Nordstrom

Coordinates: 47°36′45″N 122°20′11″W / 47.61237°N 122.3365°W / 47.61237; -122.3365

Nordstrom, Inc.
Public
Traded as NYSE: JWN
S&P 500 Component
Industry Retail
Founded 1901 (1901)
Founder John W. Nordstrom
Carl F. Wallin
Headquarters Seattle, Washington, United States
Number of locations
Nordstrom: 118
Nordstrom Rack: 178
Jeffrey: 2
Nordstrom Last Chance: 1
Key people
Enrique Hernandez, Jr., Chairman
Blake Nordstrom, President
Pete Nordstrom, President of Merchandising
Erik Nordstrom, President of Nordstrom Direct
Jamie Nordstrom, President of Stores
Mike Koppel, Chief Financial Officer
Geevy Thomas, President Nordstrom Rack
Karen Mckibbin, President Nordstrom Canada
Products Clothing, footwear, jewelry, beauty, restaurant, espresso bar, home furnishings and design, and wedding
Revenue Increase US$ 13.506 billion (2014)[1]
Decrease US$ 1.323 billion (2014)[1]
Decrease US$ 720 million (2014)[1]
Total assets
  • Increase US$ 9.245 billion (2014) [2]
  • Increase US$ 8.574 billion (2013) [3]
Total equity Increase US$ 2.44 billion (2014)[4]
Number of employees
67,000 (2014)[5]
Subsidiaries HauteLook
Nordstrom Rack
Website nordstrom.com

Nordstrom, Inc. (/ˈnɔːrdstrəm/) is an American upscale fashion retailer, founded by John W. Nordstrom and Carl F. Wallin and headquartered in Seattle. The company began as a shoe retailer and has since expanded its inventory to include clothing, accessories, handbags, jewelry, cosmetics, and fragrances. Select Nordstrom stores also have wedding and home furnishing departments. There are 323 stores operating in 38 states and Canada, which includes 121 full-line stores and 194 Nordstrom Racks, five Trunk Club clubhouses, two Jeffrey boutiques and one clearance store. Nordstrom also serves customers through nordstrom.com and nordstromrack.com, and its online private sale site, HauteLook. In addition, Nordstrom operates one clearance store, along with two Jeffrey boutiques. Nordstrom, Inc.'s common stock is publicly traded on the NYSE under the symbol JWN. The company announced plans to open six stores in Canada beginning in 2014,[6] as well as its first namesake in New York City in 2018.[7] Nationally, Nordstrom competes with luxury retailers Bloomingdale's, Lord & Taylor, Neiman Marcus, and Saks Fifth Avenue. Of its retail competitors, Nordstrom has both the largest number of store locations and the largest geographic footprint, and its stores anchor many upscale malls throughout the United States.

History

Early history

Nordstrom's headquarters and flagship store (in former Frederick & Nelson flagship) in downtown Seattle.

In 1887, at the age of 16, like many other Swedes in the late 19th century, John W. Nordstrom immigrated to the United States in search of opportunity. He was born in the village of Alvik Nedar Luleå in Northern Sweden. His name at birth was "Johan Nordström" which he later anglicized to John Nordstrom. After landing in New York, he first began working in Michigan. As he moved across the country, he worked a series of menial jobs. He was able to save enough money to purchase a 20-acre (81,000 m2) potato farm in Arlington, Washington, near Seattle. In 1897, he joined the Klondike Gold Rush in Canada's Yukon Territory, leaving Seattle. After two years of prospecting, he finally struck gold, but sold his disputed claim for $13,000.[8] Returning to Seattle with his newfound wealth, he married Hilda Carlson and looked for a business venture, finally settling on a shoe store that opened in 1901, called Wallin & Nordstrom. Carl F. Wallin, the co-founder of the store, was the owner of the adjacent shoe repair shop. John and Hilda had five children, three of whom would follow him into the family business, Everett W.(1903), Elmer J. (1904) and Lloyd N. Nordstrom. By the time Wallin & Nordstrom opened their second store in Seattle in 1923, Elmer, a recent graduate of the University of Washington, had enough experience to be placed in charge of its opening.

The exterior of a typical Nordstrom department store. This one is the now closed location at The Florida Mall in Orlando, Florida.

