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Type: Wholly Owned Subsidiary of Storehouse plc
Address: Marylebone House, 129-137 Marylebone Road, London NW1 5QD, England
Telephone: (171) 262-3456
Fax: (171) 262-4740
Employees: 14,000
Sales: £749 million (1996)
Incorporated: 1933
SIC: 5311 Department Stores; 5621 Women's Clothing Stores; 5611 Men's & Boys' Clothing Stores; 5712 Furniture Stores

Known for more than 50 years as British Home Stores, Bhs plc ranks among the United Kingdom's largest department store chains. Since its foundation in the late 1920s, this company has haltingly evolved from a variety store focused exclusively on price into a department store with a strong emphasis on apparel. Bhs's 186 outlets (135 company-owned and 51 franchised) carry clothing (mostly womenswear), housewares, and giftware. Many units also feature a restaurant, coffee house, or sandwich shop. The business is a subsidiary of Storehouse plc, a holding company whose operations include maternity and infant goods retailer Mothercare UK Ltd. Led by Keith Edelman, who was also CEO of Storehouse, Bhs enjoyed steadily rising pretax profits in the early 1990s.

British Home Stores was founded in 1928 by a group of American entrepreneurs. These businessmen modeled their two initial London stores after Woolworth's, which carried no goods that retailed for more than sixpence (ten cents in the United States). So as not to compete directly with its successful predecessor, British Home Stores set its price ceiling a bit higher, at one shilling (double that of Woolworth's). By raising the bar to five shillings in 1929, British Home Stores was able to offer a wider variety of home furnishings, including drapery. Most of the budding chain's locations featured small cafeterias and grocery departments as well. During the interwar period, the company developed several lines of own-label merchandise, including "Twinkle" brand infantswear, "Travair" luggage, and "Request" foods. The chain went public in 1933.

In the postwar era, British Home Stores shifted its strategy from selling strictly on price to focusing more broadly on offering "quality and value for money." The chain adopted the "Prova" brand to designate BHS exclusives in 1960. By the end of that decade, the company employed more than 12,000 and boasted 94 stores nationwide.

British Home Stores continued to distinguish itself from variety stores like Woolworth's over the course of the 1970s by continuously broadening its apparel and housewares lines. The company also formed a joint venture with British supermarket giant J. Sainsbury Ltd. to create a chain of SavaCentre "hypermarkets" (giant supermarkets) during the decade. By the end of the 1970s, BHS had made the transition: it was considered more of a department store, à la Marks & Spencer, than a variety store, like Woolworth's. The Accountant characterized British Home Stores as a "strong and efficient" chain in 1980 and compared its earnings growth favorably to market leader Marks & Spencer. In fact, the company's annual revenues had increased from £161.8 million in 1975 to £366.4 million, and its net income before taxes rose from £18.6 million to £41.8 million during that same period.

Gary Warnaby, who examined British Home Stores' history in the early 1990s, asserted, "BHS's advances in trading profit had been due as much to cost containment as to sales growth." Over the course of the 1970s, the chain had only added a net of 30 locations. Indeed, the chain's "back-office" functions--distribution, data processing, etcetera--were highly praised for their efficiency. Some observers, both contemporary and retrospective, noted that despite its apparent strengths, BHS lacked the panache of its department store competitors. Next to Marks & Spencer, British Home Stores was described as "drab" and "dowdy."

Such criticism came to fruition in the early 1980s, when a global recession bruised the bottom line at many major retailers. In an effort to upgrade its image and increase its sales, British Home Stores consulted with designers at Conran Associates to revamp its merchandise and retail environment. The chain unveiled its first remodeling project late in 1982. The new layout traded in supermarket-style aisles for a curvier, more open floor plan. British Home Stores also continued to add higher-priced goods while working to retain its focus on value.

