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Canadian Tire

 
Hoover's Profile: Canadian Tire Corporation, Limited
(Toronto:CTC)
Contact Information
Canadian Tire Corporation, Limited
2180 Yonge St., Station K
Toronto, Ontario M4P 2V8, Canada
Tel. 416-480-3000
Toll Free 800-620-6943
Fax 416-544-7715

Type: Public
On the web: http://www.canadiantire.ca
Employees: 7,689
Employee growth: (38.3%)

Don't be fooled by this company's modest name: Canadian Tire sells a lot more than tires. About 475 Canadian Tire general merchandise stores run by a network of associate dealers throughout Canada sell automotive, home, and sports and leisure products, including bicycles. The company's 85 PartSource auto parts stores cater to knowledgeable automotive "do-it-yourselfers" and small garage owners. The Canadian retailer also operates the 375-store Mark's Work Wearhouse chain. In addition, Canadian Tire is the country's largest independent gasoline retailer through its Canadian Tire Petroleum subsidiary. Martha Billes, daughter of the company's founder A.J. Billes, controls Canadian Tire.

Key numbers for fiscal year ending December, 2008:
Sales: $7,459.4M
One year growth: (15.0%)
Net income: $306.0M
Income growth: (28.0%)

Officers:
Chairman: Maureen J. Sabia
President, CEO, and Director: Stephen G. Wetmore
EVP, Finance and Administration and CFO: J. Huw Thomas

Competitors:
Hudson's Bay
Sears Canada
Wal-Mart Canada

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Company History: Canadian Tire Corporation, Limited
Top

Incorporated: 1927
NAIC: 441310 Automotive Parts and Accessories Stores; 441320 Tire Dealers; 444110 Home Centers; 447110 Gasoline Stations with Convenience Stores; 448140 Family Clothing Stores; 454111 Electronic Shopping; 811191 Automotive Oil Change and Lubrication Shops; 811192 Car Washes

Canadian Tire Corporation, Limited is one of the leading retailers in Canada. The company, aided by associate dealers, franchisees, and agents, operates the flagship Canadian Tire chain, which includes more than 450 stores from coast to coast. These stores offer a wide selection of automotive parts, accessories, and services; sports and leisure products; and household goods. About 85 percent of all Canadians live within a 15-minute drive of a Canadian Tire store; nine out of ten adult Canadians shop at one of these outlets at least twice a year; and 40 percent of Canadians shop at Canadian Tire every week. The company also offers online shopping via the Canadian Tire web site and runs the 40-unit PartSource automotive parts specialty chain. The Canadian Tire Petroleum unit is the nation's leading independent retailer of gasoline with about 250 gasoline filling stations, some of which include a convenience store and/or a car wash. Canadian Tire Financial Services finances and manages the Canadian Tire Options MasterCard program, which has more than 3.1 million cardmembers; markets insurance and warranty products; and offers emergency roadside assistance through the Canadian Tire Auto Club. The company also owns Mark's Work Wearhouse, operator of around 320 men's and women's clothing stores, including approximately three dozen L'Équipeur stores in Quebec; these outlets specialize in business casual and weekend clothing and workwear. Canadian Tire Corporation is a true national institution, so much so that it issues its own "money," was celebrated on a Canadian postage stamp, and has won the nation's highest honor, the Order of Canada. Martha Billes, a daughter of one of the company cofounders, is the controlling shareholder, owning a stake of more than 60 percent.

Canada Tire was started in 1922 by brothers John W. and Alfred Jackson (A.J.) Billes. The budding entrepreneurs invested their combined savings of CAD 1,800 in an automobile service garage and auto parts depot in Toronto. The company--Hamilton Tire and Garage Limited--stocked a small inventory of repair and replacement goods, including tires, batteries, and automobile fluids. Although the automobile industry was still in its infancy, the Billeses believed surging automobile sales at the time indicated a bright future for their business. Later that year, in fact, Toronto hosted its first "Closed Car Show," in which windshield wipers, automatic starters, and other new car parts were introduced.

The Billeses experienced what could have turned out to be a major setback shortly after they opened their shop: A bridge that routed traffic past their garage was shut down for repairs. To overcome the problem, the brothers converted the garage into an overnight parking facility and took turns sleeping in the garage at night. Then, early in 1923, they moved the entire operation to a better location. The new shop included retail goods and a gas pump. The success of that outlet encouraged the Billeses to open a second retail store nearby. Early gains were largely attributable to A.J.'s marketing savvy. He began offering free road maps in the company's promotional flyers, for example, because maps were rare at the time and valued by customers.

