deerparker
Active Member
^agreed - the CM slim fits are great. Top Man also has slim shirts as small as XXS.
No staff on the selling floor is right -- you could never find someone to man the cash or unlock a dressing room when needed. What's even more annoying is when you approach a point of sale only to be told that they're an "in-store boutique" and can't take your money because that thing you want to buy is not their product. I mean, really. You'd think they'd want to make it EASY for you to give them money.
How to swankify a store, by HBC president Bonnie Brooks
Toronto Star
Francine Kopun
Business Reporter
June 5, 2012
These days, The Bay on Queen Street West looks a lot more like a Holt Renfrew or a Bloomingdales than the tired old retailer it used to be.
When Bonnie Brooks got her hands on it after becoming president in 2008, she dropped 900 brands in the first six months and added 450 new ones.
Since then, she’s added stores-within-stores including Burberry and Coach. A new Top Shop is on the way.
She invited celebrity guests to launch their books and their looks, including Madonna, Gordon Ramsay, Kim Kardashian, Sarah Jessica Parker, Jessica Simpson and designers Jason Lu, Oscar de la Renta and the design duo behind Proenza Schouler.
While the changes at the Queen Street West location may be the most familiar to Toronto shoppers, 80 Bay stores have been extensively renovated, Brooks told attendees at the Retail Council of Canada conference on Tuesday.
“We’ve been working really hard to make them the talk of the town,” Brooks said.
She said the Bay has signed up to manufacture Canadian Olympic gear for the next eight years.
The annual conference, held at the Toronto Congress Centre, drew CEOs from some of Canada’s biggest retailers.
Brooks was one of the main speakers on Tuesday, along with Walmart CEO Shelley Broader.
Brooks said she began the big change at the Bay by canvassing 7,000 shoppers in the late fall of 2008.
They learned the Bay was perceived as having no visible staff, even though the payroll was plenty heavy – they were busy working on tasks behind the scenes instead of on the floor.
Brooks changed hiring criteria and went after fashionistas to staff the stores and made sure they were able to spend more time on the floor with customers than behind the scenes dealing with inventory.
And she didn’t just add expensive designer brands to the mix, she added lines in lower-price tiers.
“We think high-low is really how North American men and women want to shop today,” she said.
She knew she was onto something when she got 7,000 emails and letters in 12 months.
“People are absolutely shocked at the changes,” she said.
Brooks, who is also president of Lord & Taylor in the U.S., said the management teams of the two retailing icons have recently been integrated.
She also criticized high Canadian import duties, which push up the price of clothing in Canada, leading customers to complain that they are being overcharged relative to consumers in the U.S.
Is this a joke?
"These days, The Bay on Queen Street West looks a lot more like a Holt Renfrew or a Bloomingdales than the tired old retailer it used to be."
Hardly! It's still the same stuff. And so far any real renos have been focussed on the women's section.
Plus, Holt Renfrew ain't all that when it comes to hight-end dept stores. Shelfridges (which, ironically Holts owns) is much better.
Ugh! The Bay at Sherway Gardens is just the pits!!!!!!! It's like shopping in a Warehouse Outlet Store in the States, but worse - poor lighting, filthy, filthy carpet and walls, and terrible signage, and then it takes 27 hours to stand in line, get to the till where there are three staff lounging about doing nothing, and one operating the till and she is totally incapable of ringing up a sale correctly.
I can't wait for Nordstroms and Target to come and show them how it's done...
I'm not 100% sure what the other stores look like but The Bay Yorkdale looks superb after its renovations, well the completed sections. The main floor is currently under renovations but the 2nd and 3rd floors are completely renovated and look fantastic and layout is great. The product offerings have vastly improved throughout the years. They're going in the right direction.
Is this a joke?
"These days, The Bay on Queen Street West looks a lot more like a Holt Renfrew or a Bloomingdales than the tired old retailer it used to be."
Hardly! It's still the same stuff. And so far any real renos have been focussed on the women's section.
Plus, Holt Renfrew ain't all that when it comes to hight-end dept stores. Shelfridges (which, ironically Holts owns) is much better.