Perhaps as an outgrowth of its contact with Conran Associates, British Home Stores merged with Sir Terence Conran's Habitat/Mothercare plc in 1986. Widely known as the most important arbiter of postwar Britons' taste in home furnishings, Conran was knighted "for services to British design and industry" in 1983. British Home Stores was one of a succession of acquisitions that transformed Conran's chain of Habitat stores from a £67.2 million company into an international retail federation with more than £1 billion in annual sales. Storehouse plc, a holding company, was formed to manage Conran's growing family of companies, which included seven retail outfits and more than six million square feet of selling space. Although all of the chains operated independently, Storehouse CEO Conran hoped that the merger would generate synergies among its primary constituents.

To that end, British Home Stores began to undergo a process of "Conranization," targeting younger customers with updated stores, trendier fashions, and a revitalized corporate image. Sixteen-year BHS veteran Denis Cassidy, who had been appointed CEO of British Home Stores in 1985, became deputy chairman and group managing director of Storehouse in 1986 and advanced to chairman and CEO of BHS in 1987. The parent company chipped in £8.5 million (US 12.6 million) in addition to the chain's existing £50 million modernization program. Before the year was out, British Home Stores had shuttered its 56 food departments and adopted a new logo featuring the "flying h": a lowercase swoop of a letter sandwiched between the uppercase "B" and "S." (A second round of changes would make the "s" lowercase as well.) An increased advertising budget promoted the new "Bhs."

These efforts proved to be in vain, however, as the British retail environment went into another tailspin at the end of the decade. Forbes's Jeffrey Ferry characterized the Bhs revamp as "disastrous," noting that Storehouse's attempt to appeal to a young, upper-class clientele alienated Bhs's traditional core of mature, budget-conscious customers. In a 1994 interview for Britain's Marketing magazine, Bhs executive Helena Packshaw noted, "Customers knew Bhs had changed in the late '80s but they didn't know what we'd become." By mid-1987, even the visionary Conran was ready to decouple Storehouse's disparate interests. Over the span of just a few months, the holding company endured two takeover threats and the October 1987 stock market crash. Top Bhs executive Denis Cassidy resigned in frustration. From 1987 to 1989, group pretax profits dropped from £130 million to £11.3 million, and in 1988, Storehouse's board of directors asked Conran to step aside and accept a titular chairmanship. He resigned in 1990.

Although Bhs and its parent endured a high rate of turnover in the chief executive's offices during the late 1980s and early 1990s, the group benefited from a program of retrenchment. Under the de facto direction of Michael Julien from 1988 to 1992, Storehouse decided to restrict its operations to Bhs, which brought in the most revenues, and Mothercare UK, whose focus on maternity and early childhood remained rather unique. Although these two chains were quite different from one another, they were linked in their common target customer: women and their families. In 1989, American David Dworkin, a former executive at Neiman Marcus, Bonwit Teller, and other upscale department store chains, became CEO and chairman of Bhs. Dworkin brought with him U.S.-made clothing and merchandising strategies and furloughed 900 middle managers in an effort to flatten the organization.

When Michael Julien's health compelled him to resign in 1992, Dworkin advanced to the lead roles at the parent company. After less than a year as Storehouse's CEO, Dworkin was hired away by Carter Hawley Hale Stores. In 1993 the board of directors hired an outsider, Keith Edelman, as chief executive officer of both Storehouse and Bhs.

Revenues at Bhs remained flat throughout this period, at around £750 million, but pretax profits more than tripled, from £22.1 million in 1992 to £77.4 million in 1996 (fiscal year ended March 30). Although Edelman has been praised as the architect of Bhs's early 1990s turnaround, it seems clear that the efforts of the previous decade also contributed to the chain's revitalization. Ongoing store renovations kept the selling environments up to date. Rationalization of the chain's suppliers and its distribution scheme cut costs and smoothed inventory replenishment. Company-sponsored clothing design and modeling competitions kept the company's apparel lines fresh and identified new talent. An increased advertising budget featured the chain's first television campaign in years.

After divesting most of its overseas operations in the late 1980s, Bhs undertook a program of international growth through franchising. By early 1996, the chain had established 51 franchised stores in 12 countries, with a particularly heavy concentration in the Middle East. The chain expected to expand this segment of its business to China, Hong Kong, and Moscow in the late 1990s.

