Quote:
Originally Posted by HillStreetBlues
The rumour about Ikea coming to Southwestern Ontario has been given print space for more than a decade. I’ve read articles with the identical quote (“We are continually reviewing our expansion opportunities in Canada, but at this time there is no store planned for [Cambridge/Kitchener/Kitchener-Waterloo]”) from different spokespeople in different publications from different decades.
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Well, the Ikea situation is a lot like what they tell people in the army: "If the army wanted you to have one, it would have issued you one", meaning if Ikea felt they could have made a reasonably good profit from a store in London, they would have located one here.
The fact that they haven't done so at any time in the last two decades pretty well answers the profitability question. Another way to look at the situation is to recognize the fact that Ikea stores are physically very large. Large stores cost a lot of money to run. To generate the revenues needed, you need a lot of product turnover. To get that turnover, you need lots of customers who come back repeatedly.
Now consider the demographics in London and surrounding areas. In London, you have maybe 375,000 people. Of that number, maybe 60%, or 230,000 are working-age adults and retirees. Retirees tend not to need much new furniture, so lop off another thirty or forty thousand, and that leaves you with 190,000 potential buyers. Of that 190,000, about 12,000 or so are post-secondary students with limited finances who could buy only limited amounts of Ikea stuff. Plus, they're only here 16 months in every 24-month academic cycle, since a school year bridges over two years, not one.
That whittles your customer base down to about 178,000. Of that 178,000, maybe 40% make enough money to shop at Ikea. The remaining 60% either don't like modern furniture, or shop at places like The Brick, Bad Boy, Leon's or Teppermans because they can finance their purchases over time.
So this leaves you with only 71,000 potential shoppers in London. Rule out the 100,000 or so people living in rural and semi-rural areas located less than 40km outside of London. I'm not trying to generalize here, but rural types seem to like traditionally-styled furniture.
Now consider the population that the Burlington Ikea store can draw as potential customers. Burlington has about 100,000 people. Nearby Hamilton has 700,000. Oakville and Mississauga together have close to 800,000 people. Don't forget Kitchener-Waterloo, which is only 40km away. There's another 500,000 at a minimum. Total population: about 2.3 million. All of these cities have large post-secondary student populations as well. Even if you cut the potential pool of customers to account for the demographic factors I mentioned earlier, you would still have more than one million potential customers.
Now compare that one million with the population of potential buyers in London, which is 71,000 at best. Where do you think Ikea will locate a store that is likely to generate the most profits and cost the least to run?