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Retail Locations

Consider the AGVs layout in figure. Vehicles travel counterclockwise around the loop to deliver loads from the load station to the unload station. Loading time = 0.70 min and unloading time = 0.65 min. The following performance parameters are given: Vehicle velocity: 50m/min. Availability: 0.95. Traffic factor: 0.90. Worker efficiency: 0.97. The total of 50 deliveries/hour must be completed by the AGVs. Determine: a) Ideal delivery cycle time b) Number of vehicles required to satisfy the deliver

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
107 views

Retail Locations

Consider the AGVs layout in figure. Vehicles travel counterclockwise around the loop to deliver loads from the load station to the unload station. Loading time = 0.70 min and unloading time = 0.65 min. The following performance parameters are given: Vehicle velocity: 50m/min. Availability: 0.95. Traffic factor: 0.90. Worker efficiency: 0.97. The total of 50 deliveries/hour must be completed by the AGVs. Determine: a) Ideal delivery cycle time b) Number of vehicles required to satisfy the deliver

Uploaded by

Quỳnh Nguyễn
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Retail

Locations
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

Copyright © 2014 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education.
Questions
• What types of locations are available to retailers?
• What are the relative advantages of each location type?
• Why are some locations particularly well suited to specific
retail strategies?
• Which types of locations are growing in popularity with
retailers?

7-2
What Are the Three Most Important
Things in Retailing?

Location! Location! Location!

7-3
Eddie Tan/Life File/Getty Images
Facts on Retail Space
• Currently the U. S. has 20 square feet of retail space in
shopping centers for every person.
• The highest country in the world
• The second-highest country:
• Sweden – 3.1 square feet per person

7-4
Why is Store Location
Important for a Retailer?
• Location is typically prime
consideration in customer’s store
choice.
Ex: Car wash – close to home
• Location decisions have strategic
importance because they can
help to develop sustainable
competitive advantage –
Competitors can not copy
• Location decisions are risky:
invest or lease? F. Schussler/PhotoLink/Getty Images

7-5
Types of Retail Locations
Types
• Unplanned locations- do not
have centralized management
that determines what stores will
be in a development.

• Planned locations-the shopping


center and/or manager makes
and enforces policies that
govern store operations.

• Gross leasable area- Total floor


area designed for the retailer’s
occupancy.

7-6
Types of Retail Locations
• Free Standing Sites: not connected to
other retailers (retailers with large space
requirements such as warehouse club,
hypermarket)
• City or Town Locations (low cost and high
pedestrian traffic)
• Inner City
• Main Street
• Shopping Centers (combine many stores at
one location to attract more consumers)
• Strip Shopping Centers
• Shopping Malls
• Other Location Opportunities
7-7
Selecting a particular location type
• Involves evaluating a series of trade-offs between
• The size of the trade area (geographic area encompassing most of
the customers who would patronize a specific retail site)
• the occupancy cost of the location
• The pedestrian and vehicle customer traffic
• The restrictions placed on store operations by the property
manager
• The convenience of the location for customers

7-8
Tradeoff Between Locations

There are relative advantages


and disadvantages to consider
with each location.
Rent

Traffic

7-9
Types of Locations

7-10
Unplanned Retail Locations
• Freestanding Sites – location for individual store
unconnected to other retailer
• Advantages:
• Convenience
• High traffic and visibility
• Modest occupancy cost
• Separation from competition
• Few restrictions
• Disadvantages:
• No foot traffic
• No drawing power The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc./Andrew Resek, photographer

7-11
City or Town Locations
• Gentrification the renewal and
rebuilding of offices, housing and
retailers.
• Advantage to Retailers:
• More affluent people
• Incentives to move provided by cities
The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc./Andrew Resek, photographer

• Jobs!
• Low occupancy costs
• High pedestrian traffic

7-12
Central Business District (CBD)
Traditional downtown business area in a city or town.
• Draws people into areas during business hours
Advantages

• Hub for public transportation


• Pedestrian traffic
• Residents

• High security required


Disadvantages

• Shoplifting
• Parking is poor
• Evenings and weekends are slow

Spike Mafford/Getty Images

7-13
Main Streets vs. CBDs
• Occupancy costs lower than
CBDs
• Traditional downtown shopping
area
• They don’t attract as many
people
• There are not as many stores
• Smaller selections offered
• Some planners restrict store
operations

7-14
Inner City
• Inner city retailers
achieve high sales
volume, higher
margins and higher
profits
• Unmet demand tops
25% in many inner
city markets

7-15
Shopping Centers
• A shopping center is a group
of retail and other commercial
establishments that is planned,
developed, owned, and
managed as a single property.

• Shopping center management


controls:
• Parking
• Security
• Parking lot lighting
• Outdoor signage
• Advertising
• Special events for customers

The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc./Andrew Resek, photographer

7-16
Types of Shopping Centers
• Neighborhood and Community Centers (Strip Centers)
• Power Centers including: discount stores, off-price stores,
warehouse clubs
• Enclosed Malls
• Lifestyle Centers are with open-air configuration of specialty
stores, entertainment and restaurant with design ambience and
amenities.
• Mixed-Use Developments
• Outlet Centers: most of manufacturer’s outlet
• Theme/Festival Centers: shops with architectural design
• Omnicenters: combined enclosed malls, lifestyle centres and
power centres
7-17
Neighborhood and Community Centers
Managed as a unit
Advantages

The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc./Andrew Resek, photographer


Convenient locations
Easy parking
Low occupancy costs

Disadvantages
Limited trade area
Lack of entertainment
No protection from weather

