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    J.C. Penney gets rid of hundreds of sales

    NEW YORK (AP) — J.C. Penney is permanently marking down all of its merchandise by at least 40 percent so shoppers no longer have to wait for sales to get bargains.

    Penney said Wednesday that it is getting rid of the hundreds of sales it offers each year in favor of a simpler approach to pricing. Starting on Feb. 1, the retailer is rolling out an "Every Day" pricing strategy with much fewer sales throughout the year.

    The plan, the first major move by Apple executive Ron Johnson since he became Penney's CEO in November, is different from Wal-Mart's iconic everyday low pricing. Unlike Wal-Mart, Penney's goal isn't to undercut competitors, but rather to offer customers more predictable pricing.

    "Pricing is actually a pretty simple and straightforward thing," Johnson told the Associated Press during an interview ahead of the announcement at the company's Plano, Tex. headquarters. "Customers will not pay literally a penny more than the true value of the product."

    Penney's plan comes as stores are struggling to wean Americans off of the profit-busting bargains that they have come to expect in the weak economy. The move is risky, though, because shoppers who love to bargain-hunt may be turned off by the absence of sales.

    "The big question on investors' minds will be: 'How customers will react to a single price point versus a perceived discount under the old strategy?'" says Citi Investment Research analyst Deborah L. Weinswig.

    Here's how Penney's pricing strategy will work:

    — Sale prices become everyday prices. The company will use sales data from last year to slash prices on all merchandise at least 40 percent or lower than the previous year's prices. So, a woman's St. John's Bay blouse regularly priced at $14.99 could have the "Every Day" price of $7.

    — Fewer sales. The retailer will pick items to go on sale each month for a "Month-Long Value." For instance, jewelry and Valentine's Day gifts would go on sale in February, while Christmas decorations would be discounted in November. Items that don't sell well would go on clearance during the first and third Friday of every month when many Americans get paid. Those items will be tagged "Best Prices," signaling to customers that's the cheapest price.

    — New tags. The retailer used to pile stickers on price tags to indicate each time an item was marked down. But now each time an item gets a new price, it gets a new tag too. A red tag indicates an "Every Day" price, a white tag a "Month-Long Value" and a blue tag a "Best Price."

    — Simpler pricing. Penney will use whole figures when pricing items. In other words, you won't see jeans with a price tag of $19.99, but rather $19 or $20.

    — New advertising. Ads began airing Wednesday with a shopper screaming "No" to discounts as they look in their mailboxes, a pile of coupons and big sales signs. The company also has a new spokeswoman (talk show host Ellen DeGeneres) and logo (a red outline of a box that features JCP in the corner.) And a 96-page catalog will be mailed each month to 14 million customers, along with other promotional efforts.

    The strategy, unveiled at Penney's investor meeting on Wednesday, comes as the retailer tries to turn around its business. Heavy discounting has hurt department stores like Penney. The group generates an average of about $200 per square foot, less than half the $550 or $600 stores like Victoria's Secret and Lululemon make per square foot, according to John Bemis, head of Jones Lang LaSalle Inc.'s retail leasing team.

    But Penney has been a laggard even among department stores as its core middle-class customers have been among the hardest hit by the weak economy. It's also failed to attract younger customers even though its added hip brands like Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen's teen clothing collection called Olsenboye. The stores also have been by Johnson himself describes as "tired."

    For the 11 months through December, Penney's revenue at stores opened at least a year — an indicator of a retailer's health — rose 0.7 percent, while competitors like Macy's Inc. rose 5.4 percent, and Kohl's was up 1.1 percent. Penney posted a loss in the third quarter and cut its fourth-quarter earnings outlook after a disappointing holiday season when it had to heavily discount to attract consumers.

    The new pricing caps months of speculation about what Penney's future might look like under the leadership of Johnson, a former Target Corp executive and the mastermind behind the success at Apple Inc.'s stores.

    Johnson, who joined the company's board in August, already has put his stamp on the retailer. He has tapped former colleagues at Apple and Target to join him at Penney. That includes Target's top marketing executive Michael Francis to be Penney's president.

    Johnson also is borrowing from the playbook of Apple, which shuns discounting and focuses on selling products and offering services.

    In December, Penney said it will have homemaker doyenne Martha Stewart develop mini-shops starting next year. And during Wednesday's meeting, Penney executives outlined plans to in the next two years add Main Street, a series of 80 to 100 brand shops in stores similar to the Martha Stewart ones. It also plans to open areas in all stores called Town Square, a place that will offer services and expert advice, similar to Apple's Genius bars.

    Perhaps the biggest challenge for Penney is to sell shoppers on its new pricing. For years, Penney, like many other stores, has propped up price. The intent: to make it look like shoppers are getting great discounts when items go on sale.