In 1927, after four years of rising sales, the Billeses changed the name of their enterprise to Canadian Tire Corporation, Limited. That same year, A.J., building off of his successful road map idea, decided to test a mail-order offer to car owners in southern Ontario and New York state. Response to that effort, in turn, led him to publish a full catalog in 1928 that featured Canadian Tire's retail offerings and allowed customers to order by mail. Thus, the company became a pioneer in the mail-order and catalog auto-parts retailing industry. Indeed, Canadian Tire's mail-order sales swelled in the late 1920s and early 1930s. Even during the Great Depression the company continued to post gains as a result of its low prices, high-quality merchandise, and an emphasis on customer service. Importantly, shrewd marketing always played a role.

Throughout the 1930s and into the 1960s, in fact, Canadian Tire was a leading innovator in its industry. Among A.J.'s most brilliant marketing schemes was Canadian Tire "money," an innovation he concocted in the 1950s. A.J. knew a lot of money could be made from the sale of gasoline from his store pumps. Because of pressure from the big oil companies, however, retailers such as A.J. were unable to lower their prices to undercut competitors. A.J. got around that hurdle by giving his gas customers coupons that they could use for merchandise in his stores. The scheme was a major success and continued to be used, in some form, for several decades. Another of A.J.'s innovations was clerks on roller skates. When A.J. expanded one of his stores into a vacant supermarket he became concerned that the longer aisles would slow down his clerks. Besides speeding up the clerks, the roller skates served as an entertainment gimmick that drew customers.

Among other firsts, Canadian Tire introduced the unconditional tire guarantee in 1931. Until that time, tires were guaranteed only against manufacturing defects. A.J. decided to begin offering an unconditional "Super-Lastic" tire guarantee that would cover the tire for almost any mishap. "In those days the guarantee on tires was only for defects and workmanship," A.J. recalled in company annals, "but customers would come in with a shard of glass or a stone bruise, saying well, I didn't do that. So I introduced the first one-year unconditional tire guarantee. People came in looking for a fight, and there wasn't one." Canadian Tire also helped pioneer the profit-sharing concept, giving workers a stake in the profits of the business and generating employee motivation and loyalty.

Canadian Tire expanded in the 1930s as business grew. In 1934 the company opened an associate store in Hamilton, Ontario. That store was the first in what would become a huge chain of stores that spanned Canada. Although Canadian Tire automotive lines were already stocked in other stores, the new outlets gave the company higher profit margins and more control over its products. As the chain expanded, Canadian Tire's stores and mail-order catalogs began featuring a wide range of parts and supplies--many under the Canadian Tire brand name--including motor and chassis parts, radio equipment, and hundreds of miscellaneous accessories. In addition, Canadian Tire was beginning to branch out into sporting goods such as camping equipment. Gains at the new store spawned a flurry of expansion during the mid- and late 1930s. By 1939, in fact, Canadian Tire was operating an impressive 71 stores in addition to its thriving mail-order business.

World War II caused shortages of many goods, and Canadian Tire was forced to change many of its operating procedures. Nevertheless, the company managed to adapt and even to sustain its healthy growth rate throughout the war years. By 1946, in fact, Canadian Tire had boosted its total number of outlets to 116. As a result of spiraling demand during the postwar economic boom, moreover, sales soared. Canadian Tire built a giant new warehouse that was averaging 57 tons of new inventory daily by 1952. By 1956 even that facility had become too small to serve the company's 160-plus outlets, so Canadian Tire built a large new distribution center. Before the center was opened, President John W. Billes passed away. His brother, A.J., succeeded him.

Canadian Tire continued to prosper under A.J.'s ten-year stint as president. Warehouse and distribution centers were expanded, and the company's network of retail outlets increased to a total of 225 by the mid-1960s. A.J., always open to new ideas, was among the first retailers to use new electronic equipment and computers to handle accounting, inventory, and invoicing tasks. Canadian Tire flourished under his leadership, becoming one of the most successful retailers in Canada. Later, looking back on his career and life, A.J. would give much of the credit for the company's success to his employees: "If asked what has been my life's most rewarding experience, it is good health, strength, and a destiny which afforded me the opportunity to assist our corporate people in recognizing and more fully exploiting their God-given talents, both for their own betterment and for that of others around them, and while in the process, building a business wherein the spirit of enlightened self-interest continues."

