Jan 082008
 

I see that Paul Ked­rosky is talk­ing about a resur­gence of depart­ment stores, based on the fact that lots of people want one-stop shop­ping rather than going from store to store. Fun­nily enough, Wal­mart has been meet­ing pre­cisely this need for years; I gath­er one of the major demo­graph­ics for Wal­mart is har­ried moth­ers with chil­dren in tow who also don’t want to schlep from store to store. Now, if depart­ment stores would actu­ally make it more pleas­ant to shop in them, and more effi­cient, they’d get more of my busi­ness as well. Effi­ciency to me means a reas­on­able selec­tion of products, not only cloth­ing, organ­ised in a way that means I can find what I’m look­ing for (or find out they don’t have it) in a short peri­od of time. People to help in the pro­cess would be a def­in­ite plus, but some logic in where things are would make up for that. Rolling carts for people push­ing strollers or bug­gies would help as well.

  3 Responses to “One-Stop Shopping”

  1. Wally World (what amer­ic­ans call wal-mart) already has all the cheapest goods slave labor can provide, a Sub­way at the entrance with geez­er greeters„ under­paid and dis­gruntled floor work­ers, dis­coun­ted DVDs piled in a box 

    … and you want a pleas­ant exper­i­ence too? 

    Wow. Be grate­ful they are sav­ing you gas money and will change your oil while you drag kids through the aisles. Didja think all that money you are sav­ing was free!!!

    … par­don me while I laugh out loud. BWAAAHAHAAHA!
    Wel­come to the concept of Two. Two kids are not the same as one.

    Today I’m try­ing to ima­gine walk­ing into a deal­er­ship selling a car that is func­tion­ally an Izetta (remem­ber those?) and keep a straight face while I ask the sales­per­son to show me their new “Tatas”.

    All that so I can enjoy the new Sam­sung with the same bad cable TV. OTOH, old black and white movies are really fant­ast­ic on the thing.

  2. Per­son­ally I’d be happy to pay a little more for products if the shop­ping exper­i­ence were effi­cient and pleas­ant. In fact, I already pay more by shop­ping at more pleas­ant places even if it isn’t effi­cient. Not that that’s an option for every­one, of course.

  3. Hi Lauren,
    Came upon your blog via Tim’s at blogs.sun.com, Inter­est­ing post about depart­ment stores & shop­ping. I’m in the UK so Wal-Mart aren’t on the scene unless their “proxy”, Asda, is coun­ted. I got hacked off with the weekly poly wrapped super­mar­ket run, fre­quently with two small chil­dren in tow, & have taken to split­ting the gro­cery shop­ping between the loc­al farm­er­’s mar­ket and a bi-weekly online order/home deliv­ery. When it comes to depart­ment stores John Lewis is super­i­or to any­thing — it’s formed as a part­ner­ship of employ­ees so the cus­tom­er ser­vice is excel­lent & their product range great. Unfor­tu­nately, there isn’t one close to home but if a couple of years plan­ning per­mis­sion wrangling can be sor­ted there may be soon (me thinks the plan­ning applic­a­tion is being hindered by ves­ted interests). I’m totally will­ing to pay more for a more pleas­ant exper­i­ence, good qual­ity fresh food & top service.

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