With its multidecade transformation from a one-price variety store to a full-fledged department store complete, economic recovery on Britain's horizon, and an apparently dedicated management team in place, Bhs appeared poised for profitable growth in the late 1990s.

Further Reading

"BhS' New Power Supply," Management Today, January 1986, pp. 11-12.

Born, Pete, "David Dworkin Leaves Bonwit's for British Post," WWD, November 9, 1989, p.1.

"British Retailing; Selling by Design," The Economist, September 20, 1986, p. 82.

Britton, Noelle, and Miles, Louella, "Chalk and Cheese," Marketing, July 2, 1987, pp. 26-27.

Collier, Andrew, "British Home Stores To Cut Staff by 1990," Daily News Record, May 18, 1990, p. 7.

------, "Dworkin Heading Home To Buy U.S. Apparel," Daily News Record, March 2, 1990, pp. 2-3.

"Each Way Bet?," The Economist, May 9, 1970, p. 81.

Ferry, Jeffrey, "Broken by the Bottom Line," Forbes, November 27, 1989, pp. 180-183.

Great Britain Commission on Industrial Relations, British Home Stores, London: H.M.S.O., 1971.

Grofton, Ken, "The Backroom Boys," Marketing, September 18, 1986, pp. 31-32.

"High Street Setbacks," Retail & Distribution Management, July-August 1986, p. 5.

"Is This the End of a Great Romance? The Problems Facing Storehouse," Retail & Distribution Management, July-August 1986, pp. 54-56.

"M&S Up Against New Fashion Rivals," Retail & Distribution Management, November-December 1984, pp. 66-68.

Miles, Louella, "The Counter Revolutionaries," Marketing, September 25, 1986, pp. 41-43.

Miller, Rachel, "Harvester of a Corporate Culture," Marketing, August 24, 1995, p. 20.

Nicholas, Ruth, "Storehouse Set To Build Up BhS," Marketing, March 3, 1994, p. 2.

"Super Supermarkets," The Accountant, June 26, 1980, pp. 981-984.

Warnaby, Gary, "Storehouse," International Journal of Retail & Distribution Management, May-June 1993, pp. 27-34.

"What Lies Behind the Habitat Mothercare-BHS Merger," Retail & Distribution Management, January-February 1986, pp. 66-68.

— April Dougal Gasbarre


 
 

Beta-hemolytic streptococci.

 
For other uses of the abbreviation, see BHS

Bhs (also trading as British Home Stores and formerly BHS and BhS) is a stalwart department store of the British High Street, selling clothing and household items (such as bedlinen, cutlery, crockery and lighting). Bhs competes on high-quality and value-for-money, aiming at a slightly less affluent demographic than Marks and Spencer or John Lewis. Currently the company has 182 stores throughout the United Kingdom.


Bhs Limited
Type Private (Ltd)
Founded Flag of the United Kingdom Brixton, London (1928)
Headquarters Marylebone Road, London, UK
Key people Philip Green
(Managing Director)
Paul Coackley
(COO)
Barbara Gentles
(Head of Finance)
Tony Brown
(Retail Director)
Ian Allkins
(Commercial Director)
Industry Retail
Products Clothing, Homewares and Restaurant

Other
Revenue £900m (04-05)
Red_Arrow_Down.svg £860.5m (05-06)
£SOON (06-07)
Employees 14,752 (2006)
Slogan "Modern Living, Made Easy"
Website Bhs UK: Bhs.co.uk
Tammy: TammyFashion.co.uk
Bhs façade in Broughton, North Wales introduced in 2005. Stores such as this which feature home furnishings alongside clothing ranges have reverted to the British Home Stores branding.
Enlarge
Bhs façade in Broughton, North Wales introduced in 2005. Stores such as this which feature home furnishings alongside clothing ranges have reverted to the British Home Stores branding.

History

The 1920s & 30s

The first British Home Stores shop opened in Brixton in 1928 and copied the business model of the US-based FW Woolworth in that the price of goods was limited to a maximum of one shilling. In 1929 the maximum price was increased to five shillings which enabled the company to expand the range to include furnishings and drapery. The company became a public company (Plc) in 1931.

