Pier 1 Imports to Close Up to 450 Stores and Cut Jobs - 2 minutes read
Pier 1 Imports to Close Up to 450 Stores and Cut Jobs
Pier 1 Imports, the specialty furniture chain once hailed as a trendy destination for young professionals, saidon Monday that it might close up to 450 of its 936 stores, as well as some distribution centers, and lay off an unspecified number of corporate employees.
The company is the latest big-name retailer to announce sweeping closings and job cuts as it struggles with declining store visits and changing consumer tastes. Pier 1 made the announcement while reporting a quarterly sales decline of 13 percent and a loss of $59 million.
Pier 1, which traces its roots to a store in San Mateo, Calif., in 1962, is the first national chain to announce major store closings this year. It was an ominous note after a grim 2019 for brick-and-mortar retailers. Bankruptcies last year included major names like the fast-fashion empire Forever 21, the luxury department-store chain Barneys New York, Payless ShoeSource and Charlotte Russe.
Pier 1, based in Fort Worth, has struggled to attract visitors to stores and increase sales, despite recent efforts to overhaul its marketing and merchandise. Last year, the company touted new marketing efforts around colors like “calming eucalyptus” and “elegant indigo,” and said it had brought on a new ad agency for a fresh strategic and creative direction for the holidays.
Source: The New York Times
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Pier 1 Imports • Retail • Pier 1 Imports • Furniture • Chain store • Retail • Layoff • Corporation • Employment • Company • Retail • Employment • Consumerism • Sales • San Mateo, California • Brick and mortar • Retail • Bankruptcy • Fast fashion • Forever 21 • Department store • Barneys New York • Payless ShoeSource • Charlotte Russe (clothing retailer) • Fort Worth, Texas • Retail • Sales • Marketing • Product (business) • Company • Marketing • Color • Eucalyptus (software) • Indigo • Advertising agency • Creative director •
Pier 1 Imports, the specialty furniture chain once hailed as a trendy destination for young professionals, saidon Monday that it might close up to 450 of its 936 stores, as well as some distribution centers, and lay off an unspecified number of corporate employees.
The company is the latest big-name retailer to announce sweeping closings and job cuts as it struggles with declining store visits and changing consumer tastes. Pier 1 made the announcement while reporting a quarterly sales decline of 13 percent and a loss of $59 million.
Pier 1, which traces its roots to a store in San Mateo, Calif., in 1962, is the first national chain to announce major store closings this year. It was an ominous note after a grim 2019 for brick-and-mortar retailers. Bankruptcies last year included major names like the fast-fashion empire Forever 21, the luxury department-store chain Barneys New York, Payless ShoeSource and Charlotte Russe.
Pier 1, based in Fort Worth, has struggled to attract visitors to stores and increase sales, despite recent efforts to overhaul its marketing and merchandise. Last year, the company touted new marketing efforts around colors like “calming eucalyptus” and “elegant indigo,” and said it had brought on a new ad agency for a fresh strategic and creative direction for the holidays.
Source: The New York Times
Powered by NewsAPI.org
Keywords:
Pier 1 Imports • Retail • Pier 1 Imports • Furniture • Chain store • Retail • Layoff • Corporation • Employment • Company • Retail • Employment • Consumerism • Sales • San Mateo, California • Brick and mortar • Retail • Bankruptcy • Fast fashion • Forever 21 • Department store • Barneys New York • Payless ShoeSource • Charlotte Russe (clothing retailer) • Fort Worth, Texas • Retail • Sales • Marketing • Product (business) • Company • Marketing • Color • Eucalyptus (software) • Indigo • Advertising agency • Creative director •