A.J. stepped aside in 1966; J. Dean Muncaster succeeded him. Muncaster had started out working in a Canadian Tire store before working his way through the executive ranks. Under Muncaster's direction Canadian Tire continued to expand. The company began its own long-distance hauling operation in 1967, which would balloon in size to include more than 700 transport units by the 1990s. A second major distribution facility was built in 1973 to feed the growing Canadian Tire retail chain. In 1979, moreover, the company completed a giant 65-million-cubic-feet, computer-controlled, high-rise warehouse and distribution center that was among the largest of its kind in the world. That facility helped to support the company's new Auto Parts Depot division. The Auto Parts Depot, on the cutting edge of just-in-time techniques that would emerge in the 1980s, provided speedy daytime and overnight delivery of auto parts to Canadian Tire outlets.

During the late 1970s Canadian Tire upgraded its existing stores and expanded into British Columbia with a new store format. Then, in 1982, Canadian Tire reached outside its national borders when it purchased the assets of White Stores, Inc., of Wichita, Texas, for $144 million. White Stores was a chain of more than 400 automotive retail stores in the United States. Most of the stores were owned and operated by dealers, but some of the outlets were company owned, and Canadian Tire also took possession of the company's warehouse operations. Canadian Tire attempted to convert the stores into a format similar to that used by its Canadian stores. Unfortunately, the venture flopped and Canadian Tire elected in 1985 to sell the entire division. Shortly thereafter, Muncaster resigned. He was replaced in 1986 by Dean Groussman, the former chief executive of White Stores.

By the mid-1980s Canadian Tire was generating more than CAD 2 billion in annual sales and operating nearly 400 stores throughout Canada (not including the U.S. White Stores division). In addition, the company was operating about 115 gas stations. Besides increasing the number of stores in its portfolio during the 1970s and early 1980s, Canadian Tire had introduced a variety of new merchandise. The company had started selling a large amount of sporting and leisure items, as well as hardware, lawn and garden items, inexpensive furniture and other home products, and even luggage. In essence, Canadian Tire was becoming a general-merchandise discount store with an emphasis on automotive products.

Under Groussman's leadership, Canadian Tire continued to expand its store network and distribution facilities. Between 1986 and 1990, in fact, Canadian Tire added about 75 gas stations and 17 retail stores to its group, pushing sales past the CAD 3 billion mark for the first time in 1990. Meanwhile, net earnings gradually rose to nearly CAD 150 million annually in both 1989 and 1990--Canadian Tire was ranked as the 42nd most profitable company in Canada in 1990--and the company's workforce swelled to nearly 25,000. Encouraged by healthy gains at home, Canadian Tire management decided once again to take a crack at the massive U.S. market. In 1991 the company announced its intent to enter the Indianapolis, Indiana, market with four new stores under the name Auto Source Inc.

Canadian Tire had started its Auto Source experiment in 1990, when it opened two stores under the banner Car Care USA. Those stores, which mimicked the successful Pep Boys centers, incorporated 14 service bays and about 18,000 square feet of space for inventory. In 1991, it decided to change the names of those stores and began construction on two new stores. The design of the new outlets was influenced by the growing trend toward superstores. Thus, the new Auto Source outlets boasted 30,000 feet of retail space and 24 service bays. Auto Source planned to open between 100 and 150 additional outlets in the United States by the close of the century, aiming for CAD 1 billion in sales by that time.

During the early 1990s Canadian Tire opened six more Auto Source outlets, for a total of ten, that were soon generating more than CAD 60 million in annual revenues. Like the company's first attempt in the U.S. market, however, Auto Source proved unprofitable. The venture lost CAD 15.3 million in 1992 alone. Company officials explained that the loss was not unexpected considering that it was a new enterprise. In 1993, however, the division's losses increased. Part of the problem was that Auto Source was attempting a start-up in the midst of a U.S. economic downturn. But losses, according to critics, also stemmed from the fact that the company's U.S. support infrastructure was too great for the ten-store chain. Furthermore, the auto parts industry was facing increasing competition from discount stores such as Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., as well as new entrants into the burgeoning automotive discount superstore industry.

