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  #2001  
Old Posted Jul 12, 2016, 7:50 PM
Uhuniau Uhuniau is offline
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Anything else in a more central location?
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  #2002  
Old Posted Aug 10, 2016, 5:06 PM
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Giant Tiger eyes expansion and revamp as key to lure in loyal shoppers

Linda Nguyen, The Canadian Press 08.10.2016


TORONTO - For 55 years, Giant Tiger's smiling feline mascot has beckoned shoppers in small towns and those driving up to the cottage.

But after years of operating under the radar amid intense competition against rivals like Walmart and the now defunct Target Canada, the company is setting its sights on becoming a household name.

The Ottawa-based retailer, with its trademark yellow branding, currently operates 220 stores and has a goal of opening 10 to 15 new stores every year for the next three to five years.

The company also has plans to revamp the design of its locations and increase its product offerings in order to build a better shopping experience. Growing its e-commerce business has also been a top priority.

Selling everything from groceries to big-screen TVs, the national discount chain credits the key to its survival and more importantly, its success over the last half-century, to delivering value to shoppers in the know.

"Giant Tiger is Canada's best-kept secret," touts Thomas Haig, president and chief operating officer at the privately-owned company.

But in growing its footprint, Haig says it will not lose sight of what has kept it sitting pretty: its local franchise owners who know their customers and knows what works for their specific community.

"These store managers live in the area, (have) lived there for several years and understand the clientele and understand the needs and wants of the community," he said.

For instance, some locations carry hunting and cottage supplies if they're serving rural areas, while others may sell medical uniforms if they're close to a hospital.

As part of its expansion, the company says it's looking for sites between 18,000 to 25,000 square feet in communities where there's demand for Giant Tiger — including areas where there's already a location.

Recent openings have included stores in Bathurst, N.B., Sudbury, Ont., and Wetaskiwin, Alta. The company also recently announced a new store in Peterborough, Ont., scheduled to open next April.

For the past few years, Giant Tiger has been working on transforming its sleepy image in order to stay relevant to customers who want one-stop shopping for household items and groceries.

One of the biggest priorities the company has is the task of reorganizing store layouts so customers can navigate faster and easier as opposed to rivals who operate warehouse-sized locations that force customers to walk around aimlessly.

"(Our customers) are looking for a simplified shopping experience," says Karen Sterling, vice-president of marketing at Giant Tiger.

Their target customer continues to be women between 30 to 55 years old, with two kids, who are the "CFO (chief financial officer)" of their families and looking for value from their purchases.

Sterling says their customers' time constraints have also motivated the company to include more product selection, so a weekly shop for toilet paper, frozen pizza, workout clothes or back-to-school supplies can all be done under one roof.

"The smaller store size is a competitive advantage," she said.

Along with updating its store look, the company has also been increasing its e-commerce presence. It currently has about 6,000 products online, with the option of shipping some of them to home or a local store for pickup.

Retail analyst Sandy Silva, who is with market research firm NPD Group, says part of Giant Tiger's success comes from customers who like the idea of supporting a Canadian business.

But where the company can really make its mark is how it proceeds with online shopping.

Silva noted that some challenges for the retailer will be meeting expectations when it comes to home delivery times and product availability because the majority of their customers live in rural areas.

"E-commerce is going to be crucial to them," she said.

Follow @LindaNguyenTO on Twitter.

http://www.ottawacitizen.com/busines...043/story.html
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  #2003  
Old Posted Aug 13, 2016, 7:23 PM
SF Thomas SF Thomas is offline
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Glad to see Giant Tiger plans to expand a bit, it would be nice to have a more widespread alternative to Walmart for a lower-end/discount department store since Target (and Zellers) are gone.

While the mess of dollar stores like Dollarama and Dollar Tree do fill the void to some extent they still lack variety in some areas like clothes or their products are just too low quality sometimes.

There are two locations that come to mind which would be decent in Ottawa:

-The Lincoln Fields Shopping Centre that Walmart just moved out of (I am aware this has been suggested a few times). There is a decent concentration of customers in this area between Brittania Bay and the mess of apartment/condo towers by Lincoln Fields and there is already any established customer base for a discount department store. Granted there is a GT Express by Greenbank and the highway but it doesn't have a huge amount of space or store selection.

-Meadowlands/Merivale area, there are a few vacant stores between the Target and Future Shop that closed down in the last few years that would work well. There are also several condos either finished or under construction along this section of Merivale the last few years which would be a good place to establish a customer base.

While there is the Walmart at Baseline/Clyde I think that you could get some people to go to GT simply if it is closer to where they live. From my anecdotal experience there are actually a fair number of people in this area that don't have cars or at least walk or use transit regularly between Algonquin and Carleton students, seniors, young professionals or just people attracted by low real estate and rental prices. In addition the 176 isn't the most frequent bus route and doesn't drop you directly at the Walmart either (you have to walk a block or take the 118 for a minute or two), so a Giant Tiger on Merivale might be a bit more convenient for some people.
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  #2004  
Old Posted Aug 18, 2016, 4:41 PM
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Trendy outdoor chain Cabela's set to open second Ontario location in Kanata

By Jacob Serebrin, OBJ Contributor
Published on August 17, 2016


Outdoor equipment retailer Cabela’s, known for its elaborate stores, plans to open a location in Ottawa on Sept. 22.