Attached row of stores


Onsite parking
7-18
Power Centers
• Shopping centers that consist primarily of collections of big-box retail
stores such as discount stores (Target), off-price stores (Marshall’s),
warehouse clubs (Costco), and category specialists (Lowe’s, Best
Buy, Bed Bath & Beyond, Dick’s Sporting Goods)
• Open air set up
• Free-standing anchors
• Limited small specialty stores
• Many located near enclosed malls
• Low occupancy costs
• Convenient
• Modest vehicular and pedestrian traffic
• Convenient
• Large trade areas

7-19
Shopping Malls
• Regional shopping
malls (less than 1
million square feet)

• Super regional malls


(more than 1 million
square feet)

The South China Mall in Dongguan, China

7-20
Advantages and Disadvantages
of Shopping Malls
Advantages:
• Many different types of stores
• Many different assortments available
• Attracts many shoppers
• Main Street for today’s shoppers
• Never worry about the weather
• Comfortable surrounding to shop

PhotoLink/Getty Images
• Uniform hours of operation

7-21
Advantages and Disadvantages
of Shopping Malls
Disadvantages:
• Occupancy costs are high
• Tenants may not like mall
management control of operations
• Competition can be intense
• Customers may not have time to
stroll through a mall

PhotoLink/Getty Images
7-22
Lifestyle Centers
• Usually located in affluent residential neighborhoods
• Includes 50K sq. ft. of upscale chain specialty stores
• Open-air configuration
• Design ambience and
amenities
• Upscale stores
• Restaurants and often
a cinema or other
entertainment
• Small department store
format

7-23
Mixed Use Developments (MXDs)
• Combine several different
uses into one complex,
including shopping centers,
offices, hotels, residential
complexes, civic centers,
and convention centers.
• Offer an all-inclusive
environment so that
consumers can work, live,
and play in a proximal area

7-24
Outlet Centers
These shopping centers contain mostly manufacturers and retail outlet stores

Courtesy of Beall’s, Inc.

7-25
Theme/Festival Centers
• Located in places of historic interests or for tourists
• Anchored by restaurants and entertainment facilities

7-26
Larger, Multi-format
Developments: Omnicenters
• Combines enclosed malls, lifestyle center, and power
centers

• Larger developments are targeted


• to generate more pedestrian traffic and longer shopping trips
• To capture cross-shopping consumers

7-27
Other Location Opportunities
• Airports
• Resorts
• Store within a Store
• Temporary or pop-up stores

7-28
Alternative Locations
Pop-Up Stores and Other Temporary Locations

• Temporary locations that focus on new products or a


limited group of products.
• Create buzz, test new concepts, or even evaluate a
new neighborhood or city.
• Temporary stores to take advantage of the holiday
season in December
• Visibility and additional sales at
festivals or concerts, weekend
crafts fairs, or farmers’ markets.

7-29
Alternative Locations
Store within a Store

• Located within other, larger stores


• Examples:
• Grocery store with service providers (coffee bars, banks, clinics,
video outlets)
• Sephora in JCPenney

7-30
Alternative Locations
Merchandise Kiosks

• Merchandise Kiosks
– small temporary
selling stations
located in walkways
of enclosed malls,
airports, train
stations or office
building lobbies.

Kent Knudson/PhotoLink/Getty Images

7-31
Alternative Locations
Airports

Airports: Why wait with nothing to do?


Rents are 20% higher than malls
Sales/square ft are 3-4 times higher than malls
Best airports are ones with many connecting flights
Kim Steele/Getty Images

7-32
Matching Location to Retail Strategy
• The selection of a location type must reinforce the
retailer’s strategy be consistent with
• the shopping behavior
• size of the target market
• The retailer’s position in its target market
• Department Stores  Regional Mall
• Specialty Apparel  Central Business District, Regional
malls
• Category Specialists  Power Centers, Free Standing
• Grocery Stores  Strip Shopping Centers
• Drug Stores  Stand Alone

7-33
Shopping Behavior of Consumers
in Retailer’s Target Market
• Factors affecting the location choice
• Consumer Shopping Situations
• Convenience shopping
• Comparison shopping
• Specialty shopping

• Density of Target Market


• Ex. Convenience stores in CBD; comparison shopping stores next to
Wal-Mart

• Uniqueness of Retailing Offering


• Convenience of locations is less important
• Ex. Bass Pro Shop

7-34
Convenience Shopping
• Minimize the
customer’s effort to
get the product or
service by locating

The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc./Andrew Resek, photographer


store close to where
customers are
located

7-35
Comparison Shopping
• Customers have a
good idea of what
type of product they
want, but don’t have
a strong preference
for brand, model or
retailer. Typical for furniture,
• Competing retailers appliances, apparel,
consumer electronics, hand
locate tools and cameras.
• Near one another Ryan McVay/Getty Images

7-36
Specialty Shopping
• Customers know
what they want
• Designer labels
• Convenient location
matters less

7-37
LEGAL CONSIDERATIONS
Environmental Issues
• “Above-ground” risks - such as asbestos-containing
materials or lead pipes used in construction.
• Hazardous materials - e.g. dry cleaning chemicals,
motor oil, that have been stored in the ground.

• Retailers’ remedies to protect themselves from hazards.


• Stipulate in the lease that the lessor is responsible for
removal and disposal of this material if it’s found.
• Buy insurance that specifically protects it from these
risks.

7-38
LEGAL CONSIDERATIONS
Other Legal Issues
• Zoning and Building Codes
• Zoning determines how a particular site can be used
• Building codes determine the type of building, signs,
size, type of parking lot, etc. that can be used
• Signs
• Restrictions on the use of signs can also impact a
particular site’s desirability
• Licensing Requirements
• Some areas may restrict or require a license for
alcoholic beverages

7-39

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