AS ONLINE DELIVERIES surge and shop sales fall, Britain鈥檚 retailers are looking to refit their once bustling superstores with new attractions such as rivals鈥 fashion brands to fill empty spaces and keep shoppers coming through the door.
In a shift in strategy aimed at making the space profitable and avoiding store closures, retailers such as Tesco have also started experimenting with gyms and children鈥檚 play areas to entertain customers.
鈥淵ou鈥檝e got more choice. It鈥檚 a bit like a shopping mall where you can come and look at different things,鈥 said health care worker Margaret O鈥橰egan, who was browsing clothes from the privately held Dorothy Perkins, Burton and Evans brands in a huge Tesco store in Woolwich, Southeast London.
The brands have 20,000 square feet of the store鈥檚 120,000 sq. ft., replacing space previously taken up by Tesco鈥檚 toys, stationery and technology offer, some of which are now only available on its Web site.
In the four months since the brands went in, shopper numbers at the Woolwich store have risen.
A Tesco spokesman said the changes at Woolwich were illustrative of Tesco Chief Executive Dave Lewis鈥 strategy to turn around the business, giving shoppers more choice so they start to see superstores as the most convenient way to shop again.
鈥淲e are always looking at new ways our stores can meet the needs of local customers. We鈥檙e pleased with the feedback from customers in Woolwich who tell us they like the store鈥檚 convenient range of fashion options,鈥 he said.
Thousands of small shops have disappeared from British towns in recent years, unable to compete with the lower costs and prices of online outfits and bluechip retailers such as Tesco and Marks & Spencer could join the exodus.
鈥淭he UK is very advanced in terms of online shopping,鈥 said Neil Saunders, managing director of retail research firm Conlumino. 鈥淎s other regions catch-up with that they will experience similar problems and similar issues.鈥
In the UK online sales as a percentage of total sales rose to 15.2% in 2015 from 13.5% in 2014, according to the Centre for Retail Research, compared with 11.6% in Germany, 8% in France and just 2.5% in Italy.
UNDER ONE ROOF
Britain鈥檚 supermarket sector alone added around 35 million square feet between 2007 and 2014 even as online shopping rose and the digital shift looks unstoppable.
Sainsbury鈥檚, Britain鈥檚 second biggest supermarket, has acknowledged that it now has around 6% excess space, or about 1.5 million sq. ft.
A big part of the rationale for its 拢1.3 billion proposed takeover of Argos-owner Home Retail is to bring Argos concessions into its stores to absorb this space.
鈥淭he coming together of the two organizations would allow us to optimize the space and optimize the space quickly,鈥 said Sainsbury鈥檚 Chief Executive Mike Coupe.
The Argos concessions will complement other moves by Sainsbury鈥檚 to exploit under-utilized space through existing partnerships with Jessops, the photographic shop, and Timpsons, the shoe repair and key cutting firm.
Tesco has also struck deals for third party outlets with firms such as Sports Direct, Mothercare, Claire鈥檚 Accessories and Sock Shop and is testing gyms and soft play areas in some stores. Similarly Wal-Mart鈥檚 Asda recently agreed a deal to give space over to Decathlon, the sports equipment and sportswear retailer.
Matthew Hopkinson director of retail property experts The Local Data Company expects a proliferation of retail tie-ups.
He says store groups are asking themselves: 鈥淲hat are the other things that you can bring in under the roof that make customers feel happier and therefore spend more?鈥
CLOSURES
If retailers can鈥檛 make stores profitable the alternative is closure.
Tesco has closed 61 stores since Lewis became CEO in 2014, while Morrisons, Britain鈥檚 No. 4 grocer, has closed 21 supermarkets and plans to close seven more, saying it can鈥檛 see a way to make them profitable.
Analysts say Marks & Spencer, the country鈥檚 biggest clothing retailer is ripe for a major store rationalization.
In its Christmas quarter M&S grew online sales by 21% and although it did not break out general merchandise sales for its stores only, analysts have estimated a year-on-year decline of over 8%.
The firm has been tinkering with its near 900 UK stores, dedicating a little more space to the faster growing food over clothes.
There has been speculation that M&S, whose clothing offer is entirely own brand though it does sell some third-party food items, could bring in rival clothing brands. This has, however, been dismissed by CEO Marc Bolland, who will be replaced by Steve Rowe in April. A spokeswoman for M&S declined to comment. 鈥 Reuters