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Home Depot Replaces Leader of US Stores

January 21, 2016/in Retail, The Home Depot /by tashman

Home Depot is replacing its US stores, Marc Powers, with another company veteran, becoming the latest major retailer to change the leader of its store operations. The spokesman said Mr. Powers wasn’t available to comment.

Home Depot is the 3rd big US chain this month to change the executive in charge of its stores, as retailers grapple with what role their bricks and mortar locations should play while more shopping takes place online.

As reported in NASDAQ – Read the rest of the article

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The Home Depot Acquires Interline Brands

August 26, 2015/in The Home Depot, Uncategorized /by tashman

Source: Hardware & Building Supply Dealer

The Home Depot said Monday it completed its $1.625 billion acquisition of Interline Brands, a national distributor and direct marketer of broad-line maintenance, repair and operations (MRO) products.

The agreement to acquire Interline was previously announced on July 22, 2015.

“We’re delighted to officially welcome Interline’s associates and customers into The Home Depot family,” said Craig Menear, chairman, CEO and president of The Home Depot. “By joining forces with Interline, we’ll be able to better serve our pro customers whether in- store, online or at their place of business. We look forward to the value this acquisition will bring to our customers and shareholders.”

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https://www.tashman.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/08/HomeDepot_Exterior.jpg 575 767 tashman https://www.tashman.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/head-logo.jpg tashman2015-08-26 18:06:492015-08-26 18:11:14The Home Depot Acquires Interline Brands

Satellite Imagery Shows Home Depot is Busier than Lowe’s

July 27, 2015/in The Home Depot /by tashman

Source- Washington Post

A few years ago, Americans who wanted to invest in China would have a lot of homework — and legwork – -to do. Most would have to hire someone halfway around the world to check out the investment for them. An investigator might drive for hours over the empty plains of Inner Mongolia, China’s far northern region, to make sure a remote mining operation really existed. Others would literally hide in the bushes to count trucks coming and going from a factory, or count the number of trees owned by a lumber operation.

Now, companies have a much simpler solution: monitoring investments across the world through photographs taken from space.

Satellite images contain a wealth of information about how much business a company is doing, and how much a country’s economy is growing. A hedge fund interested in investing in a Chinese miner, for example, might use the satellite images below to see how much the mine is really producing. By watching how a mine changes over hours or days, analysts can figure out how active the mine is.

In the image below, taken by satellites owned by space and analytics company Planet Labs, you can see how a gold mine in northern China changes between September and October. (Move the slider on the image back and forth to see the mine get deeper over the course of the month.)

Analysts are now using satellite imagery to examine everything from the lights cast by cities in India, to black market activity in North Korea, to how many people are shopping at Home Depot. As satellite imagery becomes more available, it will reshape how companies monitor their own and competitors’ operations, and make investors huge amounts of money. It will also generate privacy concerns, as anyone’s activity outside is now visible to the highest bidder.

Read the rest here

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How To Get Paid Faster from Home Depot

March 24, 2015/in General Industry News, Hardware News, The Home Depot /by tashman

Home Depot is a great company – but let’s face it, they do what a lot of big businesses do: They pay kind of slow. I know this because I have clients who do business with them. Typical terms are around 60 days. These terms are not uncommon when dealing with larger companies. And yet, it’s a huge issue for smaller companies.

That’s because smaller companies need cash. By the time one of my clients sells product to Home Depot or a larger company all of their money has been spent on buying the raw materials, producing the product, paying people, maintaining overhead and shipping the items…and then it’s another 60 days until the cash comes in. Big businesses have greater cash reserves and large credit facilities made available by banks who are more than happy to lend them money. Small companies don’t have these resources at their disposal. They just wait.

Until now. There is an enormous change happening in payments processing, a change that will impact any small business doing business with larger companies. Technology is driving this change and a company named Taulia is right in the middle of it. Taulia, founded by former entrepreneurs who wrote payment processing software for SAP, raised about $15 million in additional financing last January and is now valued at close to $1 billion – and there are rumors that they’re considering a public offering in 2016.

