Close X
Friday, September 20, 2024
ADVT 
International

IKEA Pushes For Growth, Makes Shopping More Accessible

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 20 Oct, 2014 04:00 PM
  • IKEA Pushes For Growth, Makes Shopping More Accessible
NEW YORK - Ikea, whose stadium-sized furniture stores draw shoppers from miles around, is making an online push.
 
The CEO of Ikea Group, the world's largest furniture chain, is pushing for sales growth, while making its ready-to-assemble furniture more accessible to shoppers increasingly buying online.
 
Peter Agnefjail, Ikea's president and CEO, told The Associated Press in a phone interview Friday that he remains focused on reaching sales of 50 billion euros ($63.7 billion) by 2020, a goal set a couple of years ago. And he says he's not unnerved by the recent investor fears about another recession in Europe.
 
He plans to reach that goal by opening more stores, while making the locations more inviting and expanding its online business around the globe.
 
"We are optimistic about what we see," said Agnefjail, an 18-year Ikea veteran who took over the reins from Mikael Ohlsson in September 2013. "Unemployment is stabilizing in many markets."
 
But Agnefjail acknowledged the Swedish retailer, which operates 315 massive stores around the globe, has to go where shoppers are heading.
 
"Customers still would like to sit in the sofa and feel how comfortable it is," he said. But he said they also mix up online and offline shopping. "What we do see is that customers are more walking across channels in a way that is very seamless."
 
The focus marks another chapter in the history of Ikea, founded by Ingvar Kamprad in 1943 as a mail-order company whose stores now drew 716 million visitors in its last fiscal year.
 
Ikea is starting to see a recovery in many of its markets, particularly its European business, which accounts for about 70 per cent of total sales and has been hampered by an economic slowdown there. But Ikea also needs to offer more convenience to shoppers as it faces increasing competition here and abroad.
 
Abroad, there are players like Home24, a German-based online furniture startup looking to expand. In the U.S., Ikea faces fragmented competition from different types of chains from discounters like Wal-Mart and Target to chains like Crate and Barrel at the higher end.
 
"Ikea is still the low-priced go-to furniture place," said Brian Sozzi, CEO and chief equities strategist at Belus Capital Advisors. But he noted everyone is trying to take a bite out of Ikea's business.
 
Last month, Ikea announced 5.9 per cent revenue growth in the year ended Aug. 31 to 28.7 billion euros ($36.6 billion). That's an increased pace from the 3.1 per cent increase in the prior year. In the U.S., total sales rose 5.4 per cent, while revenue at stores opened at least a year rose 4.2 per cent in the latest fiscal year, according to Rob Olson, Ikea's acting U.S. president.
 
Ikea also continues to focus on cutting prices on big-ticket items as it seeks to outfit more homes around the globe. Last year, it cut prices by 1 per cent, in line with the long-term average of 1 to 2 per cent. During the recession, it cut prices more than that. Ikea cuts prices by looking for new ways to cut costs. For example, shipping one sofa flat — squeezing five onto a pallet instead of three — has cut thousands of truck trips.
 
But Ikea is also working hard to cater to customers looking for convenience.
 
"The store layout needs to be customer friendly. And the website is underdeveloped, and there's a huge upside opportunity for them," said Craig Johnson, president of Customer Growth Partners, a retail consultancy in New Canaan, Connecticut.
 
Currently, Ikea sells online in only about half of the countries it operates. And now 90 per cent of the 9,500 items offered in its stores are online, up from about half a few years ago, on a global basis. In the U.S., 70 per cent of its store products are offered online.
 
Ikea is also looking to offer services for online shoppers that allow them to pick up the goods at stores. Currently, that service is only available in its stores in the United Kingdom. Agnefjail noted customer traffic to Ikea.com increased to 1.5 billion customers in its latest fiscal year, up from 1.3 billion in the prior year and 1.1 billion in the year before that.
 
Overall, "We are just at the beginning. We are still small," Agnefjail said.

MORE International ARTICLES

Pakistan again raises Kashmir in UN

Pakistan again raises Kashmir in UN
Raising the Kashmir issue yet again at the UN, Pakistan dragged the UN Military Observer Group (UNMOGIP) into the current situation along the Line of Control where cross-border shelling has flared up....

Pakistan again raises Kashmir in UN

Twitter sues US government over surveillance rights

Twitter sues US government over surveillance rights
Twitter has sued the US government for restricting the microblogging site from sharing online government surveillance reports with its users....

Twitter sues US government over surveillance rights

Teacher banned for sending topless selfie to student

Teacher banned for sending topless selfie to student
A British teacher has been banned from teaching for five years for sending her bare-breasted pictures to a 16-year-old student....

Teacher banned for sending topless selfie to student

US federal court revokes ban on same-sex marriages

US federal court revokes ban on same-sex marriages
A federal court in the US has passed a ruling revoking the ban on same-sex marriages in Idaho and Nevada a day after the country's Supreme Court...

US federal court revokes ban on same-sex marriages

Ebola Escapes Europe's Defences: Madrid Scrambles To Contain The Virus; Orders Dog Killed

Ebola Escapes Europe's Defences: Madrid Scrambles To Contain The Virus; Orders Dog Killed
Health officials scrambled Tuesday to figure out how West Africa's Ebola outbreak got past Europe's defences, quarantining four people at a Madrid hospital where a Spanish nursing assistant became infected.

Ebola Escapes Europe's Defences: Madrid Scrambles To Contain The Virus; Orders Dog Killed

Sad that India unable to restrain forces: Pakistan

Sad that India unable to restrain forces: Pakistan
Pakistan Tuesday said it is "sad" that India "has not been able to restrain its forces despite strong diplomatic protest by Pakistan" and called upon the Indian government...

Sad that India unable to restrain forces: Pakistan