In fact, Canadian Tire's domestic operations were also suffering from increased competition, particularly from invading mega-discounters such as Wal-Mart and Kmart Corporation. Indeed, by the early 1990s Canadian Tire was generating only about one-third of its revenues from automotive-related sales. The other revenue was generated from general merchandise. Canadian Tire was Canada's largest hardware retailer, for example, and a leading supplier of sporting goods. Profits from those items were increasingly being pinched by competition from discount warehouse rivals. Partly as a result of that dynamic, Canadian Tire's financial performance deteriorated in the early 1990s. Although the company's revenues grew to CAD 3.2 billion in 1992 and then to CAD 3.6 billion by 1994, its net income plunged to less than CAD 100 million annually in 1992 and 1993.

Groussman left Canadian Tire in 1992 and was replaced by Stephen E. Bachand, previously an executive vice-president at Hechinger Company, a home center chain based in Landover, Maryland. Under Bachand's leadership, the company began implementing a strategy to help it compete in the new retail environment. That meant eliminating certain inventory items such as furniture and luggage from some stores and focusing on the company's traditional core products: automotive accessories, hardware, and sporting goods. The big superstores that were popping up across Canada carried all of those items and often had larger selections. But Canadian Tire benefited from intense market penetration--about 80 percent of all Canadian citizens lived within 15 minutes of one of its outlets--and was also known for its high-quality products. Importantly, Canadian Tire launched an aggressive renewal program that called for the enlargement of 240 of its 423 stores by 1998.

Canadian Tire's net earnings plummeted to just CAD 5.5 million in 1994, partly as a result of weak gasoline markets that were slowing the company's gas station division. Early in 1995, moreover, the company decided to shutter its Auto Source chain in the United States and completely bail out of that market. All of the U.S. stores were sold by 1996. Despite this setback, early results from the company's store expansion program were positive and management expected to realize substantial gains as it enlarged existing stores.

On April 3, 1995, company founder Alfred Jackson Billes passed away at the age of 93. His professional accomplishments included investiture in 1976 as a Member of the Order of Canada, the highest recognition a civilian Canadian could achieve. He was also inducted into the Canadian Hardware/Houseware Hall of Fame in 1986.

Canadian Tire's store improvement program continued throughout the late 1990s and into the new decade, by which time the cost of the program would top CAD 1 billion. While some existing stores were expanded to conform to a handful of new prototype layouts (later reduced to three), in many cases brand-new stores were built as replacements. By 1999, when the number of completed outlets stood at 188, the program had been expanded: The firm now planned to convert 350 of its 430 stores to the new formats.

As the company saw dividends from the more modern store designs and improvements in customer service, it also made changes in its management and ownership structure. In the late 1980s and early 1990s relations between the Toronto headquarters and the Canadian Tire dealers had been strained--so strained that the dealers had tried to buy the company in 1987 from the three children of A.J. Billes who held a controlling interest. The brothers, Alfred and David, and the sister, Martha, had been locked in a battle for control of the company before agreeing to sell to the dealers. But security regulators blocked the plan, contending that it was "abusive" to nonvoting shareholders. A truce was reached in 1989 that put an end to various lawsuits, but it was not until Bachand came onboard that relations with the dealers began to be mended. Bachand spent much of his first year meeting with and listening to the dealers, and he also started involving them in corporate strategy sessions. Most importantly, he got them to buy into the store improvement program, which began to pay off handsomely for all involved by the late 1990s. Meantime, the unsettled ownership situation reached a resolution as well. In 1997 Martha Billes bought out her brothers' stakes for CAD 45.4 million, boosting her holding to 61.2 percent.

The latter move came as Canadian Tire was celebrating its 75th anniversary, a milestone that Canada Post Corporation marked by issuing a commemorative stamp. It featured the company cofounders, an early Canadian Tire storefront, and a scene meant to be indicative of the relationship between the company and Canadians.

Another significant development in the late 1990s was the launch of PartSource, a new retail concept that was officially rolled out in 1999 after the testing of a few outlets. About 10,000 square feet in size, PartSource stores sold only automotive parts and were aimed at professional automotive installers and serious do-it-yourselfers. The move was widely viewed as a preemptive strike against the possible encroachment of major U.S. auto parts retailers, such as AutoZone, Inc. and The Pep Boys, into the Canadian market.