“This company makes a lot of sense,” says Josh Hannah of Matrix Partners, one of Taulia’s earliest investors and a board member. “I love companies that find legacy-related inefficiencies that have persisted for years then make them efficient.”

How is Taulia solving these problems? Take Home Depot (or John Deere, EBay, Grainger, Salesforce, PayPal, Coca-Cola Bottling Consolidated, Hallmark Cards, Johnson Controls, Graphic Packaging, Pacific Gas & Electric – all customers, according to the company). You’re a small company selling product or providing services to one of these giants. You ship your product/do your service, send your invoice…and wait to get paid. Meanwhile, other bills need to be paid. Your bank is offering you less credit (if any credit at all). Factoring and micro-finance options are expensive. You’re trying to grow but you’re restricted. You need the cash now.

But what if Home Depot comes back to you and says “Look little guy – we value you and we’re happy to pay you earlier. Just find your invoice in our online portal and click the button that says ‘pay earlier.’ It’s as simple as that.” And it really is that simple. Taulia’s software is written to integrate with their customers’ back end systems. A portal is provided to the small business suppliers, either by Taulia or from the large company. If a small supplier chooses to be paid earlier the payment will be made, net of a discount. The discount is ultimately split between the big company and Taulia. I’m simplifying a few things here, but you get the point.

Read full article here

https://www.tashman.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/head-logo.jpg 0 0 tashman https://www.tashman.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/head-logo.jpg tashman2015-03-24 16:51:062015-03-24 16:51:06How To Get Paid Faster from Home Depot

The Home Depot Names Craig Menear as Chairman

January 19, 2015/in The Home Depot /by tashman

ATLANTA, Jan. 16, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — The Home Depot®, the world’s largest home improvement retailer, today announced that its Board of Directors has elected CEO and president, Craig Menear, as chairman, effective February 2. He will succeed Frank Blake, who will retire as chairman.

“On behalf of the Board of Directors, I once again want to thank Frank for his outstanding leadership and dedication to our customers, associates and shareholders,” said Greg Brenneman, lead director. “We’re fortunate to have another great leader in Craig Menear and look forward to working closely with him moving forward.”

The Home Depot named Menear CEO and president in November of 2014. He is a 17-year veteran of the company, and is the first merchant to be named chairman and CEO since co-founder Bernie Marcus.

The Home Depot is the world’s largest home improvement specialty retailer, with 2,269 retail stores in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam, 10 Canadian provinces and Mexico. In fiscal 2013, The Home Depot had sales of $78.8 billion and earnings of $5.4 billion. The Company employs more than 300,000 associates. The Home Depot’s stock is traded on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE: HD) and is included in the Dow Jones industrial average and Standard & Poor’s 500 index.

 

Read full press release here

https://www.tashman.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/head-logo.jpg 0 0 tashman https://www.tashman.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/head-logo.jpg tashman2015-01-19 23:13:232015-01-19 23:13:23The Home Depot Names Craig Menear as Chairman

Home Depot Names Mark Powers EVP U.S. Stores

October 23, 2014/in Home Channel News, The Home Depot, Uncategorized /by tashman

The Home Depot promoted Marc Powers to the role of EVP U.S. Stores, effective Nov. 1, 2014.

“Marc brings a deep understanding of our operations, culture and customers, making him an ideal fit to oversee our U.S. stores,” said Frank Blake, chairman and CEO. “We’re truly fortunate to have such a deep bench with leaders like Marc.”

Powers will transition from his current role as SVP operations, U.S. Stores, which has put him in charge of store operations and customer service programs for the retailer’s nearly 2,000 U.S. stores. He began working for The Home Depot as a store associate in 1986.

In his new role, he will be charged with leading the company’s three U.S. operating divisions, as well as Pro, Tool Rental and Home Depot’s installation business.

Powers replaces Marvin Ellison, who left Home Depot to join J.C. Penney in a role that will eventually put him in the CEO post.