In 1928, John W. Nordstrom retired and sold his shares to two of his sons, Everett and Elmer. In 1929, Wallin also retired and sold his shares to them. The 1930 grand opening of the remodeled Second Avenue store marked the change of name to Nordstrom. Lloyd Nordstrom subsequently joined the company in 1933, and the three brothers ran the business together for almost forty years.

By 1958, Nordstrom had expanded to eight stores in two states but still only sold shoes. Their expansion was based on customer service, deep product offerings and full size ranges. Apparel came with its purchase of Best Apparel of Seattle in 1963. The company's name was changed to Nordstrom Absolute Best in 1969.

By 1968, the second generation debated selling the company as Everett neared retirement. Instead, they were convinced by the third generation Nordstroms—Bruce A. (Everett's son), James F. and John N. (Elmer's two sons), together with John A. (Jack) MacMillan (married to Lloyd's daughter) -- to take the company public instead, and allow the cousins to take over the business. In 1971, the company was taken public on NASDAQ under the ticker NOBE (Nordstrom Best). In 1973, "Best" was dropped from the company's name, and the store assumed its current name of Nordstrom.[9] It was moved to the New York Stock Exchange in 1999 under the ticker symbol JWN after John W. Nordstrom, its founder.

1970s–90s

The previous Nordstrom logo, in use from 1973 through 1991.

By 1975, Nordstrom expanded into Alaska (the only time by acquisition) by purchasing Northern Commercial Company and opened its first Nordstrom Rack clearance store in Seattle. A strong northwest regional retailer with sales already approaching $250 million (making it the third-largest specialty retailer in the U.S.), it opened its first Southern California store at South Coast Plaza in Costa Mesa in 1978.[10] By the early 1990s, it had opened 26 stores plus Racks in California. Subsequent expansion relied on creating a strongly decentralized regional structure, beginning with the Northeast (Tysons Corner Center, 1988), Midwest (Oakbrook Center, 1991), Southeast (Atlanta, 1998), and Southwest (Dallas, 1996) to which the California stores were added. In a new region, the initial store was used as a base for training and recruitment for subsequent expansion, and was usually backed by its own distribution center. From 1978 to 1995, Nordstrom opened a total of 46 full-line department stores.[11]

In 1976, Nordstrom opened a series of stores called Place Two to sell a more limited selection of apparel in smaller markets. By 1983, there were ten Place Two stores, but the cost of upgrading the smaller stores, especially from a systems perspective, outweighed the benefit, and the division was discontinued.[12] The company also expanded into direct sales in 1993, beginning with a catalog division[13] led by John N.'s son Dan that was followed by an e-commerce business. Nordstrom.com's fulfillment and contact centers are located in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, and Seattle, Washington. Currently, it has distribution centers in Ontario, California; Newark, California; Portland, Oregon; Dubuque, Iowa; Upper Marlboro, Maryland; and Gainesville, Florida.

Nordstrom FSB, a wholly owned subsidiary of Nordstrom, Inc., is a federally chartered savings bank doing business as Nordstrom Bank. It was formed in 1991 in Scottsdale, Arizona, with its customer contact center in Centennial, Colorado. Nordstrom FSB was formerly known as Nordstrom National Credit Bank and changed its name to Nordstrom FSB in March 2000. The bank offers various banking and credit products, such as Nordstrom Signature VISA, Nordstrom retail credit and debit cards, interest-bearing checking accounts, check cards, and certificates of deposits. It offers Nordstrom customers cards under Nordstrom Rewards – its customer loyalty program – where customers earn points when making purchases with the card at Nordstrom and other retailers. Other rewards include Nordstrom Notes which are redeemed or used like cash in stores for new purchases and the Nordstrom Signature VISA card also has an optional travel/leisure rewards feature. The Nordstrom Rewards program features 4 levels of status depending on annual spending and offers various promotional times throughout the year to earn double, triple and even ten-times points.[14][15]

Beginning in 1995, the fourth generation of brothers and cousins served as co-presidents for a time. After John Whitacre served as the first non-Nordstrom CEO in 1997,[16] in 2001 the family reasserted its control, with the sons of Bruce A. (Blake, Erik and Peter) assuming senior roles in the company which they continue to hold.[17]

In 1998, Nordstrom replaced its downtown Seattle store with a new flagship location in the former Frederick & Nelson building across the street. At 383,000 square feet (35,600 m2), the downtown Seattle location is the chain's largest store. By contrast, the smallest Nordstrom store (as of September 2008) opened in 1980 in Salem, Oregon and has a total area of just under 72,000 square feet (6,700 m2).