By 1999, under Bachand's leadership, revenue at Canadian Tire had reached CAD 4.73 billion, while profits had improved to CAD 145.9 million. Bachand announced in early 2000 that he would retire from the company, having successfully transformed Canadian Tire into a more modern operation. He had managed to do so while fending off the aggressive cross-border advances of U.S. retailing giants Wal-Mart and The Home Depot, Inc. Succeeding Bachand was Wayne Sales, who had been second-in-command as executive vice-president of Canadian Tire Retail. An American like Bachand, Sales had joined Canadian Tire in 1991, having previously worked in the United States for Kmart Corporation.

Sales oversaw the launch in 2000 of Canadian Tire's "Next Generation" store format, which was designed to be easier for customers to navigate and featured expanded and more upscale kitchen, hardware, and other product lines. Part of the aim with the new format was to attract more female customers. All stores built in 2001 and 2002 were given the new format, and some existing stores were also retrofitted into "Next Generation" stores. By 2002, 290 of Canadian Tire's 451 outlets featured one of the newer store formats. In November 2000, meanwhile, Canadian Tire launched its web site, which already by year's end was one of Canada's top five online retail destinations.

In a move that surprised many, Canadian Tire acquired Mark's Work Wearhouse Ltd. in February 2002 for CAD 110.8 million. Mark's operated about 320 outlets across Canada that sold casual clothing and footwear for work and leisure. Under Canadian Tire, it operated as a separate business unit. In 2004 the company began testing Mark's Work Wearhouse "stores within a store" inside of select Canadian Tire outlets. The addition of Mark's helped boost overall Canadian Tire revenues to CAD 7.86 billion by 2003. Profits by that time had ballooned to CAD 241.3 million, a 22 percent increase in just one year. Also aiding these stellar results were improvements to the product selection at Canadian Tire outlets, the addition of more gas stations and car washes, and the conversion of its customers from proprietary credit cards to a cobranded MasterCard called Options.

Not resting on its laurels, Canadian Tire began testing a new retail format in 2003 called Concept 20/20. Designed to achieve sales 20 percent higher than an older format Canadian Tire store, the new concept featured an updated layout, new and expanded product assortments, a customer care center, new store signage, and a redesigned exterior facade. Some of the 20/20 stores featured a Mark's Work Wearhouse store-within-a-store. The test stores were so successful--achieving 30 percent higher sales--that Canadian Tire announced that beginning in 2004 Concept 20/20 would supersede the Next Generation format as the prototype for the ongoing store improvement program.

For 2004 profits improved to CAD 291.5 million on record sales of CAD 8.39 billion. The company said that strong holiday buying played a significant role in the 20.8 percent increase in profits and the 6.7 percent jump in revenues. CEO Sales told analysts in early 2005 that the company was considering future acquisitions, building on its successful purchase of Mark's. An expansion of the Mark's store-within-a-store initiative was also under consideration because results had exceeded expectations. Canadian Tire, one of a dwindling number of Canadian-owned retailers, confidently looked to the future as an icon of the Canadian business community, and indeed for many Canadians it was an integral part of their lives.

Principal Subsidiaries

Canadian Tire Financial Services Limited; Canadian Tire Real Estate Limited; Canadian Tire Bank; CTC Capital Corp. (U.S.A.); CTC Holdings Inc. (U.S.A.).

Principal Operating Units

Canadian Tire Retail; PartSource; Canadian Tire Petroleum; Mark's Work Wearhouse.

Principal Competitors

Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.; Hudson's Bay Company; Sears Canada Inc.; Costco Wholesale Corporation; The Home Depot, Inc.; Ace Hardware Corporation; True Value Company; The Forzani Group Ltd.

Further Reading

"Auto Source Loses Money But Gains Experience," Automotive Marketing, May 1994, p. 20.

Bachand, Stephen E., "There's a Lot More to Canadian Tire," Business Quarterly, Spring 1995, pp. 30-33, 36-39.

Brown, Ian, Freewheeling: The Feuds, Broods, and Outrageous Fortunes of the Billes Family and Canada's Favorite Company, Toronto: Harper & Collins, 1989, 339 p.

------, "Trouble in Tireland," Canadian Business, November 1989, pp. 95-109.

"Canadian Tire's Journey South Is Uphill All the Way," Business Week, February 6, 1984, p. 88H.

Caulfield, John, "Canadian Tire CEO Announces Retirement," National Home Center News, January 24, 2000, pp. 1, 12.

