Saturday, December 1, 2012

Shopping malls cater to shifting demographics


As malls lose renters, their business models will change. Aivars lode avantce


Shopping malls cater to shifting demographics

NEW YORK | Tue Nov 27, 2012 11:26am EST
(Reuters) - Macerich Co (MAC.N) isn't usually in thebusiness of hosting religious processions in its mall parking lots.
But when it allowed a Good Friday event featuring a costumed Jesus, prisoners and Roman guards at a Phoenix mall last year, hundreds of shoppers turned out from the heavily Hispanic community, where re-enactments of the Stations of the Cross are a major occasion.
The response proved to Macerich that its program to attract the surrounding population to its malls was working.
A small but growing number of real estate owners and developers are tapping into the same demographic change U.S. politicians have begun to recognize.
Two ethnic groups - Hispanics and Asian-Americans - are expected to see their population and buying power soar in the coming years. And several demographic experts project that non-Hispanic whites will be a minority nationally by 2040 or 2050.
If mall and shopping center owners fail to adapt to the changing demographic make-up of the country, they risk seeing their properties become mausoleums of a less-diverse American past.
"It's a bunch of guys trying to build for a (white) world that's no longer growing. But there are those individuals out there that are seeing the growth in different ways. They're picking it apart and making some big money off of it," said James Chung, president of strategy and research firm Reach Advisors.
Many developers focusing on ethnic shoppers have come to the rescue of dying malls and shopping centers throughout the United States.
In California, Primestor Development is transforming the 850,000-square-foot Baldwin Hill Crenshaw Plaza in Los Angeles into an Hispanic-focused mall, plowing in up to $40 million for renovations. Further south in Irvine, Diamond Development Group has created Diamond Jamboree, with small service-oriented tenants, such as doctors' offices, anchored by an Asian food market. In Atlanta, a vacant 220,000-square-foot furniture store has been converted into Global Mall, the largest U.S. mall targeting consumers whose roots are in southern India.
DESERT SKY BRIGHTENS
Macerich is in the forefront of large, publicly traded mall owners courting the growing numbers of ethnic shoppers. Two years ago it teamed up with Legaspi Co, a consultant and operator of Hispanic-oriented malls, to help Desert Sky Mall. Occupancy at the Phoenix mall had fallen to 77 percent from over 90 percent as the demographic make-up of its trade area shifted.
Several changes were made, including converting a vacant Mervyns store into a mercado - Spanish for market - with scores of small shops and stands. Occupancy at the mall is now back up to 90 percent.
With the success of Desert Sky, Macerich and Legaspi Co President José de Jesús Legaspi created Vanguardia, a program that includes marketing and renovations to transform malls before their occupancy suffers.
"We aren't about to let good real estate go that way," Macerich Executive Vice President Eric Salo said.
José de Jesús Legaspi started more than 30 years ago helping retailers reach Hispanic shoppers. His company operates or has a stake in four malls and is eyeing a 700,000-square-foot mall in Oklahoma City.
Transforming struggling malls has a lot to do with marketing, including using bilingual staff, sending out direct mail in both English and Spanish, and hosting events like Mexican Independence Day.
MORE THAN DIM SUM AND CHIMICHANGAS
When building its Asian-focused, grocery-anchored shopping centers, Diamond Development followed the engineering workforce, which includes a heavy concentration of Asians. It found thatrestaurants were in demand, and leases had to include clauses prohibiting restaurants from copying each other's specialties.
But it takes more than adding a dim sum restaurant or chimichangas to the food court to attract the growing U.S. Hispanic and Asian populations.
Primestor, which has built or redeveloped more than 80 Hispanic-focused malls, shopping centers and strip malls, uses research from Pew Hispanic Center and the U.S. Census, and conducts town hall meetings to discover the types of retailers an area lacks and to gauge demand.
"We're not in the build-it-and-they-will-come mentality," said Arturo Sneider, Primestor's chief executive. "We're in the build-it-improve-it-because-they're-already-here mentality."
Developers of malls and shopping centers aimed at Hispanic Americans say they often change the facilities' physical appearance, transforming dull, fortress-like malls into festive, colorful shopping centers. Because Latino families tend to be larger, developers broaden the corridors and make common areas bigger; because such families tend to be younger, there is more demand for shoe and clothing stores - for growing children.
Third-generation Hispanic Americans add another consideration. Like the American mainstream, they want the latest consumer electronics and tend to like restaurants, such as Chipotle Mexican Grill, that are popular with their mainstream peers, Sneider said.
NO SUCH THING AS A CHINESE TIE
But what works for some ethnic groups doesn't necessarily work for others. Seoul Plaza, a Korean marketplace billed as a "mall within a mall" in Baltimore's Security Square Mall, did not fare well in competition with other Asian markets in the area. Many stores closed, and the plaza has been up for sale since 2010.
In targeting Asian-American shoppers, merchants selling soft goods such as clothing and toystend to find the going tough, said Steve Zuckerman, project manager at Diamond Development.
"The reason for that is there's really no such thing as a Chinese necktie," Zuckerman said. "A Chinese guy, if he wants to save money, he's going to go to Ross, Walmart. If he wants to spend money, he'll go to Bloomingdale's or Nordstrom."
The Macerich-Legaspi Vanguardia program has been implemented at six of Macerich's 59 malls, and aspects of it have been employed to some degree at a few others.
"There's been enough financial success here that we're going to continue to invest in this," Macerich's Salo said. "It's good business."
(Reporting By Ilaina Jonas; Editing by Ben Berkowitz and John Wallace)