The 70,000-square-foot store on Palladium Drive in Kanata will be just the company’s second location in Ontario.

It will feature “a large mountain replica, indoor archery range and dozens of museum-quality wildlife displays,“ the company said in a release.

“We just set them up to be fun,” said Nathan Borowski, a spokesman with Cabela’s. “The founder of Cabela’s, Dick Cabela, used to always say, ‘We sell fun.’”

The company sells products to help people have fun outdoors, but “we want to make sure that the in-store experience is fun as well,” he said.

Cabela’s, based in Sidney, Neb., opened its first Canadian store in Winnipeg in 2007. It now has 10 locations nationwide. In 2014, it opened its first Ontario store in Barrie.

Mr. Borowski said the company uses data from online and catalog sales to decide where it will open new stores.

“Ottawa definitely has a high volume of outdoor enthusiasts who are already familiar with Cabela’s,” he said.

Mr. Borowski said the company sees an opportunity to cater to those existing customers as well as expand its local customer base with the new location. With firearms and an indoor archery range on site, the store faces some additional safety and security concerns.

“We definitely take the safety and the security of all aspects of our stores very seriously,” Mr. Borowski said.

Long guns are equipped with trigger locks and compound bows are also equipped with a locking mechanism.

Cabela’s employees, called outfitters, always accompany customers using the archery range.

Mr. Borowski said that’s to explain products to customers, helping sales, as well as to ensure that they’re handled safely.

http://www.obj.ca/Local/Retail/2016-...on-in-Kanata/1
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  #2005  
Old Posted Aug 19, 2016, 1:51 AM
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I was at Tanger last week and Cabelas looks all built up ready to open. Contractors were busy doing road work.
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  #2006  
Old Posted Aug 19, 2016, 1:53 AM
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Sports Experts is closing down on innes rd in Orleans, not sure if Atmosphere inside will close too.
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  #2007  
Old Posted Aug 19, 2016, 3:28 AM
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Sports Experts is closing down on innes rd in Orleans, not sure if Atmosphere inside will close too.
That's very surprising, it is a good store and always seems busy. There is nothing else like it in the area.
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  #2008  
Old Posted Aug 19, 2016, 12:06 PM
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I feel like every Sports Experts is shutting down. I guess the massive Sports chek at PDO doesn't help and they own Sports Experts on top.
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  #2009  
Old Posted Aug 19, 2016, 12:48 PM
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Originally Posted by Dundas View Post
I feel like every Sports Experts is shutting down. I guess the massive Sports chek at PDO doesn't help and they own Sports Experts on top.
Canadian Tire might be trying to consolidate their many sports brands (Athletes World, Atmosphere, Intersport, National Sports, S3, SportChek, Sport Mart, Sports Experts)
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  #2010  
Old Posted Aug 19, 2016, 1:54 PM
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Originally Posted by acottawa View Post
Canadian Tire might be trying to consolidate their many sports brands (Athletes World, Atmosphere, Intersport, National Sports, S3, SportChek, Sport Mart, Sports Experts)
It was announced earlier this year by Canadian Tire that all Sports Experts in Ontario were closing or being converted to Sport Chek. Conformations of this already in Ottawa at St. Laurent (closed, already have a Sport Chek in that mall), Rideau Centre (replaced, new Sport Chek opening) and Orleans (assume closing, as there is already a Sport Chek in Place D'Orleans).

Sports Experts will remain open in Quebec for sure, and maybe Alberta (never say any news on Alberta locations).

I think this is just Canadian Tire getting their brands in order.
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  #2011  
Old Posted Aug 22, 2016, 3:00 PM
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Sports Experts and Atmosphère are very strong brands in Quebec. We don't any Sport Chek stores here at all.
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  #2012  
Old Posted Aug 22, 2016, 4:18 PM
MichelKazan MichelKazan is offline
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It appears that they're trying to phase out the Sports Experts brand in Ontario. I'm pretty sure it will continue to exist in Québec.
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  #2013  
Old Posted Aug 22, 2016, 4:24 PM
TransitZilla TransitZilla is offline
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It would be nice to have a Sport Chek in the south keys area... there's not really a sporting goods store in the southeast end except for the Hockey Life...
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  #2014  
Old Posted Aug 22, 2016, 5:24 PM
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It appears that they're trying to phase out the Sports Experts brand in Ontario. I'm pretty sure it will continue to exist in Québec.
It would be a serious mistake if they eliminated Sports Experts in Quebec IMO.
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  #2015  
Old Posted Aug 24, 2016, 5:18 PM
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Nordstrom to open discount Rack location at Train Yards

OBJ Staff
Published on August 23, 2016


Upscale clothing retailer Nordstrom says it plans to open a Rack store in Ottawa that will offer lower-cost merchandise.

The Seattle-based retailer says the Nordstrom Rack location at the Ottawa Train Yards is scheduled to open in the fall of 2018.

