tries to Find Its Customer For all its success in the United States--and there is plenty of it--Wal-Mart Stores is
Wal-Mart Tries to Find Its Customer For all its success in the United States--and there is plenty of it--Wal-Mart Stores is
admin
2010-03-26
26
问题
Wal-Mart Tries to Find Its Customer
For all its success in the United States--and there is plenty of it--Wal-Mart Stores is still struggling to figure out its performance at home, where sales growth at individual stores has dropped, its customers routinely flirt with rivals like Target for clothing and its advertising has often failed to inspire.
The retailer’s plans to fix the problems became clearer yesterday, when Wal-Mart executives pledged to remodel (装饰) nearly half of its United States stores over the next 18 months, beef up its marketing division and expand a bold line of clothing across much of the chain.
The changes, explained in Wal-Mart’s fourth-quarter earnings announcement yesterday, threw a spotlight on the increasingly important role of one man: Eduardo Castro-Wright, the new chief of Wal-Mart’s United States stores. Mr. Castro-Wright is a popular figure in the company because of his success in transforming the retailer’s Mexican division into one of its most profitable units.
Mr. Castro-Wright, 51, has proved to be an aggressive innovator, overseeing a change in regional store management that will put more supervisors in the field rather than in the company’s hometown of Bentonville, Ark., and encouraging experimentation, like a new pharmacy station that brings customers closer to pharmacists.
"Clearly, Wal-Mart’s fortunes over the next 12 to 18 months counts on the quality of the job that Eduardo Castro-Wright does," said Robert F. Buchanan, a retail analyst at A. G. Edwards & Sons. "He is the man on the hot seat."
Bill Dreher, a retail analyst at Deutsche Bank Securities, called Mr. Castro-Wright a rising star and a very strong candidate to succeed the chief executive, H. Lee Scott Jr., providing that he can fix what analysts say is broken in the United States--namely a shopping experience that Wal-Mart executives concede has become inconsistent and, at times, unpleasant because of cluttered aisles and outdated decoration.
Sales at Wal-Mart stores open for at least a year grew, on average, 3.6 percent a month in fiscal(财政的)year 2005, compared with a 5.8 percent gain for Target, according to the International Council of Shopping Centers, a trade group.
And as yesterday’s earnings--or perhaps more accurately, investors’ reactions--showed, managing Wal-Mart is no simple task. Profit rose 13 percent in the quarter, but Wal-Mart, the nation’s largest retailer, predicted that full-year earnings would fall below Wall Street’s expectations.
As a result, Wal-Mart’s shares fell as much as 1.5 percent in morning trading. Shares closed down 36 cents, or less than 1 percent, at $45.74.
Wal-Mart said it was optimistic about 2006 despite’ the financial burdens--among them higher energy prices--facing its predominantly working-class shoppers.
The company forecast full-year earnings yesterday of $2.88 to $2.95 a share, compared with analysts’ estimates of $2.98. Wal-Mart pointed out that the Wall Street estimates did not reflect higher interest costs and share repurchases.
Mr. Scott said the retailer finished strong in its fourth quarter, which ended Jan. 31. Net income rose to $3.6 billion, or 86 cents a share, for the quarter, from $3.2 billion, or 75 cents a share, a year ago. Sales increased 8.6 percent, to $89 billion from $82 billion, but overall revenue of $90.1 billion was below analysts’ estimates.
In a conference call this morning, Mr. Castro-Wright outlined his plan to improve the uneven shopping experience at Wal-Mart’s American stores, which accounted for 67 percent of the company’s $312 billion in annual sales last year.
Perhaps the most ambitious part of the plan is the proposed renovation of 1,800 stores over the next 18 months. The remodeling is intended to bring the chain’s oldest outlets in line with newer ones, which have faux hardwood floors in the clothing department, lower display cases that make it easier to see merchandise, and--as Wal-Mart like to emphasize--better restrooms.
Bernard Sosnick, an analyst at Oppenheimer & Company, called the pace of the remodeling remarkable, noting the company’s budget for capital expenditures, which he estimated at $17 billion, exceeded the annual sales at a rival, Kohl’s department store? But the store improvements may be coming too late for some customers, said Mr. Buchanan, the A. G. Edwards analyst. "Arguably, they have fallen behind. They have too many tired-looking stores," he said, adding that Mr. Castro-Wright is "barking up the right tree."