The 1960s

After the Second World War the company stopped selling based on price and started to offer goods with quality and value for money. In 1960 the company started an own brand called Prova and by the end of the 1960s had 94 stores.

The 1970s

The company expanded in the 1970s including a joint venture with retailer J Sainsbury Limited to create hypermarkets using the SavaCentre brand. By the end of the 1970s British Home Stores was established as a department store.

The 1980s

A downturn in business in the early 1980s was fought with a revamp of the stores and the selling of goods with higher profit margins. In 1985 the first overseas franchise store opened in Gibraltar. Such stores, not directly owned by the Bhs company itself, now operate over Europe and the Middle East. In 1986, Bhs merged with Habitat and Mothercare to form Storehouse plc and soon afterwards, the British Home Stores registered company name and branding across its shops was replaced with BhS (now Bhs) and a new corporate logo. The exception was in stores that displayed an 'historic' fascia, such as Edinburgh's Princes Street, which continues to feature the British Home Stores name in an old fashioned Roman type etched into the stone shop front.

The 1990s: Takeover by Philip Green

During the late 1990s the stores which formed Storehouse Plc fell on hard times, Bhs and Mothercare being the worst affected. Following a number of years tough trading Sir Philip Green bought Bhs from Storehouse Plc in May 2000 for £200 million. He then changed the company from public (Plc) to private (Ltd). In 2002 Green then went on to acquire the Arcadia Group of high street retailers; which includes Topshop, Burton, Evans, Dorothy Perkins and Wallis among others, to form Britain's second largest clothes retailer, after Marks and Spencer. Storehouse Plc who had also demerged Habitat back in 1992 now trades as Mothercare Plc and only operates Mothercare. Alan Smith, chairman of Storehouse at the time of the Bhs sale commented "He [Philip Green] had a crystal-clear vision and strategy. He had the guts to do the deal, to make it work when nobody else thought he could."

The 2000s: Etam, Amelie May, Tammy & Return to British Home Stores

Tammy: Now in all UK Bhs Stores
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Tammy: Now in all UK Bhs Stores

In May 2005 Philip Green, owner of Bhs purchased Etam UK from their French owner, Etam Development. The Etam UK brands included "Etam", "Emily May" and "Tammy"; of the three brands names included in the purchase of Etam UK; the girls fashion retailer "Tammy" ('Tammyfashion.co.uk') having already established itself as a well respected girlswear brand "For Girls with Attitude" was the strongest brand in terms of sales and consumer recognition. For this reason and to help improve young peoples' perception of Bhs as a whole, stand-alone Tammy stores were closed nationwide and the brand was integrated into all Bhs stores across the UK from early September 2005. There are also some new lines in UK Bhs stores which carry a slight re-work of the "Emily May" brand, "Amelie May".

In 2005, Bhs resurrected its 'British Home Stores' fascia more than 20 years after it had disappeared from the UK high street. The move followed the purchase of several former Allders at Home sites from the defunct department store chain. British Home Stores branding is used at outlets that feature homeware alongside the traditional clothing range. Contrary to what is sometimes believed, they are not dedicated entirely to domestic items. Due to the success of the branding of these stores, there are more planned for the future. Effective from 14 January 2007 all of the 'British Home Stores' have all been structured together as one "region" within the company. As a whole the company has approx 12 regions.

Home shopping

The company launched its home shopping Web site on Wednesday 28th March 2007, with the ultimate aim of making all of its products available online. Homewares and Wedding lines available online from its launch. Schoolwear lines have been integrated into the new site as of June 2007 and Tammy will be available to buy online from Autumn 2007.

Changes to store format

Some stores in the core format of Bhs are currently evaluating a new department layout; with some departments, including menswear, growing and some decreasing in size. With this ongoing change. Larger homewares departments will also stock new bedding, lighting and bathroom ranges developed for the British Home Stores fascia.

