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Cover Story : One Step at a Time

Successfully?integrating an?e-commerce site into its?retail-centric?organization?has Meijer flourishing

January 2010 By Joe Keenan

Admittedly a latecomer to the party, general merchandise retailer Meijer (pronounced Meyer) has begun embracing e-commerce. While Meijer.com was up and running for consumers as an informational website since the late '90s, merchandise wasn't available for purchase until September 2007. Better late than never for the Grand Rapids, Mich.-based seller of everything from groceries to pharmaceuticals to electronics and apparel.

E-commerce has benefited Meijer in various ways, but two areas stand out: increased sales, and increased traffic generated for Meijer's 190 "supercenters" throughout its five-state footprint of Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Illinois and Kentucky. The website is still a work in progress, however, as online sales account for only a fraction of total revenues.

Meijer's top categories online can be credited for upward of 10 percent of all company sales in select product categories, and it's seen weeks when that number swelled to 20 percent. Yet other product categories represent as little as a quarter of a percentage point of total sales.

"Looking at some of our competitors, if we did consistently across the board between 2 [percent] and 5 percent of our general merchandise business online, that would be great," says Tom Nakfoor, Meijer's vice president of e-commerce. "But I can't say that we're there yet, across the board. We're just too new and still growing."

Brand First, Selling Second
When it launched as an e-commerce site, Meijer.com was more about aligning the company's brand — the look and feel consumers experienced online — with its brick-and-mortar locations than being a selling channel. This meant syncing up promotions, pricing and messaging to what was displayed in its stores.

Although comfortable for Meijer's long-time customers, who'd grown accustomed to visiting the company's website to view its weekly ads circular before purchasing in stores, the company knew it had to sell online to compete with the Wal-Marts and Targets of the world.

So Meijer had to help its loyal customers, who often viewed it as their neighborhood retail store, learn that it had more to offer online. Aligning its e-commerce and retail teams more closely allowed Meijer to present a more holistic marketing message to its customers: that Meijer.com was open for business.

To help spread that message, Meijer invested time and money into improving store labeling and signage, store associate training, print and online messaging, and its return process, among other things, to inform and remind customers that if they can't find what they're looking for in the store, they can go online.

About Meijer
  • Founded: 1934
  • Headquarters: ?Grand Rapids, Mich.
  • Primary merchandise: General merchandise, including groceries, health and beauty, hard goods, soft lines
  • Average order size: $125
  • # of employees: 60,000-plus
  • Retail stores: 190
  • Email service provider: ?Handled in-house
  • Affiliate marketing provider: Commission Junction
 

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