------, "Canadian Tire Looks to 'The Next Generation,'" National Home Center News, May 1, 2000, pp. 3, 27.

------, "Decisions Lie Ahead for Canadian Tire's New CEO," National Home Center News, September 4, 2000, pp. 4, 49.

Deverell, John, "Canadian Tire Remake 'Encouraging' Sales Up 60 Percent in Revamped Stores, Shareholders Told," Toronto Star, May 6, 1995, p. E7.

Duff, Mike, "Canadian Tire Rethinks Strategy," DSN Retailing Today, July 23, 2001, pp. 3, 26.

Fox, Jim, "Canadian Tire in the Passing Lane: Chain Rolls Out New Store, Merchandising Strategy," Discount Store News, September 18, 1995, pp. 11, 111.

------, "Canadian Tire Names CEO," DSN Retailing Today, August 21, 2000, pp. 4, 43.

Heinzl, John, "Canadian Tire Opens Parts Stores," Globe and Mail, August 7, 1996, p. B4.

Lorinc, John, "Road Warriors," Canadian Business, October 1995, pp. 26+.

McBride, Hugh, Our Store: 75 Years of Canadians and Canadian Tire, Toronto: Quantum Book Group, 1997, 127 p.

McCann, Julie, "Cutting the Crap: Wayne Sales, the New Man Behind the Wheel at Canadian Tire," National Post Business, March 2001, pp. 46-48, 53+.

McFarland, Janet, "Canadian Tire Now Seen As the Last Northern Fortress," Globe and Mail, August 14, 2004, p. B5.

McQueen, Rod, Can't Buy Me Love: How Martha Billes Made Canadian Tire Hers, Toronto: Stoddart, 2001, 282 p.

Olijnyk, Zena, "In the Driver's Seat," Financial Post, October 18, 1997, p. 18.

Olive, David, "Tire on a Roll," Globe and Mail Report on Business Magazine, June 27, 1997, p. 17.

Parent, Tawn, "Not Just an Automotive Chain: Canada's Largest Specialty Wholesaler Opens U.S. Headquarters Near Castleton," Indianapolis Business Journal, May 28, 1990, p. 1A.

Pearlstein, Steven, "Turnaround in Toronto: Canadian Tire Meets Challenge from United States," Washington Post, January 19, 1999, p. E1.

Powell, Chris, "On a Roll: With the Acquisition of Mark's Work Wearhouse, an Ambitious Expansion Strategy, and a New "Let's Get Started" Positioning, Canadian Tire Isn't Sitting on Its Advertising Laurels," Marketing Magazine, July 1, 2002, p. 10.

Shalom, Francois, "Is 'the Tire' Going Flat? Tough Competition Is Forcing Canadian Tire Back to Its Strengths," Gazette, September 19, 1994, p. C8.

Sheikh, Fawzia, "How Canadian Tire Refocused and Solved Its Identity Crisis," Marketing Magazine, December 20-27, 1999, p. 13.

Southerst, John, "Tire Kicker," Canadian Business, July 1993, p. 37.

Strauss, Marina, "Canadian Tire to Test New Concept," Globe and Mail, May 15, 2003, p. B1.

------, "Sister to Rule at Canadian Tire," Globe and Mail, July 22, 1997, p. B1.

Strauss, Marina, and Elizabeth Church, "Canadian Tire Makes Surprise Mark's Work Wearhouse Bid," Globe and Mail, December 20, 2001, p. B1.

Total Customer Value: A Special Edition in Memory of A.J. Billes, 1902-1995, Toronto: Canadian Tire Corporation, Limited, 1995.

Wirebach, John, "Canadian Tire Closes U.S. Subsidiary," Automotive Marketing, February 1995, p. 6.

— Dave Mote; Updated by David E. Salamie


Wikipedia: Canadian Tire
Top
Canadian Tire Corporation, Limited
Type Public
Founded 1922
Headquarters Canada Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Key people Alfred J. Billes (co-founder)
J. William Billes (co-founder)
Stephen Wetmore (President and CEO)
Industry Retail
Products Automotive, Sports and Leisure, and Home Products
Employees 57,000
Website http://www.canadiantire.ca/

Canadian Tire Corporation, Limited (TSXCTC) is one of Canada's 35 largest publicly traded companies and operates an inter-related network of businesses engaged in retailing (hardgoods, apparel and petroleum) and services (financial and automotive). It operates Canadian Tire Retail, Canada's largest and most-shopped general merchandise retailer best known for its unique selection of home products, hardware and tools, automotive, sports, camping, lawn and garden products. It also operates Canada's largest independent gasoline station network and a chartered bank in Canadian Tire Bank, and it owns Mark's Work Wearhouse, a leading specialty apparel retailer of work and casual clothing, and PartSource, retailing auto parts and accessories. Its head office is in Toronto, Ontario.