Read full article here

https://www.tashman.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/head-logo.jpg 0 0 tashman https://www.tashman.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/head-logo.jpg tashman2014-10-23 20:07:412014-10-23 20:07:41Home Depot Names Mark Powers EVP U.S. Stores

Home Depot, Lowe’s Bring the Internet of Things to DIYers

July 22, 2014/in General Industry News, Hardware News, Lowe's Home Improvement Warehouse, The Home Depot /by tashman

Home improvement stores, destinations for the do-it-yourself consumer, have long sold the hammers, nails and tools people need to fix up their houses.

Now large chains such as Home Depot and Lowe’s are selling virtual tools — sensors, Wi-Fi enabled appliances and software — to help those customers monitor and control their homes from their smartphones.

It’s an attempt to tap into the Internet of Things — technologists’ term for a network of connected sensors, devices and objects. In its early stages, the Internet of Things attracted tech companies such as Nest, the connected-thermostat manufacturer bought by Google in January for $3.2 billion, and Smart­Things, a District-based start-up selling home automation kits.

 

Read full article here

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Home Depot Starts Selling 3D Printers in Stores

July 14, 2014/in The Home Depot /by tashman

Home Depot Inc. (HD), the world’s largest home-improvement chain, will start selling 3-D printers today in stores for the first time, pushing deeper into a market that was once the domain of engineers and hobbyists.

Home Depot is selling devices from MakerBot, a 3-D printer maker acquired by Stratasys Ltd. (SSYS) last year, in 12 locations as part of a pilot project, the companies said. The effort will include stores in California, Illinois and New York.

“It’s a pilot for us to test a potential disruptive technology, and to make sure we are on the forefront of a new innovative product,” Joe Downey, an online merchant at Atlanta-based Home Depot, said in an interview.

Read full article here

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Home Depot, the Place to Go for Toilet Paper?

June 6, 2014/in The Home Depot /by tashman

Chains Like Staples, Best Buy Are Betting Consumer Basics Will Boost Sales, Pull In Shoppers

Link to full article

By SHELLY BANJO and SERENA NG

CONNECT

June 5, 2014 2:13 p.m. ET

TAKE A QUIZ: Each retailer sells three of the four items shown. Can you pick the item that it does NOT sell? (Scroll down for answers.) Mikey Burton

Social media marketer Valentina Monte stops by Home Depot HD +0.46% every two months. It’s her favorite place to buy toilet paper.

The 23-year-old often buys books, clothes, shoes and concert tickets online and watches TV shows from Netflix NFLX +0.23% and HBO Go. But she still treks out regularly from her New York City apartment to visit the do-it-yourself store and stock up.

It’s confusing, but it’s no accident. Home Depot Inc. is one of many unlikely retailers betting that consumer staples will boost sales and pull shoppers into their stores. While sales of most electronics and office supplies have rapidly migrated online, sales of soap and paper towels generally haven’t, making them magnets for foot traffic.

As a result, shoppers at Best Buy Co. BBY +1.29% don’t just find laptops and headphones. They can also buy Keurig coffee pods and Tide detergent. Customers browsing Staples Inc. SPLS +0.36% can pick up legal pads, but they can also find shaving cream and deodorant.

Related

  • Retail Sales in May Get a Boost

Best Buy calls the strategy “floor optimization.” Staples calls it “Beyond Office Supplies.” Some shoppers call it puzzling.

“I couldn’t imagine going to Staples for the purpose of buying deodorant, is it really good business?” said Bart Barber, a pastor in Farmersville, Texas, who recently visited a Staples store for computer supplies and was surprised by deodorant sticks near checkout. “I guess it’s for the person who has run out but forgot to go to Wal-MartWMT +0.19% to get it.”

It wasn’t long ago that the largest American retailers had a simple strategy: Choose a category, build lots of huge stores and wipe out less-focused competitors. The lines are starting to blur.

Staples’ marketing executive Alison Corcoran said expanding into deodorants and other goods that have to be replenished regularly is a logical step for the office supply giant. The chain is adding 1,600 new items, mainly business-related supplies, to its stores this year as it tries to reinvent itself and align with changing consumer tastes.