A number of sections within some of the main departments are being re-branded and are receiving new clothing lines to suit their (colour-based) themes. Tea Dance, 40s Romance, 40s Nostalgia, Classics, Core, Denim Shop, English Heritage, Heritage, Simply Chic, Winter Berries, Baroque and Petites (note the addition of the "s") among others (depending on season) for example, made-up the 2006 women's fashions department. Recently, the older boys (8-16) department has been revamped with new, more fashionable clothing ranges added across most stores within the company. This new department range is called "Flipback". Flipback's aim is to appeal youngsters into the rebel, punk, skater boy type-image.

Specialised departments

Bhs has a number of dedicated niche departments that include the school and wedding departments. In the wedding department a number of changes have recently taken place. A larger wedding range is now available in selected stores and parts of the range ("essentials") are available in other stores. The schoolwear shop ("Bhs School") department received a major design and range review mid-2006 and with its new "short, tall, big or small. .. we've got it all!" slogan and promises to "Fit the Nation". Additionally, each store is now customising their uniform offerings to cater for the most popular colour combinations used by schools in the locality.

Brand imaging, refurbishments and revamps

Bhs Facias
Enlarge
Bhs Facias

At present there are a number of corporate designs being used by Bhs, this is caused by the company's policy of refurbishing and applying new branding to the better (financially) performing stores first and slowly working down the store "league table" thereafter. Generally speaking those stores with the most up to date facia (black and white) are among the best performing within the business. Those with the facia prior to this are stores which are or have been performing fairly well. Stores which are still using facias dating back to the 80s and early 90s are generally the worst performing stores within the business.

Bhs are currently in the process of rolling out a revamped brand image for its stores. Gone will be the 1980s facias and the Bhs greys, greens and curved store signage from the 90s - in come the black and the white. Examples of this can already be seen by both the internal and external presentation of their newer stores, like those purchased from collapsed firm Allders in 2005 and better performing stores such as Kingston. This move appears to be quite a trend for high street retailers, with rivals Debenhams and Next already having a similar simple black and white corporate design.

Many departments within the stores themselves have recently received complete revamps themselves, creating a number of "themes" within each department. The most notable change to some of the larger stores that carry homeware products is the reintroduction of 'British Home Stores' branding on store façades alongside 'Bhs'. The British Home Stores wording is shown in the Futura typeface which both contrasts with the curvy script of the Bhs acronym logo and harks back to the font's predominant use in historical signage. Again, all new store branding is presented in the new white-on-black livery style.

Christmas shop

Bhs is renowned among many of its customers for offering a fair value Christmas shopping experience - and the queues around the Christmas period speak for themselves. During the 1st week of October each year the full Christmas shop is rolled out in Bhs stores nationwide (giving that the Christmas cards normally come out earlier); in most cases this replaces a section of women's fashions until just after Christmas. During this period Christmas shop offer a wide range of novelty, gift, decoration and food items to consumers in addition to the usual Bhs clothing and homewares lines. Additional temporary staff are taken on from late September right up until December, the some often being retained on a permanent basis after this should the store have any vacancies to fill. Each year a new Christmas cuddly toy is launched, normally taking the form of a bear. Christmas 2005 brought about Parker the Bear and Christmas 2006 had Bertie Bear and Toby Terrier. In 2007 Baxter Bear and Dexter Dog have made an appearance.

Kelly Hoppen

Kelly Hoppen is an internationally renowned interior designer who has advised the Beckhams among others on their interior furnishings and decor. The KHome range offers two styles, "Classic" and "Glamour". Products include cushions, towels, vases, accessories, lighting, sofas, dining tables and chairs, side tables and headboards. The Kelly Hoppen range is normally higher priced than the standard Bhs Home Range.

Bhs Goldcard

The Bhs Goldcard
Enlarge
The Bhs Goldcard

The Goldcard is the Bhs combined payment and discount card, administered by GE Capital Bank. The card also functions as a loyalty discount card. The Bhs Goldcard is accepted in all Bhs (including Tammy) and Arcadia Group stores.


Bhs Everyone Card

This is the new version of the Bhs goldcard. Since September 2006 customers in certain "regions" within the company, who apply for a Bhs card will be given the choice of either a Bhs Everyone card or a Bhs Everyone Mastercard. The Everyone store card can be used in Bhs and Arcadia Group stores. The Bhs Mastercard can be also be used in any other shops.