2000–present

Nordstrom Rack, the company's off-price clearance store

As the stores expanded in size, restaurants were added beginning in 1979, reaching their peak with the then-largest (and most expensive) Westfield San Francisco Centre California flagship store that opened in 1989, that included no fewer than four restaurants as well as an English pub.[18] Recently, the "Espresso Bar" from older stores has been discontinued and re-introduced as the "eBar" with offering a variety of quick-fix snacks, and an expanded "hotbar" drink list. Smaller stores (mostly consisting of two-stories) now have an "in-House Cafe", which offers the same menu but with seating. Nordstrom has also revised its four restaurants (found in select stores), the casual "Classic Cafe" and "Marketplace Cafe", the "Cafe Bistro" specializing in brick oven entrees, and the "Nordstrom Grill" offering food and alcoholic beverages. The Nordstrom restaurants have similar menus and offer different specials daily. The restaurants offer beer and wine.

A Nordstrom Rack store in Hillsboro, Oregon

Nordstrom sold its stand-alone boutique chain Façonnable in 2007, though it still offers that label in its lineup.

In February 2011, Nordstrom announced the acquisition of HauteLook, an LA-based online retailer that offers flash sales on designer goods. The deal included Nordstrom paying $180 million in stock and a three-year "earn-out" payment based on HauteLook's financial performance.[19]

On May 26, 2011, Nordstrom announced that they would be closing the downtown Indianapolis, Indiana Circle Center Mall location due to declining business at the site. The remaining location on the north side of the city at the Fashion Mall at Keystone as well as the future Nordstrom Rack store in the Rivers Edge Shopping Center, also on the north side, remained as the only two locations in the state. Erik Nordstrom, president of stores at Nordstrom stated, "We've enjoyed serving our customers in downtown Indianapolis, but unfortunately our business has declined over the long term for some time and despite our efforts to turn things around we don't see the outlook significantly changing."[20]

Downtown Salt Lake City, Utah 84101, USA Nordstrom, West Temple Entrance façade at night

In August 2011, Nordstrom opened the store Treasure & Bond in SoHo, New York. Intended to test the waters of the tumultuous high-end department store scene in New York, all profits of Treasure & Bond are donated to charity. The customer base of the smaller store is thought to be the younger, more free-willed sister of the typical Nordstrom customer.[21]

March 22, 2012, the City Creek Center opened in downtown Salt Lake City, with a new Nordstrom anchor store. The store features a light feature on the west façade adjacent to Temple Square. City Creek Center's only other anchor is Macy's.

During this same time, Nordstrom also announced plans to open a Nordstrom Rack in Milwaukee in 2014.[22] In late November 2012, Nordstrom announced that they would also be opening a full line Nordstrom Department Store in 2015 in Milwaukee at Mayfair Mall, a half-mile away from the Nordstrom Rack location. Milwaukee is the largest metropolitan area in the country that does not have a Nordstrom. Such unmet demand was highlighted in Nordstrom's decision to open in the Milwaukee area.[23]

On January 4, 2013, Nordstrom confirmed a new location in the Minneapolis-Saint Paul metropolitan region. To be located at the Ridgedale Center, it would be the second in the Minneapolis-Saint Paul area. Following the success of its Mall of America opening in 1991, Nordstrom has sought to expand in the Twin Cities market.[24] Plans were originally made in 2007 to open at Ridgedale Center in 2011, only to be canceled in 2009.[25] The current announcement is for an opening in the fall of 2015.

Nordstrom opened its first Rack location in Philadelphia in the fall of 2014.[26] In the fall of 2015, Nordstrom opened their first Nordstrom Rack store in Delaware.[27]

In February 2015 Nordstrom closed their store at Mall of Georgia in Georgia.

Nordstrom's full-line stores can be found in the states of Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nevada, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Virginia, Wisconsin, and Washington.

Expansion into Canada

Nordstrom officially announced its expansion to Canada on September 13, 2012, announcing the opening of 4 locations all owned by Cadillac Fairview. The first three will be in former Sears locations, the result of a 170 million dollar buyout to vacate the sites, and the fourth store is to be a new build in Toronto at the Yorkdale Shopping Centre.

