With today's seemingly
unlimited competition, numerous shopping centers are faced with the
need to critically examine themselves. In the Chicago area, we recently
found that over the past ten years, the average major mall had tenant turnover
of over 67 percent and, in some cases, close to 80 percent. In Texas, we
found increasing vacancy in both young and older malls, while in Florida,
we found big box users vacating centers less than five years old for newer
power centers. If your center is faced with declining tenancy or additional
competition, it will pay to consider this process as a way to strengthen
your center and protect your investment.
ANALYZE YOUR
SHOPPING CENTER
The initial step
is to critically analyze your center's general market and center performance.
Competitive, Convenient
Access and Demographic Changes in the Market Area
Most recognize that
it is important to understand the changes that have taken place in the
general area over the past five years. This includes new shopping centers
or malls, centers expanded or re-tenanted, and any major freestanding stores.
Where are they located in relation to your center's customer base? How
did they impact your center's tenants and sales? Did they change shopping
patterns and customer orientation?
Often accessibility
to an area or ingress or egress can be changed with a major street widening
or improvement. Is one planned? It is very easy to find out from the state
department of transportation or the local traffic engineer. If one is planned,
get with the traffic people and make your voice heard regarding how it
will impact your center. If it has already occurred, did it affect your
center's trade area? Did you lose some competitive advantage? What can
be done about it?
The U.S. population
is aging and many urban areas are changing ethnically. Have any of these
changes affected your center's trade area? The aging of the population
will have a dramatic impact upon retail store orientation over the next
five years. Is your tenant mix ready for the changes? These are simply
some of the questions that one need ask when assessing shopping center
and market area changes.
Your Shopping
Center's Changes
It is important to
understand the annual changes that have taken place in your center or mall
for at least the past five years, including: annual sales, store sizes,
sales per square foot, store placement, store turnover, independent versus
chain stores, store mix, types of merchandise, types of stores leasing
space, or vacating the center, store size changes, store competitiveness,
occupancy/vacancy, quality of store management, effectiveness of center
management, promotional activities and their level of success, visibility,
my dark spaces, entrance and exit utilization, and other elements particular
to your center.
Shopping Center
Physical Needs or Deficiencies
Examine your shopping
center as a consumer or retailer would. Does the center look sharp and
appealing? What needs to be improved? Often this might include facade improvements,
parking lot repair, better signs, entrance/exit changes, lighting, new
roof repair, store fronts, beautification, and more. Physical deficiencies
can loom large in the consumer's mind if newer, more modern shopping centers
are located nearby.
ANALYZING YOUR
CENTER'S CUSTOMER AND TRADE AREA RESIDENTS
Perhaps the most
often overlooked element in shopping center analysis is the customer. Customers
and trade area residents are not necessarily synonymous. Some certainly
are customers, however many may be shoppers at competitive facilities.
It is important to know who is and who is not, and why they are not customers
of your shopping center or mall. Some centers' owners and managers rely
on the credit card distribution of one of the department stores, or perhaps,
a big box retailer to define their trade area. While that can be very helpful,
it does not provide anything other than a trade area. Furthermore, what
about the cash customers? The following tools can be utilized:
The Customer Intercept
Survey
The customer intercept
program involves intercepting the customers as they leave the center or
mall. They are then queried regarding their shopping habits, patterns,
place of residence, and socioeconomic characteristics. The process usually
takes four to seven days depending upon the center or mall's size and performance.
Particularly important is: who is the most frequent customer to the shopping
center and why? Where else do they shop? Who are their favorite competitors?
When was the decision made to visit your shopping center? How long did
it take the customer to get to the center? How much did the customer spend
at your center? What stores were visited? What do they like about your
center? Is there anything that they dislike? What improvements do they
think your shopping center needs? How does your center rate in comparison
to other centers, including safety and security? Also, what are the customers'
household incomes, ages, numbers of children, and where they live or work?
Some shopping center
managers rely on focus groups to achieve this insight. That is acceptable
as long as the groups selected are truly representative of the shopping
center's customer base, and more importantly, the most frequent shoppers
to the center. In my almost 40 years of evaluating shopping centers, I
find that focus groups are often too narrow and rarely represent a shopping
center's most frequent shoppers. How can anyone know who the most frequent
shoppers are without first intercepting them as they leave the center to
find out? Most executives like focus groups because they can watch and
listen to the focus group members
and draw their own
opinions and conclusions. Unfortunately, if not done very carefully, it
can be a great way to reinvent the Edsel.