A Wal-Mart representative said Mr. Castro-Wright was unavailable for an interview and declined to comment on his future at the company. Mr. Castro-Wright, who was born in Ecuador, held senior positions at RJR Nabisco and Honeywell Transportation before he began running Wal-Mart Mexico in 2001.
To appeal to fashion-conscious shoppers, Mr. Castro-Wright said during the conference call that a line of clothing called Metro7, originally introduced to 500 stores, will be stocked at 1,500 stores by September. The line, which includes distressed-denim jeans and silk camisoles with sequined lace, has exceeded sales expectations.
Wal-Mart has found that its higher-income consumers rely on the chain for cheap consumables like laundry detergent and toilet paper, but shop elsewhere for fashion, home decor (装饰) and electronics, products that typically deliver higher profit margins for retailers.
Wal-Mart refers to such consumers as "selective shoppers," because they can afford to buy a skirt, television or comforter at higher-priced retailer.
To reach them, the company has expanded its marketing team, poaching senior executives from Frito-Lay and DaimlerChrysler. It is introducing more sophisticated advertisements, largely supplanting the sword-wielding, price-slashing smiley face, which seemed dated next to sleek ads from Target.
The latest television and print media campaign, in a departure from Wal-Mart tradition, concedes that shoppers do not think of the chain as a destination for fashion. In one print ad, a woman arrives at a store looking for eyedrops and, to her surprise, discovers smart apparel. Instead of advertising "always low prices," it ends by encouraging consumers to "look beyond the basics."
A lot of Wal-mart stores are poorly decorated.
选项
A、Y
B、N
C、NG
答案
A
解析
文章多处提到沃尔玛要进行装修改造的问题。第十五段也有人评论沃尔玛说:They have too many tired-looking stores.可见,沃尔玛的店而陈旧,需要装修。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/Xok7777K
0
大学英语四级
相关试题推荐
Thebiggestoilspillhappenedin1989.Thepollutioncausedbyoilspillscanhavelong-lastingeffectsontheanimalsorbird
Twentyyearsago,whenonlythelowlytadpolehadbeencloned,bioethicistsraisedthepossibilitythatscientistsmightsomeday
AnimalslikebearsandbluewhalessharetheEarthwithus.Theyfascinateuswiththeir【S1】______,theirgrace,andtheirspee
A、New-bornbabieshavenopreferenceastowhichhandtouse.B、Scientistsbelievethatman’sright-handednessderivedfromour
IrisRossnerhasseeneasternGermancustomersweepforjoywhentheydriveawayinshiny,newMercedes—Benzsedans."Theyhave
TheUnitedStatesranksfirstamongWesterncountriesasfarasdivorcerateisconcerned.Peoplefromdivorcedfamiliesaremo
A、Theadvantagesoftraditionalsurveyingmethods.B、Usingsatellitestocommunicatewithmountainclimbers.C、Obtainingnewinf
Weareallforyourproposalthat____________(推迟讨论).
A、Thebenefitsofstrongbusinesscompetition.B、Aproposaltolowerthecostofproduction.C、Complaintsabouttheexpenseofm
随机试题
市政公用工程常常处于城镇区域,必须在施工组织设计中贯彻()理念。
在教学过程中如何培养学生的创造想象?
蛛网膜下腔出血与其他脑血管病的最大区别是
男性,患者,64岁。反复咳嗽、咯痰,痰中带血2周。体温38.3℃,WBC12×109/L,胸片右肺门肿块影,伴远端大片状阴影,抗感染治疗阴影不吸收。首先考虑的治疗方案是
女子胞的功能活动与下述哪项关系密切
国民待遇是指对其他成员方的货物、服务以及知识产权等领域应与成员方自身的同类货物、服务和知识产权等领域同等对待。 ( )
下列税法的构成要素中,( )是区别不同类型税种的主要标志。
劳动关系的特点决定了劳动争议具有如下特征()。
采取扩张性财政政策通常是在()。
凯洛夫所著的《教育学》的特点有()
最新回复
(
0
)