The Calgary store opened in Chinook Centre on September 19, 2014,[28] the Ottawa store opened in CF Rideau Centre on March 6, 2015,[29] and the Vancouver CF Pacific Centre store opened on September 18, 2015.[30] Other Canada stores are scheduled to open fall 2016 (Toronto Yorkdale Centre), fall 2016 (Toronto Eaton Centre), spring 2017 (Toronto Sherway Gardens).[31]

On April 8, 2013, Nordstrom announced a fifth Canadian location at Toronto's Yorkdale Shopping Centre.[32]

On January 15, 2014, a sixth location was announced for the Toronto Eaton Centre, replacing a flagship Sears location that is closed in February 2014.[33]

Puerto Rico

Nordstrom opened a 138,000 square feet, two-level, full-line store March 2015 in The Mall of San Juan in San Juan, Puerto Rico.[34]

Sales

Map of Nordstrom locations in the United States

Nordstrom traditionally only holds five designated sale events each year. Four of these are Half-Yearly sales, which take place semi-annually and are split up by department. For women and kids, the Half-Yearly sales take place in May and November. The Men's Half-Yearly sales occur in mid-June and late December.

Nordstrom's largest sale event is the Nordstrom Anniversary Sale, which is held each July.[35] Limited amounts of merchandise set to be released for the following fall is sent to Nordstrom stores early, where it is sold at a large discount. For ten days prior to Anniversary Sale, Nordstrom rewards members are able to make appointments with sales associates to shop the sale early through the store's Early Access event.[36] Shoppers also get double points on their Nordstrom card purchases throughout early access and the first weekend of the Anniversary Sale.

Employee handbook

For many years, new employees were supposedly given a copy of the Nordstrom's Employee Handbook – a single 5-by-8-inch (130 mm × 200 mm) gray card containing 75 words. The brief employee handbook was, however a myth.[37] The actual employee handbook is 12 pages, and includes a no-smoking policy, drug testing, a social media policy, and a workplace relationships policy.[38]

Recognition

Nordstrom was listed at No. 72 in Fortune magazine's 100 Best Companies to Work For 2009.[39] (Nordstrom is a Hall of Fame member of Fortune magazine's "100 Best Companies to Work For" list.[40]) Nordstrom was No. 36 on the same list in 2008, No. 24 in 2007, No. 46 in 2006 and No. 88 in 2005.[41] In 2010, it ranked number 53, and dropped to 61 in 2012.[42]

Nordstrom was ranked No. 286 (previously 293) on the Fortune 500 for 2007.[43] In 2011 it ranked 254,[44] and as of 2012 it sits at 242.[45]

As of December 2013, WWD reports that Nordstrom is the top fashion retailer.[46]

Controversies

In a 1998 article by Mark Worth, the Seattle Weekly revealed that consultants linked to Pacific Place developer Jeff Rhodes had secured a $47 million low-interest loan to help build a for-profit parking garage beneath the mall. The loan was obtained through the Washington State Housing Finance Commission, a government agency whose mission is to support low-income housing and other needy projects. The parking garage also served a Nordstrom store across the street.[47]