    Penney has been an especially big promoter. Last year, the company, which offered 590 sales events last year, nearly three-quarters of its revenue come from merchandise that was discounted by 50 percent or more.

    That's more than double the retail industry average. According to an estimate by management consultant firm A.T. Kearney, a typical retailer sells between 40 and 45 percent of its inventory at a promotional price, up from 15 to 20 percent a decade ago.

    The increased discounting has been a vicious cycle that only feeds into shoppers' insatiable appetite for bigger and better discounts. In fact, whereas it took 38 percent off to get shoppers to buy 10 years ago, it now takes discounts of 60 percent, Johnson says.

    At Penney, the regular price on an item that costs $10 to make rose 43 percent, from $28 in 2002 to $40 in 2011. But because of all of its sales and other promotions, what it actually ended up selling for rose only 15 cents, from $15.80 to $15.95 during that same period.

    "I have been struck by the extraordinary amount of promotional activity, which to me, didn't feel like it was appropriate for a department store," Johnson says. "Once you start to promote, the only way to beat a promotion was to make it bigger."

    Walter Loeb, a New York-based retail consultant, says Penney's new pricing is "visionary" and revolutionary."

    But Charles Grom, a retail analyst at Deutsche Bank, says it will be difficult for Johnson to change shoppers' buying habits. Macy's, for example, cut back on coupons a few years ago, only to reverse courses after sales fell.

