Obviously, advertising isn't the only thing that's causing sears to fail. But do you guys think it plays a huge part?
Personally when I worked there I felt like they were depending on the wrong outlets. I don't know the money side of things and how much it costs to run an E mail ad versus TV versus paper but I just think sears advertising was way too email/paper heavy and not enough other methods were being used.
I'm pretty young so my views may be different from the older people but I just don't think those are the best ones to anymore. My main reasoning is A: I don't even remember the last time I've touched a new paper. Not to say no one uses them anymore but I personally don't and I don't know anyone near my age (early 20s) who do. B: I don't bother opening those sears emails because I get so many of them and 9 times out of 10 the information is useless junk. In fact, I unsubscribed A few months after I was basically forced to create a SYW account when I started working there.
I think what sears needed to to was focus more on the places like YouTube, Netflix, Hulu etc. TV too but I'd guess those are the most expensive to run. Also, maybe less emails, only sending them out when there's an actual need so people won't automatically assume it's just garbage before they even look at it...
Sears's current main customers are older people who only really like sears because of old memories rather than recent ones. The problem with that is that customer base will never get larger. If anything, it will shrink. Even more so as more people who use to love sears, have bad service and drop sears. The people who are replacing the current 'old generation' will either have no knowledge of sears or will simply think 'it's where my grandparents shopped but is a place I'd never step foot in."
If sears would have taken advantage of those outlets then, those early mid 20s people of yesterday would have bought appliances and things then, as well as be the current 30s people now, who are interested in upgrading and getting nicer, more expensive things.
it seemed like most older people I spoke with wanted simple. They wanted no sensors, confusing controls, etc. lawn and garden, appliances, and electronics all followed that same pattern from my experience. Generally those items were the low budget items that don't really generate much revenue.
I just think if I were in a decision making position in as late as even 2010, that's what I would have focused on as far as advertising goes if the costs were even remotely comparable to the current tactics.
Obviously it seems too late for that now though. I just always found it to be ironic that sears boasted '#1 integrated retailer' but everything about it had bees obsolete or not working correctly when it comes to integration of technology. Even the iPads had awful, unoptimized software..and that was the biggest bulletpoint they talked about. Someone probably jumped the gun on that idea before it was something that could be used in a real life setting. It just screamed rushed, unoptimized, and untested when I used it.
Overall it just seemed like a mess. when you look at other stores you can figure out who their targets are. with sears you can kinda see where they were trying to go, but they missed the curve and ran off a cliff.
-Add more advanced devices for associates to use, telling them to use it as much as possible with customer to seem more technologically advanced....main customer base are older people who are either intimidated, or dislike new technology....
-No advertising in the newer outlets.
-very old and dated style, but wanting to be a more high end place with high end prices rather than a warehouse style store (Walmart, sams, etc etc) Best Buy did this well.
-pissing off your older customers because everything (even down to the phone) is automated, requires an email etc....still not going after the people who would care less about that.
Catering to the older crowd is fine, don't get me wrong. But that's not even what they're doing. Heck, I think if they even did that, and kept their old ways of doing things by keeping that personal, less automated touch to everything they would still be in better shape than where they are now. Sure, they would probably have to downsize from the peak amount of stores they had but it could still be something sustainable, unique, and possibility worth paying a little extra for...maybe but that last one is kinda a stretch.
Thoughts?