哈斯的鞋子

Edward D. Hess
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引用次数: 0

摘要

适用于创业、小企业管理、市场营销和战略等课程。这个案例提出了一个经典问题,即一个稳定的企业如何重新点燃增长之火。它提出了这样的问题:企业如何增加客户,增加每个客户的支出,创造更多的购买理由,捆绑互补产品或服务,并在很少的资本支出下扩大销售地点?Hass Shoes (Hass)是一家位于弗吉尼亚州夏洛茨维尔的独立鞋类零售商,已经经营了15年以上。在其独立的商店里,哈斯主要销售高质量的男女鞋以及袜子和袜子等配饰。这家店为顾客提供停车位,为了更好地服务上班的顾客,周一至周五的营业时间为中午12点至晚上8点;星期六上午九时至下午六时,星期日中午十二时至下午六时。意识到自己是社区的一员,哈斯为当地的慈善机构捐款,并加入了几个公民和商业俱乐部。2008年,哈斯加入了美国鞋业零售商协会(National Shoe Retailers Association, NSRA),并一直在使用该协会的基准流程来跟踪产品、服务、费用和库存周转情况,并与过去的业绩和其他最佳做法进行对比。哈斯现在的运营水平高于NSRA的平均水平。每年大约有1万笔交易,哈斯的总收入为80万美元,平均每笔交易80美元。该公司每年周转存货2.7次,在支付所有者工资后,税前净利润为7%。哈斯没有试图在价格上竞争,而是专注于服务、鞋子的选择,以及维持一些很难找到的尺码的库存;然而,Hass没有收集个人客户的常规数据,如访问次数、购买次数或每年购买的总平均成本。哈斯很好地度过了2007年的经济衰退,但自2001年以来,其业务基本持平。现在,这家鞋类零售商希望其收入每年至少增长10%,并提高净利润率. . . .
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Hass Shoes
Suitable for courses on entrepreneurship, managing small businesses, marketing, and strategy. The case raises classic issues about how a stabilized business can reignite its growth. It poses the questions: How does a business increase customers, increase spend per customer, create more reasons to buy, bundle complementary products or services, and expand selling locations with little capital outlays? Excerpt UVA-ENT-0142 Nov. 27, 2009 Hass Shoes Hass Shoes (Hass), an independent shoe retailer located in Charlottesville, Virginia, had been in business for more than 15 years. In its freestanding store, Hass primarily carried quality shoes for men and women and accessories such as socks and hosiery. The store provided parking for its customers and, to better serve its working customers, was open from 12:00 p.m. until 8:00 p.m. on Monday through Friday; 9:00 a.m. until 6:00 p.m. on Saturday, and 12:00 p.m. until 6:00 p.m. on Sunday. Conscious of its membership in the community, Hass contributed to local charities and belonged to several civic and business clubs. In 2008, Hass joined the National Shoe Retailers Association (NSRA) and had been using the association's benchmarking process to track products, services, expenses, and inventory turns of its current performance against past performance and other best practices. Hass now operated above NSRA averages. From its approximately 10,000 transactions per year, Hass grossed $ 800,000, averaging $ 80 per sale. The business turned its inventory 2.7 times a year and, after paying its owner's salary, netted a 7% before-tax profit. Hass did not try to compete on price but focused instead on service, selection of shoes, and maintaining a stock of hard-to-find sizes; however, Hass did not collect the usual data on individual customers such as number of visits, number of purchases, or the total average cost of purchases per year. Hass had weathered the 2007 recession well, but its business had basically been flat since 2001. Now the shoe retailer wanted to grow its revenue by at least 10% per year and increase its net margin. . . .
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