References

  1. 1 2 3 Nordstrom (JWN) annual SEC income statement filing via Wikinvest
  2. "Nordstrom Inc. 2013 Q3 Quarterly Report Form (10-Q)" (XBRL). United States Securities and Exchange Commission. December 2, 2013.
  3. "Nordstrom Inc. 2012 Annual Report Form (10-K)" (XBRL). United States Securities and Exchange Commission. March 18, 2013.
  4. Nordstrom (JWN) annual SEC balance sheet filing via Wikinvest
  5. Hoovers.com
  6. About Nordstrom. Shop.nordstrom.com. Retrieved on 2013-07-26.
  7. Weiss, Lois. "Nordstrom buys land for tower in Midtown". New York Post.
  8. About.Nordstrom.com
  9. Nordstrom: Free Shipping. Free Returns. All the Time. Shop.nordstrom.com. Retrieved on 2013-07-26.
  10. Berg, Tom; Mangan, Timothy; Liddane, Lisa (February 21, 2015). "Maker of a Metropolis". The Orange County Register. p. News 6.
  11. The Nordstrom Way (1996), 133
  12. Dow Jones News Services. "Nordstrom-Place Two -2-: To Close 3 Stores, Convert 1." 26 April 1994.
  13. The Nordstrom Way, 213
  14. Nordstrom fsb: Private Company Information – Businessweek. Investing.businessweek.com. Retrieved on 2013-07-26.
  15. Nordstrom Card – Compare & Apply. Shop.nordstrom.com. Retrieved on 2013-07-26.
  16. Frey, Christine (November 20, 2002). "John Whitacre, former Nordstrom CEO, was a team player". Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Retrieved September 24, 2013.
  17. Kaufman, Leslie (September 1, 2000). "2 at Top of Nordstrom Quit; Family Members Take Over". The New York Times.
  18. Nordstrom Way, 145, 133
  19. Nordstrom to Acquire Online Retailer HauteLook, New York Times Dealbook, February 17, 2011.
  20. Nordstrom.com – Press Room – Press Release. Phx.corporate-ir.net. Retrieved on 2013-07-26.
  21. New York Times, February 21, 2012.
  22. Nordstrom Rack coming to Wauwatosa in 2014 – Milwaukee – The Business Journal. Bizjournals.com. Retrieved on 2013-07-26.
  23. Marketplace: Nordstrom opening at Mayfair. Onmilwaukee.com (2012-11-29). Retrieved on 2013-07-26.
  24. Nordstrom to open in Ridgedale. StarTribune.com (2013-01-04). Retrieved on 2013-07-26.
  25. Blaming Ridgedale's owner, Nordstrom pulls out of mall. StarTribune.com (2009-02-24). Retrieved on 2013-07-26.
  26. "Nordstrom Rack To Open On Chestnut Street In Philadelphia – Press Room – Nordstrom.com". Press.nordstrom.com. 2013-10-01. Retrieved 2014-08-18.
  27. "Nordstrom Rack to Open First Store in Delaware – Press Room – Nordstrom.com". Press.nordstrom.com. 2014-02-05. Retrieved 2014-08-18.
  28. Shoppers line up for hours on opening day for Canada's first Nordstrom location Calgary Herald (2014-09-14). Retrieved on 2014-09-21.
  29. Nordstrom Opens Ottawa Store Ottawa Sun (2015-03-06) Retrieved on 2015-09-251
  30. Nordstrom Opening Brings Zing Downtown Vancouver Vancouver Sun (2015-09-19). Retrieved on 2015-09-25.
  31. Nordstrom Canada: Stores to open in Calgary, Ottawa, Vancouver, Toronto Financial Post (2012-09-13). Retrieved on 2013-07-26.
  32. Nordstrom adds second Toronto store to Canadian expansion Reuters (2013-04-08). Retrieved on 2013-07-26.
  33. Nordstrom to replace Sears at Eaton Centre Toronto Star (2014-01-15). Retrieved on 2014-01-15.
  34. "Luxury, Island Style: Mall Of San Juan Opens In Puerto Rico". NBC News. March 26, 2015. Retrieved 10 November 2015.
  35. Frequently Asked Questions. Shop.nordstrom.com. Retrieved on 2013-07-26.
  36. "Early Access Shopping".
  37. "Nordstrom's awesome employee handbook is a myth". CBS News. October 15, 2014.
  38. "Nordstrom Code of Business Conduct and Ethics or ‘Code of Conduct'". Nordstrom. November 2014.
  39. 100 Best Companies to Work For 2009, CNNMoney.com, Last accessed January 22, 2009
  40. Nordstrom Careers, Nordstrom. Last accessed March 2, 2007.
  41. 100 Best Companies to Work For 2006, CNNMoney.com, Last accessed February 15, 2007.
  42. "100 Best Companies to Work For 2012: Full list". CNN.
  43. Fortune 500 2007, CNNMoney.com, Last accessed July 24, 2007.
  44. "Fortune 500 2011: Fortune 1000 Companies 201-300". CNN.
  45. Fortune 500 2012: Fortune 1000 Companies 1-100 - FORTUNE on CNNMoney.com. Money.cnn.com (2012-05-21). Retrieved on 2013-07-26.
  46. Karr, Arnold J. (27 December 2013). "Study Finds Nordstrom Again Top Fashion Retailer". WWD. Retrieved 27 December 2013.
  47. http://www.seattleweekly.com/1998-05-06/news/king-street-easy-street

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, February 16, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.