Please read the case below and answer the questions following the case. Be sure to provide substantive and detailed responses. Include marketing terms and strategies in your responses.
The Beginning
Julie and Anna opened their store – “Hot Coffee, Cool Clothes” – just 12 months ago. The concept was based on a store that they saw when they visited New York on holidays in 2010. The idea of the store is quite simple – they wanted to combine a gourmet coffee shop and a ladies clothes shop into the SAME store. They believed that this new type of store would be highly suited to young fashion-oriented females, who regularly shop with friends as a social activity.
Their Research
As this was to be a major financial investment for them, they gathered the following information prior to deciding to open their first store:
There were only a few smaller stores in Sydney that had a similar approach to combining a coffee lounge and a fashionable clothes store
It appears that around 30% of young females (15-30 years) could be described as ”recreational” shoppers (that is, they enjoy shopping)
Research with a small sample of their friends (25 in total) indicated that their target market spend around 4 hours per week clothes shopping and spend from $100 to $200 per week on clothes – they also buy around 5 gourmet coffees per week
There was research to suggest that the atmosphere (that is, the layout, feel, colors, lighting, music, and so on) of the store could influence the consumer to shop longer and generally purchase more
Chain coffee stores were rapidly increasing their outlet numbers.
The Decision
While Julie and Anna understood that they would face substantial competition from both specialist coffee stores AND specialist fashion stores, they believed that their store was actually meeting a new need in the marketplace – a store where customers could “meet, shop, relax and chat” and a store where “they would always feel welcome”. So armed with a little bit of research and a lot of confidence, the two women borrowed $500,000 (half from their families and half from borrowing against their apartments) to invest in the business venture.
The Set-up
They considered the choice of location to be fairly important to the success of the store. However, they also recognized that they had limited financial resources. Therefore, they eventually decided upon a street location in a trendy suburb of Sydney. They hoped that this store would provide access to their particular target market, while avoiding the high rental costs of a shopping center complex.
To ensure that the store had the right “look and feel” they spend $300,000 on the fit-out of the store. This included: special lighting, an expensive music system, a top quality coffee machine, various refrigerators, quality display cabinets, stylist racking systems, several comfortable fitting rooms, leather lounge chairs and small wooden tables. Their goal was to make the store appear elegant and stylish (to communicate the store’s high fashion) and also to appear inviting and comfortable (to communicate the store’s meeting place aspect).
They spent a further $100,000 on clothes to sell. They chose three well-known and popular brands that are generally considered trendy and modern by their target market. These brands are also priced at the upper-end of the market. On average, each piece of clothing had a unit cost of $50, and would have a retail price in the store of $100.
This left around $100,000 that they decided to keep in the bank for working capital to be used as needed (most probably for the rent and staff costs in the first few months of the venture).
The Outcome
The first 12 months didn’t go as well as anticipated. While they had a loyal core of customers, which had grown through word-of-mouth promotion, the number of purchases was much lower than initially forecasted. This was because most of their customers appeared to make coffer purchases only and very few of their customers bought clothes.
As this situation became apparent, Julie and Anna tried a number of things. Firstly, they invested $10,000 in radio advertising, however this did not appear to be effective as sales did not increase sufficiently to cover the cost.
They then introduced a loyalty program. It gave customers who bought 10 coffees and free coffee AND 10% off clothes purchases. Unfortunately, only a small percentage of customers regularly used the program.
The Future
Julie and Anna are concerned about the future of the store. Although the store is profitable, they have to split it two ways and they are both able to earn more in a normal job (particularly given that they have a major loan to repay). However, for the time being, they had another four years of their lease to run. In the back of their minds, they had the idea of eventually franchising the store. However, they needed the store to be more successful for this to be a serious option. The question was how they could make it more successful?
QUESTIONS
Did they gather appropriate (research) on the market prior to their launch? Can you think of any other useful data they should have researched?
Do you think that have identified a true/valid target market? Why or why not? If not, who should they target?
Do you think they have differentiated themselves in the market? Explain.
Do you think that have selected an appropriate marketing positioning? Explain.
What do you think they should do now (that is, continue or revise their strategy)? If revise, how?