Management structure, offices and distribution

Bhs in the UK is split up into a number of regions, each region is headded by one RDE (Regional Development Executive), each store then has a store manager and assistant manager along with departmental, admin, loss prevention, weekend and visual managers. Bhs has a number of administration offices across the UK, alongside the company's main head office in Marylebone, London; offices are also located at Euston, London and Luton, Bedfordshire. The company's distribution centre is located at Atherstone, Warwickshire and is managed by Excel Logistics, web-based orders are also dispatched from this location by DHL.

Bhs International

Bhs Kids - Middle East
Enlarge
Bhs Kids - Middle East

The Bhs brand is used by a number of stores around the world on a franchise basis and although they are not directly owned by Bhs Ltd, products and support are supplied by the company. While Bhs have been offering franchises to interested parties internationally since 1985, the Tammy brand is now available as a stand-alone franchise in the international markets. In early 2006 a new franchise concept "Bhs Kids" was launched in the Middle East. Bhs Kids carries a large number of best selling children's lines from Bhs stores.

Difficult trading conditions and financial performance

Bhs revealed that their operating profits for the financial year 2005-06 have plunged 54% to just £42.2m down from £106m the previous financial year. This figure is even lower than that predicted by the firm earlier this year, who had speculated that operating profits were expected to be down by around a third. In the previous financial year which saw Bhs's operating profits at £106m was down 6% on the year before that. For the 2004-05 year Mr Green admitted that he took his eye off the ball at Bhs whilst he tried to take a tilt at Marks & Spencer and to focus on his more successful businesses such as Topshop/Topman and Burton in 2004. This was worsened by poor purchasing decisions resulting in "poor products" for the same trading year - Since then however, Mr Green has taken a more hands on role with regards to purchasing and changed some of the senior management team.

Over the last year, the new Bhs product ranges appear to have taken some time to filter into their stores, although these are now appearing in most stores, which in turn has left the business with a large selection of reduced, unsold stock from previous year(s) which is reflected in the sales which appear to be never-ending throughout their UK stores.

Bhs has been squeezed by the ascent of discount retailers such as Primark, as well as supermarkets Tesco and George @ Asda. The large purchase of ex-Littlewoods sites by Primark is expected to further worsen Bhs's market position with many Primark stores expected to open nearby existing Bhs stores throughout large parts of the UK (even though Bhs purchased 6 Littlewoods stores themselves!)

Older shoppers want to be more fashionable, and critics say Bhs has failed to fully move with the times. Its problems are compounded by the cut-throat retail climate, which has even hit high street favourites such as Next. Bhs say they are currently revamping their product range and many sale lines are now offered in their stores.

Despite these difficult times for the company, Bhs has continued to roll out more stores nationwide - including Nuneaton in Warwickshire and Llandudno, Wales. The company are also beginning to work on the refurbishment of their older stores more pro-actively as a growing number of customers see the stores as being "old fashioned".

Through no legal requirement; but as a relatively "open" privately owned business, Bhs tends to announce it's financial performance for the previous financial year around the beginning of October. The business's financial year is made up of thirteen periods of four weeks each running from April to the following March.

Bhs For Sale

2006 - No Interest, Tough Climate According to ('thisismoney.co.uk') Bhs owner Philip Green had been touting Bhs as being for sale late February/early March 2006, but this came to nothing. Rivals such as Asda and Debenhams were contacted regarding any interest they might have in purchasing the chain. Retail executives say that Green has mooted various combinations including joint ventures or outright sale, but in the current tough market most retail chains don't want to risk taking on more stores.

2007 - Suitor Search Resumes On May 30th 2007 'thisismoney.co.uk' reported rumours of talks with Icelandic retail investor Baugur regarding a sale of the chain and that Green was hoping to raise around £450m from selling the chain which would then be used towards the continuation of Arcadia's TopShop international roll-out. Analysts said Green was in a dilemma over whether he should sell the chain to rivals of his other Arcadia chains.

External links

References


 
 
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