Fanboi droves use iPads to buy more iPads on Black Friday



Online shopping on thanksgiving grew 17% over last year. Continued disruption occurring for brick and mortar business’ and their suppliers. Aivars lode avantce

By | Paul Kunert 26th November 2012 16:28
Fanboi droves use iPads to buy more iPads on Black Friday
Grey Thursday may have meant red ink for festive figures
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Apple's iPad was used by one in every 10 online shoppers on Black Friday, according to IBM's Holiday Benchmark report.
Continuing the trend of opening the supposed sales extravaganza earlier, online shopping grew 17.4 per cent on Thanksgiving compared to the same day a year earlier and Black Friday online sales were up 20.7 per cent.

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Nearly one-quarter of all net shoppers used a mobile device to browse for a gift and purchase, up from 14.3 per cent in 2011... and a staggering 10 per cent of total online traffic originated from Apple iPad users, many of whom were no doubt looking to buy an iPad 2.
"The iPad generated more traffic than any other tablet or smartphone, reaching nearly 10 per cent of online shopping," said IBM, adding that the Apple slab accounted for 88.3 per cent of all "tablet traffic".

Infographic via IBM newsroom.
The fanbois were clearly out in their droves, because the iPhone (8.7 per cent) was the next most searched upon device followed by Android (5.5 per cent).
According to figures from comScore, $1bn was spent online during Black Friday, a 26 per cent rise but a total of $11.8bn was splashed in the holiday season (between 1 to 23 November), up 16 per cent.
Meanwhile, Mark Zuckerberg and his mates will be less than pleased to hear that "shoppers referred from social networks such as Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn and YouTube" generated just 0.34 per cent of all online sales on Black Friday, a decrease of more than 35 per cent from 2011.
But while the peak sales day was a business booster for web traders, it was not perhaps what hard-pressed bricks-and-mortar retailers were hoping for to cover the red ink in their P&L accounts.
The number of folk visiting stores was up 3.5 per cent to 307.67 million on the day after Thanksgiving - the peak sales day for the year - but the amount of greenbacks going through the tills fell 1.8 per cent to $11.2bn.
"Black Friday continues to be an important day in retail," said Bill Martin, founder at ShopperTrak, which coughed the estimates.
But he said that this year retailers brought forward opening hours to midnight on Thanksgiving Day in anticipation of happy shoppers full of turkey and booze engaging in a spending frenzy.
This could have skewed the numbers, the retail analyst warned. "So while foot traffic did increase on Friday, those Thursday deals attracted some of the spending that is usually meant for Friday," said Martin.
Punters in America's midwest did their best to help out ailing retail outlets with footfall up nearly 13 per cent. Traffic in the west, south and northeast regions climbed 11.3 per cent, 8.7 per cent and 7.6 per cent respectively.
This is the first dip in figures provided by ShopperTrak since the recession hit in 2008 and caps off a challenging 2012 for the retail sector in Europe and the US.
Best Buy shuttered a bunch of big box stores in the UK at the start of the year and subsequently in the US, typifying the tough ride that even the largest players experienced.
In Blighty, the future of veteran retailer Comet is still up in the air, with administrator Deloitte still seeking a buyer willing to take on more than a handful of stores. ®