The chain is also known for its Canadian Tire "money" which is a pioneering loyalty program first introduced in 1958. It is also known for its innovative advertising.

Contents

History

A Typical CT Store

The first Canadian Tire store opened on September 15, 1925 in Toronto, Ontario by J. William Billes and Alfred J. Billes. This store, which was located at the corner of Yonge and Isabella, bought Hamilton Tire and Garage Ltd. in Toronto's east end with combined savings of $1,800.[1] In 1934, the first official associate store opened in Hamilton, Ontario.[2] In 1937, the store and head office was moved to Yonge St. and Church St. This location remains as an associate store in the chain today. In 1928, the store issued its first catalogue, becoming one of Canada's most famous mail order businesses. To this day, the company has grown to over 475 stores. A publicly traded company on the Toronto Stock Exchange, Canadian Tire shares are widely held.

Canadian Tire Corporation has tried on two occasions to expand into the US market. In the 1980s the White Auto Store chain, concentrated in Texas was acquired and cost Canadian Tire $200 million to fold. In the 1991 a second attempt with the Auto Source chain with grand plans of 100 to 120 outlets in the US Midwest was started. The Auto Source chain was sold costing the company a reported $80.6 million.

Canadian Tire has experienced a period of significant growth and success, having transformed its store network in three major waves beginning in 1994. In its last five-year strategic plan it attained top-quartile total returns to shareholders among all publicly traded North American retailers, with a total return of 286%.

Store brands

Certain merchandise items are branded specifically for Canadian Tire. The most recognized of these are Mastercraft, SuperCycle (bicycles) and Motomaster (tires, batteries and other automotive goods).

Divisions

Canadian Tire Retail

As Canada's largest retailer, it is said that 85 percent of all Canadians live within a 15-minute drive of a Canadian Tire store; that nine out of ten adult Canadians shop at one at least twice a year; and that 40 percent of Canadians shop at Canadian Tire every week.[3] There are more than 475 stores across Canada. Canadian Tire Stores are each operated by an associate dealer. The buildings and lands are owned or leased by the company and everything inside the building, from fixtures to merchandise, is owned by the dealer. The majority of stores operate in distinct categories of automotive parts, automotive service, tools and hardware, sporting goods, housewares, and seasonal.

Since 2003 Canadian Tire has converted the majority of its old traditional and new-format stores, as well as built new stores, making it the most modern network in the country. Last year, Canadian Tire introduced its two newest store formats- the Smart store and Small Market store. Currently, the largest Canadian Tire store is located in Dartmouth, Nova Scotia. It incorporates a Marks Work Warehouse (owned by Canadian Tire) within its doors.

Online Store

Canadian Tire Online was an online purchasing system where customers of Canadian Tire can order goods online. On January 20, 2009, citing a change in consumer shopping habits and convenience of its bricks and mortar stores, the Company announced the end of online sales effective at the end of January 2009.[4] [5]

Partsource Automotive Stores

PartSource is an automotive parts and accessories specialty chain, which has 88 stores in Ontario and Western Canada. It was designed to meet the needs of major purchasers of automotive parts including commercial automotive installers as well as serious do it yourself customers. While many people are aware of the Canadian Tire/PartSource affiliation, many are unaware that the individual stores are not affiliated. While Canadian Tire Retail stores are Associate Dealer operated, PartSource stores are a mix of franchisee and Canadian Tire Corporation operated.

Financial Services

Canadian Tire Financial Services is the credit arm of the company. This division operates a bank, under Canada's Bank Act. Since achieving the bank designation, Canadian Tire Financial Services has launched additional credit and loan products including Personal Loans and Lines of Credit. Its primary business is branded credit cards that give customers a choice of payment options, as well as extra Canadian Tire Money. CTFS also markets a variety of insurance and warranty products, and operates an emergency roadside service. The division also manages the Canadian Tire 'Money' On the Card loyalty program to credit card customers.

