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Stuller Blogging: Can "Glass and Brass" and RFID Make Jewelry Shopping "More Fun"?

July 15, 2009

Some thoughts from the recent “Owners Conference” at Stuller. (Theme: “Changing the Business of Jewelry.”)

 

The conference gathered a group of retailers together for two days of speeches and brainstorming. One of the big issues is how financially-stressed jewelers can manage inventory. Most of the speakers said: Blow out the old inventory (described as over a year old), and bring new inventory in. Granted, that was the consensus among the speakers. Some of the jewelers I spoke to were unconvinced.

 

As far as funding the new inventory, many jewelers today are doing this by taking in tons of memo. However, as we all know, this is not a perfect option. It lowers margins, and causes jewelers to neglect the inventory they actually own.  

“What gets sold in your store?” asked sales trainer Kate Peterson. “All the bright new shiny stuff. And what happens to all the old stuff that just sits there?”

 

The memo system is also causing real strain to the jewelry distribution chain, which will eventually impact everyone. “People think that memo is free,” said Stuller chief operating officer Jay Jackson. “But you are just moving the cost of that inventory to your supplier, who is going to, somehow, pass it along.”

 

But there is a new spin on this. With Spence Diamonds now running stores at the former Robbins Brothers locations in Houston, there was a lot of talk about the attractiveness of their “brass and glass” format for jewelers. The advantage to this model is it lets consumers “try on” replicas of the pieces right in the store, thereby making it, arguably, a more “fun” experience that lets them shop without a salesperson hovering. And of course, it requires very little inventory, other than the prototypes, and what Spence has in their factory to assemble the pieces.

 

The disadvantage is it kills one of the main advantages brick-and-mortar jewelers have over the Internet – the ability to let a customer walk out of the store with a piece.  And it means a major change in the jewelers’ business model, and new training for sales associates. But one can see why Stuller, which specializes in overnight delivery, would like this option.

 

On that same theme, right now, as speaker David Geller noted: “We are really the only industry that won’t let the customer try on its product.” However, there is talk of how RFID technology could eliminate some of the typical security prohibitions against having consumers trying on high-value pieces. Instore publisher Dan Kisch showed a video of a store where every item is coded with RFID, thereby making shop-lifting almost impossible. Fascinating stuff, and an interesting possible alternative to "glass and brass."

 

I should have more about the conference later …

Posted by Rob Bates on July 15, 2009 | Comments (5)

July 20, 2009
In response to: Stuller Blogging: Can "Glass and Brass" and RFID Make Jewelry Shopping "More Fun"?
Ken Gassman commented:

In your blog, you noted that memo inventory reduces margins and causes retailers to neglect the inventory they own. I inferred from the context that these may be negative factors. Here's another view: 1. Lower margins from memo - yes, but with instant inventory turn which yields a mathematically infinite GMROI. That's a great thing! Jewelers must get accustomed to lower margins, because that's the way of the future -- coupled with higher inventory turnover. But this is a moot point: memo inventory is going away in the future. Jewelers will need to learn how to manage their inventory, which will be all "owned inventory". 2. Neglect "owned inventory" and sell memo goods -- most jewelers would rather sell something from their "owned inventory" and keep the cash, instead of selling memo and sending the cash immediately to the supplier. When sales are slow, jewelers tend to neglect memo inventory. That's why suppliers are in such trouble -- their memo inventory in retailers' cases isn't selling, and jewelers aren't reordering new goods. Biggest problem jewelers currently have: they aren't re-ordering their fast sellers. They are left with junk in their showcases, and they wonder why sales are falling. Folks, this isn't rocket science. Re-order fast sellers TODAY and watch your sales increase!


July 17, 2009
In response to: Stuller Blogging: Can "Glass and Brass" and RFID Make Jewelry Shopping "More Fun"?
Matt Lauzon commented:

Hi Rob. I wanted to share an open letter Deb and I wrote to Matt Stuller and Jeff High. I enjoyed sitting down with both of them in Las Vegas and am excited to see Stuller will join us in the space. Dear Matt and Jeff, We were pleased to learn that you will be joining us in providing jewelers a new and innovative way to deliver customized product to their patrons. From the moment Jeff High reached out to us in Las Vegas it was clear that Paragon Lake and Stuller share a vision of a new experience that brings additional value to both the jeweler and the consumer. Our values will likely diverge beyond this core vision, but we believe our success is tied together in helping jewelers deliver an experience that greatly enhances the jewelry shopping experience. This is a paradigm shift that jewelers, designers, stone suppliers, and manufacturers will all embrace together and it is in this spirit that we say congratulations and welcome aboard. Sincerely, Deb Besemer, CEO, Paragon Lake Matt Lauzon, Founder and President, Paragon Lake


July 17, 2009
In response to: Stuller Blogging: Can "Glass and Brass" and RFID Make Jewelry Shopping "More Fun"?
6SSPH commented:

This system is good indeed,I'm shure that this is going to be a part in the future.But one draw back in jwellary shops is that this need a person to attach the tags. I large shops there will be more amount of pieses it takes a person appointed for doing this tag attaching work, This shows that though the technolagy has been developed these small things are being a hindrance


July 15, 2009
In response to: Stuller Blogging: Can "Glass and Brass" and RFID Make Jewelry Shopping "More Fun"?
Peggy Jo Donahue commented:

I remember those displays, too, Jen, both at Stuller and the ones in Germany. They're a great idea!


July 15, 2009
In response to: Stuller Blogging: Can "Glass and Brass" and RFID Make Jewelry Shopping "More Fun"?
Jennifer Heebner commented:

A few years ago, Stuller unveiled some wonderful displays that allowed consumers to try on rings that were stationed to thin wires with weights anchoring them to a podium display. The set-up was glass-case free and the wires reminded me of retractable leashes; you had some room to examine pieces close up but couldn't walk off with the merch. I recall seeing these in Germany, too, in 2001, in a department store. Why haven't these taken off here in the States?

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