Trade Area (Actual)
Determination and Changes
Knowing a shopping
center's actual trade area is very important. Customer intercept surveys
can provide that definition. Plotting the location of the customers by
their origin (home, work, shopping and others) and by frequency of shopping
at your shopping center will not only provide a trade area, but it will
also show where the most frequent shoppers originate. It will also usually
indicate the trade area subparts where residents are not coming to your
shopping center. Usually, the most frequent shoppers make up at least 60
percent of the sales of the shopping center.
Telephone Interviews
with Trade Area Residents
Knowing one's shopping
center customer profile and characteristics is often only half a loaf.
To truly understand a center's strength and weakness, it is usually necessary
to conduct telephone interviews with residents of the trade area. This
can be done either as a random selection or targeting specific subparts
of the trade area. The former is most often done while the latter is done
when there are trade area subparts that are weak and providing few customers
to your center. Regardless of the method, the objective is to find out
why some trade area residents do not shop at your center or mall and what
can be done to encourage them to change their patterns. Also, part of this
process is a determination of the trade area 'universe's' actual shopping
patterns, habits and frequencies.
YOUR CENTER'S
MARKET PENETRATION
Before making any
changes in your shopping center, it is important to know:
- The market penetration
for the trade area and its segments (primary, secondary, and others); and
- Your shopping centers
market penetration by retail category (food, general merchandise, apparel,
accessories, and others).
This can be accomplished
by computing retail expenditures both by retail category and by trade area
segment. Moreover, by using your center's customer distribution and frequency
of customer visits, one can distribute the shopping center's sales to the
various trade area subparts. Next, the relationship between retail category
expenditures and your shopping center's sales can be computed by trade
area segment to determine the center's market penetration. There is no
better way, that I know of, to see how well your center is doing in relation
to the market in which it is competing. When analyzed on a map reflecting
competition, physical or psychological barriers, road patterns and others,
a clear picture of the shopping center's attraction emerges. Moreover,
a picture of probable actions also becomes clearer.
COMPETITIVE
ASSESSMENT
Competition must
be analyzed both qualitatively and quantitatively. Competition should be
inspected and cataloged on the weekends when retailing peaks. That way
one can see who is doing business and who is not. Furthermore, competition
must be evaluated by location, name, type, convenience, size, store mix,
anchors, performance, merchandise quality, merchandise lines, price points,
merchandise presentation, advertising, service, customer perceived value,
accessibility, parking, security, and others.
IDENTIFYING
THE NEEDS OF YOUR CENTER OR MALL
Retail Store Changes
This step is fairly
easy once all of the above activities have been completed. Needs and weaknesses
become obvious. Make a realistic list of active retail store additions
in the retail categories that reflect both market and need. The list represents
target stores for your center or mail which will strengthen the center,
improve its attraction, and better meet consumer demands. Solutions may
include: entertainment, cinemas, big boxes, theme restaurants, interactive
retailers, bookstores, aquariums, museums, and even casinos. An aggressive
leasing program can be prepared when armed with very specific market and
customer data that can have a significant impact upon a retailer's representative.
Physical Needs
Alternatives
The next action is
to review the list of physical needs in light of the study findings. There
are almost always some changes required. The needs often include: exterior
changes, interior changes (malls), signage, demalling, demolition, new
construction, parking changes or additions, circulation alterations, beautification,
landscaping, lighting, and others. Regardless of the needs, they can be
prioritized based upon costs and both short and long range benefits to
the center or mall.
Financial Analysis
of the Re-Merchandising and Redevelopment Alternatives
A large part of the
final decision will be the result of a financial analysis of the alternatives
including estimated costs, store types, impact on existing stores, impact
upon overage, rent forecasts, and most importantly, value. We find that
by creating a matrix of options, costs, impacts, and financial outcomes,
a clear picture emerges. it is most helpful in making the final decision.
The big box revolution has forced many centers and malls to reflect upon
their future and their value. By developing both market and center facts
and analyzing them in a logical framework, the alternatives available to
management and ownership become very clear.
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