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The changing pattern of American retailing

Dr David Rogers (President, DSR Marketing Systems Inc. Dr David Rogers is British and operates a retail consulting firm based in one of the suburbs of Chicago, Illinois. He received his doctorate from the University of Reading and was Head of Site Potential Statistics for J. Sainsbury Ltd before moving to the USA in 1975. His firm specialises in market research, acquisition studies, and site selection, and offers service throughout North America and in the UK — which Dr Rogers visits frequently. Dr Rogers has worked for firms such as Florsheim Shoes, Zale Corporation, Minnesota Fabrics, and Ralph's, and is a regular columnist for four retail trade magazines in New York.)

Retail and Distribution Management

ISSN: 0307-2363

Article publication date: 1 March 1983

223

Abstract

Received wisdom is that retail change starts in America and later spreads to major western European countries. This was certainly true until the early 1970s when France took the lead in innovation, blinding the retail world with its dazzling regional shopping centres and its massive hypermarkets. To this day the Americans have not succeeded in selling food and non‐food under the same roof with the same panache as the French. But in recent years the Americans have revived their capacity for innovation, especially in the development of speciality chains, some of them sharply focussed in marketing terms and closely supported by the latest in automated systems. Then again, in supermarkets there has been the development of different formats within specific store type categories, of which the food‐drug combination store and the “hybrid” warehouse store are two interesting examples. Lastly there have been significant technological developments in cable TV and viewdata systems, and a number of test teleshopping systems are already in operation. In this first of an irregular series of articles on American retailing, Dr David Rogers outlines these changes, some of which will be discussed in more detail in subsequent features.

Citation

Rogers, D. (1983), "The changing pattern of American retailing", Retail and Distribution Management, Vol. 11 No. 3, pp. 8-13. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb018186

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1983, MCB UP Limited

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