Best Buy’s ‘floor optimization’ strategy has added Tide detergent and Keurig coffee pods to its shelves.Getty Images

“Some of the new products are traffic drivers, others are a convenience play,” Ms. Corcoran said. “We are trying to establish new patterns with our shoppers, who might be buying those paper towels somewhere else.”

A similar strategy is taking hold at Best Buy, which is trying to use consumables such as Tide, coffee pods and home soda machine supplies to bring back customers who once stopped by every week to buy compact discs, movies and ink cartridges.

Scott Guthrie, who oversees SodaStream International Ltd. SODA +2.03% ‘s operations in the Americas, said nearly one-third of the people who buy soda machines will return to the same store when they need CO2 gas refills or syrup.

Stores “love these planned visits,” because it increases the likelihood shoppers will pick up other items while in the store, he said.

Answers to Quiz

  • Home Depot: doesn’t sell cigarettes.
  • Best Buy: doesn’t sell sneakers.
  • Staples: doesn’t sell eggs.

Retailers are facing what may be a permanent drop in traffic as Americans increasingly shop online for everything from diapers to drywall. U.S. shoppers made 3.8% fewer shopping trips in 2013 than they did a year earlier, according to market research firm Nielsen, as strained consumers cut back trips to stores in part to spend less money on gasoline.

Consumer products companies are encouraging the retailers’ moves, saying they have helped boost sales of their brands in an otherwise dour environment. Overall unit sales of consumer products have posted little or no growth in the U.S. for the past three years, according to Nielsen.

Home improvement and office supply retailers have sold consumer packaged goods for some time, but they have been adding more items and marketing them more aggressively in response to growth in the area. Staples this year has ramped up efforts to portray itself as a source of such products, even replacing the bent staple “L” in its logo with items like a broom and dustpan, or a Windex bottle and a sponge.

Nick Vlahos, chief customer officer at Clorox Co. CLX +0.22% , said home-improvement retailers are an important source of sales for the company’s namesake bleach, disinfecting wipes and Glad trash bags. “This channel in aggregate is driving more foot traffic,” he added.

This spring, Home Depot launched its own laundry detergent under its HDX label. Bloomberg

Clorox has also found, for example, when shoppers buy barbecue grills, they also tend to pick up bags of Kingsford charcoal, a product the company makes, or they may buy trash bags along with trash cans.

Home Depot’s push into consumer staples came almost by accident, said the company’s U.S. retail president, Craig Menear.

Employees in the garden department noticed cleaning supplies would boost the division’s sales in the winter, when customers weren’t buying potting soil and shrubbery, and suggested giving them more space. The company worked with Procter & Gamble Co.PG -0.10% to understand how to add cleaning supplies that would appeal to general consumers in addition to its professional customers.

“Once we made it more visible, it became a growing category for us,” Mr. Menear said.

This spring, Home Depot launched its own laundry detergent under its HDX label.

Last year for Christmas, Ms. Monte, the social media marketer, asked her mother for a gift card to the home-improvement retailer.

It isn’t the lumber or drywall she is after. While at the store, she might pick up “some small items, or I’ll have a key made,” she said. But otherwise, “I just go there for toilet paper.”

 

https://www.tashman.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/head-logo.jpg 0 0 tashman https://www.tashman.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/head-logo.jpg tashman2014-06-06 18:18:352014-08-07 00:34:53Home Depot, the Place to Go for Toilet Paper?

Home Depot to roll out new Customer Order Management System

May 29, 2014/in General Industry News, Hardware News, The Home Depot /by tashman

Home Depot announced on its Q1 earnings call that it has gone live with its first in-store implementation of a new customer order management system (OMS), with plans to roll it out across its U.S. supply chain by the end of 2014.

The system “is designed for greater visibility and execution of special orders by our associates and a frictionless experience for our customers,” said Craig Menear, Home Depot’s president of U.S. retail, during the earnings call.

“When customers place an order they can understand the status of that order, including where it is in the process of manufacturing,” Menear said. “And our associates will have visibility into store arrival so they can better answer consumers’ questions during that process. It’s also a coordinating effort that drives back into our manufacturers and our suppliers, allowing coordination all the way through the supply chain.”

Read full article here

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