The 35,000-square-foot store will offer discounted items from regular Nordstrom stores as well as products specially purchased for the Rack brand.

“It has been a pleasure getting to know customers in Ottawa since we opened our doors at Rideau Centre in 2015,” Nordstrom Canada president Karen McKibbin said in a release. “We’re excited to offer customers a new way to shop with Nordstrom and bring them more of the great brands they love at great prices.”

This will be the second Nordstrom location in Ottawa. The chain opened a regular store covering 157,000 square feet at the Rideau Centre in March 2015.

http://www.obj.ca/Local/Retail/2016-...-Train-Yards/1
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  #2016  
Old Posted Aug 24, 2016, 5:45 PM
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Originally Posted by Dundas View Post
Sports Experts is closing down on innes rd in Orleans, not sure if Atmosphere inside will close too.
I went to Sports Experts to check out the deals and a worker told me they will re-open as a National Sports which she told me is a level down from Sports Experts focusing on teens. First store in Ottawa apparently.

http://www.nationalsports.com/
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  #2017  
Old Posted Aug 25, 2016, 1:27 AM
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Ya... I'm sure that this will solve all their problems

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Sears Canada’s new logo ‘bold, confident’ and not blue-and-white

Sean Craig | August 24, 2016 | Last Updated: Aug 24 6:01 PM ET




Sears Canada Inc., the once mighty retail giant, announced it was rebranding Wednesday with a “clean and contemporary logo.” The new look, which evenly spaces the five obvious letters, S-E-A-R-S, before a punctuating red stencil of a maple leaf is, at first glance, perhaps a bit nondescript.

“The new Sears (Canada) logo: because being boring is better than being ugly.”

That tagline was offered up by Strategy magazine marketing reporter Josh Kolm in a tweet.

But the simple look might be the point, says marketing expert Alan Middleton. Sears Canada’s straightforward approach with this rebrand, a major departure from its iconic blue lettering halved by thin white stripes, may well be the best fit for its effort to reinvent itself with a more diversified online business and smaller physical footprint.

“I will give Sears Canada 10/10 for the reinvention effort they are putting in,” said Middleton, a professor at York University’s Schulich School of Business. “They’re coming from a long way behind with ever strong competition from The Bay, Walmart and most importantly the omni-retailers like Amazon and Alibaba.”

Middleton said the new design aligns the brand with the most important thing for Sears Canada’s current strategic objectives: its stated desire to grab a sizeable foothold in online commerce, reduce its dependency on physical stores and buttress its credibility as a streamlined business.

Noting the “bold, confident new logo,” he stressed that the success of the visual break from the past will be determined by these bigger and more complicated factors.

“What will be the key will be how good their online customer experience is, not just directly but through their catalogues: awareness, the e-journey and the pricing,” Middleton said.

Adding that there is an abundance of marketing activity at this important back-to-school time, Middleton said Sears Canada’s success will also hinge on how quickly they can afford to expand their new store concepts — which the company has dubbed Sears 2.0 — and associate their planned new layout and customer service models with the new branding.

This will be the fourth major logo the company has had since its founding in 1953.

It’s had variations of the current and best known blue and white version since 1984, which it took on when it formally changed its name to Sears Canada Inc. The most significant change since was the addition of a small maple leaf in 1996 to distinguish the company from its American counterpart.

Originally named Simpsons-Sears after its two founding parents in 1953, it changed its logo in 1973 to drop Simpsons in order to avoid confusion with existing Simpsons stores.

Sears Canada has been ailing with declines in traffic at its physical stores and has struggled to establish an online shopping experience on par with competitors.

“We are proud to unveil this symbol of reinvention for Sears Canada,” said Brandon Stranzl, Sears Canada executive chairman,in a release. “Sears is changing, and our new logo asserts the modern and streamlined image and consumer experience for which we are striving in-store and online.”

In June, the company reported that in the first quarter of 2016 its loss climbed to $63.6 million or 62 cents a share from a loss of $59.1-million or 58 cents a year earlier. Sears Canada’s overall revenue fell to $596 million from $697 million.

Same-store sales at the Toronto-based retailers “core” outlets — 95 department stores and 39 home stores — were down 6.9 per cent and overall same-store sales fell 7.4 per cent.

Sears Canada also said it had raised its cost-cutting target in an attempt to return to profitability, aiming to lower annual costs by as much as $155 million. Last year, the company slashed costs by $125 million, and more cuts will likely mean store closings and layoffs.

http://business.financialpost.com/ne...-is-maybe-good
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  #2018  
Old Posted Aug 25, 2016, 4:38 AM
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That is the worst logo I've ever seen.
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  #2019  
Old Posted Aug 25, 2016, 5:50 AM
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That is the worst logo I've ever seen.
I could get really really drunk and play with MS Paint for three or four minutes and come up with a better logo.
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  #2020  
Old Posted Aug 25, 2016, 11:30 AM
Requin Requin is offline
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Originally Posted by mykl View Post
That is the worst logo I've ever seen.
+1

Terrible, looks cheap and reminds me of the Dollar Tree... except the Dollar Tree logo is better.

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