Advertisement

Sears’ New Image to Tout Variety, Not Prices

Share
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Sears, Roebuck & Co. is changing its image again in the latest effort to rev up sluggish sales, ditching its focus on discount prices in a new advertising campaign emphasizing its wide variety of goods.

The multimillion-dollar message: Shoppers can find most anything under one roof at Sears.

The switch in pitches comes at an important time for the nation’s No. 4 retailer, hamstrung by a tightened economy as it tries to keep from losing more ground to discounters such as Wal-Mart Stores Inc., Target Corp. and Kohl’s Corp.

Sears remains the leader in U.S. appliance sales and a hardware powerhouse, but clothing sales have been weak for years despite its efforts to boost them in a much-ballyhooed campaign touting Sears’ “softer side.”

Advertisement

The struggles continued even when the Hoffman Estates, Ill.-based company confronted its low-cost rivals head-on starting in 1999 by making prices the centerpiece of its marketing strategy with the tagline: “The Good Life at a Great Price. Guaranteed. Sears.” In the first six months of 2001, the retailer lost $21 million.

The new campaign, to be launched Sept. 6 with a nationwide advertising blitz, will emphasize the extent of Sears’ brand-name products, from its Craftsman and Kenmore brands to national names such as Levi’s and Maytag.

Officials said it is just one part of the company’s revised strategy under new Chief Executive Alan Lacy, who also is selling off non-core units and ordered 89 underperforming stores closed this year.

“We wanted to strike a balance between marketing purely on the basis of price and short-term promotional gains and . . . investing in our brand for the long term,” said David Selby Sears senior vice president of marketing. “What we’re trying to do is play to our strengths.”

The campaign is being launched as Sears and other retailers brace for what some industry experts have said could be the weakest Christmas sales season in a decade.

Developed by the Sears marketing team with Chicago-based ad agency Young & Rubicam, a unit of Britain’s WPP Group, it uses humor to hawk Sears products.

Advertisement

For example, in a TV commercial, a man wearing a Levi’s jacket and Timberland Pro boots cuts a hole in his hedge with a Craftsman hedge trimmer so he can peer into a neighbor’s window to watch a football game on his Sony big-screen TV. One of the print ads shows a pot-bellied man wrapped in a towel in his bathroom next to a superimposed shopping list: “Fieldcrest bath towels, Whole Home accent rugs, NordicTrack treadmill.”

Sears shares fell 83 cents to $44.07 on the New York Stock Exchange.

Advertisement