     
    • Small Fish  •  Falconer, New York  •  4 mths ago
      Alright!! now we are talking. Now lets start getting American products on those shelves and we are back in business.
    • m t  •  4 mths ago
      i've been saying this for years. just like the jewelry business advertising a $1,000 item for $100. it was only a $100 item to begin with. just put the lowest price on items and leave it at that. same way with coupons and rebates. do away with them and just put the lowest price on the item and don't make us play those stupid little games with sissors and mail stamps.
      • A Mac 4 mths ago
        !!
      • UnknownPlanet 4 mths ago
        I don't think the strategy will work. People get a psychological kick out of coupons, rebates, etc.
      • Carlsbad Tripper 4 mths ago
        I hate those coupons and rebate deals.....I don't have time for those games.
    • larry  •  Oklahoma City, Oklahoma  •  4 mths ago
      I remember when j c penney, c r anthony, sears, montgomery-ward and others were in most smaller towns, and each were shopped by moms and pops for work clothes, school clothes, etc, and for items not stocked you could order through their big "wish book" catelog. For more than 60 years my father used a particular work shoe available only at Pennys, who years ago quit handling those work shoes. Then all these community stores abanndoned the small towns and went big time to only the largest of cities in a state...sometimes putting once loyal customers up to 150 miles away. Now anthonys and wards are gone, sears and penneys are on shaky ground.. Maybe they need to get back to their roots---small town america where they could serve more everyday people. When penneys has a sale now, it is not when my wife can drive the one-way 120 or miles to participate. Just not convenient to use them, while the box stores are nearby.
      • Statguy 4 mths ago
        There's a thingy called the "internets" that has replaced the need for retailers to be in every small town in America.
      • 60's Fan 4 mths ago
        How true is your statement. We used to have Pennys, W.T.Grant,Sears, Hill's Dpt. store, Loblaws, Kroger's, A&P, in our little town. Now there is WalMart. Sears is all but gone. Pennys is stilll here, but, a big store in a mall now. I miss our little mom and pop stores and wonderful group of bakeries that closed up. Now all we have is WalMart. I hate that store.
      • Brownie 4 mths ago
        statguy of candler as. Intrnet a good place to expose yourself to thieves
    • Blaze  •  San Diego, California  •  4 mths ago
      These big department stores should start promoting US made items. We need to know where this stuff comes from and what it's made of. Case in point, for Christmas we got new dinnerware from Pennys only to find out it was made in China. They don't regulate (don't care) the lead content in glazes and paints, so who wants to serve their families food on lead tainted plates and I returned them. I swapped them for Pfiz.... funny name, made in US.
      • Tiffany 4 mths ago
        If you want to know where something is made, just check the tag! It is always listed on the tag, or the box or somewhere on the product or the packaging.
      • Lydia1 4 mths ago
        I buy the Anchor (made in US) glassware at WalMart. Attractive designs, good for everyday, but they will break when you drop them on a tile floor.... Like Tiffany says, everything has to be labeled with point of manufacture. All we have to do is check the labels and stop buying "made in China".
      • GRACE_AZ 4 mths ago
        Actually THE USA does regulate the lead content in all imported dinnerwear etc.. Lead is not allowed.. Consumers controll what they import.. buy American and they will start using more American products.. We own the looking at the tag part.. Pretty much, IMPORTED means NOT made in America.
    • David1  •  4 mths ago
      MALL rents are out of sight. If JC PENNY is going to survive they need to get out of the Malls and back into the shopping plazas. Malls are nothing but hang outs for kids now,, and all the stores beyond the big 3 retailers sell all the same crap. Shoes,, small clothing stores with outrageous prices and food all owned by the same company. Lower the overhead and sell quality for a good price and they will come. I prefer to park in front of the store I want to go into,,not in front of a huge complex,, a half mile from the doors only to have to walk a mile to get to where I want to go. Malls are going to be the next dying breed in the US unless they can control the kids,, vary their vendor base and do something about all the traffic issues to get in and out of the lots. NOT WORTH THE HASSLE.
      • heyu 4 mths ago
        I think shopping malls allow maximum exposure and more number of visitors per location for smaller stores. With shopping plazas you may get serious customers more often, however the location may not be well-known by the entire community unless you are JC Penny or a famous retailer.
    • Boof  •  4 mths ago
      So, all these years you've been ripping us off with unnecessarily high prices? GTK
      • Jimbo 4 mths ago
        How the hell did you figure that the CEO's of these retail chains were taking home 10's of millions a year without ripping us off? Is that REALLY just now dawning on you?
      • Boof 4 mths ago
        Sarcasm is lost on you Jimbo.
    • Larry  •  Amherst, Massachusetts  •  4 mths ago
      I really like the quality of their clothing, my store for buying clothes. If only their marketing dept can get it together. i do hope the plan works because I would hate to lose another good quality retailer
    • David1  •  4 mths ago
      I quit shopping in Penny's after having to stand in a long line at a kiosk to pay for my clothes and then having to hear the spiel about a Penny's charge card from someone who could barely speak ENGLISH. No Thanks!
    • GRACE_AZ  •  Phoenix, Arizona  •  4 mths ago
      Good idea.. At Kohl's a $20 pair of Jeans is tagged at $45 then it is reduced to $30 then use my card to get 30% of.. so pretty much I am paying $21 for the jeans.. Would love to have the low price without having to play the coupong discount games..
    • ga1999  •  Mont Vernon, New Hampshire  •  4 mths ago
      If JCPenney didn't spend so much money advertising sales and sending out junkmail, they'd save a lot of money. Then they wouldn't have to markup all of their merchandise 50% and say you're gettting 40% off. It's purely nothing more than the idiots in the marketing dept spending money needlessly and creating huge piles of discarded flyer and postcard trash.
    • David1  •  4 mths ago
      JC Penny's caters to the female shopper. Their Men's departments get smaller every year. I used to buy all my clothes from Penny's in the 70's and 80's when they sold quality merchandise at a decent price. Then they switched to lower quality clothing and did not drop their prices accordingly and shrunk down their men's departments. I no longer shop at Penny's for anything. You pay way to much for what you get. LEE Jeans are LEE Jeans. Why pay $38 a pair when you can buy that same jeans for $22 or $26 at Kohls or even Sears,, although Sears is going down that same road as JC Penny's now. Sears has totally lost its identity and cannot decide if it is a department store or a big box store and their quality has dropped off the cliff too.
    • RICHARD S  •  Morgantown, West Virginia  •  4 mths ago
      Will this affect their perpetual 70% off jewelry sale also ?
    • Nancy  •  Indianapolis, Indiana  •  4 mths ago
      Those "sales" weren't really sales, IMO. They were come on's for what the price should have been to begin with. Suggested Retail Prices are usually way too high on everything, not just at Pennys.
    • YAK ITY YAK  •  Boston, Massachusetts  •  4 mths ago
      now %40 on what price , china cost or ceo pay plus cost
    • Victoria Two  •  4 mths ago
      Anything that may cut into Wal-Mart, I applaud.
    • May Pang Ping Pong  •  4 mths ago
      Good for them and us
    • Dave  •  Gainesville, Florida  •  4 mths ago
      Just because they say sale or markdown, it does not mean sale or markdown.
    • RACHELS  •  4 mths ago
      will have to see how this works. I haven't shopped at Penney's in years, used to shop there all the time.
    • Murphy  •  Chicago, Illinois  •  4 mths ago
      I stopped shopping at jcp last year when, apropros of nothing, their credit department abruptly lowered my card limit from $700 to $440. The account was in good standing and I had never nmissed a payment. They had no explanation other than "a reveiw of your credit file." At this point I had had the account for 4 years and there ahd never beena problem. So I was, okay fine, wtahever. I am paying them off but will NEVER shop there/
    • Paul  •  Minneapolis, Minnesota  •  4 mths ago
      JCP is doing what it takes to remain relevant, otherwise it's the downward spiral like Sears.
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