Posts Tagged ‘David Jones’

Brick-and-mortar giants finally making strides online

Thursday, May 29th, 2014
Photo credit; Timothy H on Flickr

Photo credit; Timothy H on Flickr

Both David Jones and Myers appear to finally be getting the hang of this whole internet fad.

While Myer’s third quarter sales were down, its online sales had increased. Myer says it has 119,000 products now available through the website and nine million visits to the site over the quarter.

David Jones fared better, but its third quarter sales still weren’t great. However, the upmarket department store reported a 190% increase in online sales over the past year, albeit from a very low base. It is seeking to offer a dual in-store and online offering.

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Australian businesses getting serious about online sales

Friday, March 28th, 2014
Photo credit; Timothy H on Flickr

Photo credit; Timothy H on Flickr

Myer boss Bernie Brookes and his counterpart at David Jones, Paul Zahra, believe they will both get to 10% of total sales done online over the next three to five years.

Australian retailers are crawling to 10% online penetration slowly, while their retail peers in the US and Britain have already met and surpassed that benchmark and are well on their way to 20% of all sales done online.

Analysts agree that Australian retailers have been slow to get online, and that hesitation and lack of investment going back to last decade have meant we will probably remain behind the pace of the US and western Europe.

”The Australian department stores in particular and retailers in general have copped a lot of flack for being slow to move online,” said Caroline Finch, senior analyst at research group IBISWorld.

”Myer and David Jones in particular have been slow when compared to their international counterparts, and the department store industry has gone backwards over the last five years largely as a result of losing market share to other players who have jumped into the online space.”

Brookes says the current trajectory of online sales in Australia is similar to what was experienced in the US and Britain, which augurs well for stores such as Myer matching the online sales rates booked by the likes of Neiman Marcus and John Lewis.

”If you look at the growth of online for John Lewis, Debenhams, Macys, Nordstrom and Neiman Marcus and you plot it – it’s almost identical to us.

”It’s start at zero, goes to 1 per cent, doubles to 2, then doubles again to 4, double to 8 and that’s exactly the game plan we are seeing from a Myer point of view. So it’s happening at the same rate.”

The key game-changer, experts agree, is the proliferation of hand-held mobile devices, such as iPhones and tablets, that liberate shoppers to be able to make on-the-spot purchases as they walk through a department store, ride on a train or like what they see in a magazine as they sip a coffee at their favourite cafe.

”And this is what we see in the banking sector,” said NAB retail sector head Tiernan White, ”where mobile connectivity is extremely important to us.

”Access to quick transactability is certainly helping online sales.”

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David Jones online sales up 1,000%

Wednesday, November 20th, 2013
1000 - Miguel

Photo credit; Miguel on Flickr

While sales growth for David Jones is flat-lining, its online sales increased by more than 1,000% in the first quarter of this financial year just ended.

Compare that to total sales revenue of $424.2 million, up just 2.1 per cent.

David Jones didn’t put a dollar figure to the online sales.

The key takeouts from the quarterly David Jones report:

* New South Wales and Victoria stores are the strongest for sales.

* Online sales up more than 1,000 per cent in the quarter. Its relaunched webstore is 12 months old next week.

* Total Sales up 2.1 per cent to $424.2 million from the same quarter the previous year of $415.6 million.

* Like for Like Sales down 0.3% to $414.2 million from $415.6 million.

* Sales were up 0.6 per cent excluding the disruption impact of the Canberra Centre store
refurbishment

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