In October 2008, Canadian Tire Financial Services was named one of "Canada's Top 100 Employers" by Mediacorp Canada Inc., and was featured in Maclean's newsmagazine.[6]

Canadian Tire Petroleum

Launched in 1958, Canadian Tire Petroleum is Canada's largest independent retailer of gasoline. It has more than 273 locations as well as more than 70 Simoniz car washes in Canada. In Ontario, Canadian Tire Petroleum also operates a network of Pit Stop locations offering customers a variety of automotive services including oil changes, rust check and other services. Canadian Tire's famous "Canadian Tire Money" loyalty program was launched through the gas bars as "Gas Bonus Coupons". The program proved so popular that it was later expanded to the entire enterprise.

Canadian Tire was the world's first hard goods retailer to begin selling gasoline at their stores as a means of driving customer traffic. This model has since been copied by most of the world's top hard goods retailers, including Wal Mart, Home Depot, Real Canadian Superstore/Loblaw's, and Safeway.

CTP has opened 3 'Q' stop stores featuring a mini-grocery store as well as other items.

Mark's Work Wearhouse

Mark's Work Wearhouse has become Canada's largest supplier of business casual, weekend and work wear clothing and accessories for men and women. Mark's Work Wearhouse operates more than 374 stores across Canada including L'Equipeur stores in Quebec.

Marketing

Advertisements

For many years, Canadian Tire's Christmas ads featured Santa Claus and Ebenezer Scrooge arguing about whether Canadian Tire's great selection or their low prices are the better reason to do your Christmas shopping there, with the tagline "Give like Santa, save like Scrooge". A stamp was issued by Canada Post commemorating Canadian Tire's 75th anniversary which depicted the famous ad of a boy receiving his first bicycle which was purchased by his father at Canadian Tire.

Starting in 2007, the company ran successful month long advent calendar promotions which provided free CDs and discounts throughout the holiday season.

From 1997 to 2005, the company's ads have featured the "Canadian Tire couple". The male role also known as the Canadian Tire guy was played by Canadian actor Ted Simonett, and Gloria Slade played the female role. They are usually showing off a new product to one of their neighbours, who are in need of a certain tool. The 'Canadian Tire Couple' were once featured on Royal Canadian Air Farce as one of their targets of the year, as "Canada's most annoying couple".

In early 2006, ads featuring the couple were phased out in favor of a new campaign featuring overhead signs found in Canadian Tire's store asiles. For example, if an ad depicted a couple deciding to spruce up their back yard, signs indicating the aisles where what they needed would be found creakily lowered from overhead ("Aisle 10 - Patio Furniture", "Aisle 28 - Garden Hoses").

The Company is one of Canada's largest advertisers, and has nearly universal unaided brand awareness.

Slogans

  • 1970s: "It's for people like you"
  • 1980s: "There is a lot more to Canadian Tire than tires"
  • 1992: "There is a lot more for a lot less"
  • 1997: "Canadian Tire, still the right place"
  • Various Christmas seasons: "Give like Santa, save like Scrooge" or "Scrooge Approved prices"
  • 2001: "Let's Get Started", which used the song "I'll Start With You" (released in 1992 by former Highway 101 lead singer Paulette Carlson)
  • 2006: "______ Starts at Canadian Tire", with the blank filled with various seasons (such as "Summer" or "The Holidays") or situations ("Home Improvement," "Spring Cleaning", or, in this example, "Car Care").
  • 2008: "For Days Like Today"

Canadian Tire Money

An assortment of Canadian Tire 'money'.

Canadian Tire 'money' distinguishes the company from other retailers in Canada. These coupons, an incentive for non-credit purchases, are a national cultural fixture and feature the fictional character Sandy McTire on every bill. Customers using Canadian Tire's Options Mastercard for their purchases also received an additional 100% Canadian Tire money, in electronic form, on the card.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Canadian Tire: Our Story (Official Web site)". http://www2.canadiantire.ca/CTenglish/h_ourstory.html. Retrieved 29 January 2007. 
  2. ^ The Hamilton Spectator- Souvenir Edition page MP38 (June 10, 2006). "The Hamilton Memory Project;". Press release. 
  3. ^ Reference For Business
  4. ^ United Press International (20 January 2005). "Canadian Tire to cease online sales". Press release. http://www.upi.com/Business_News/2009/01/20/Canadian_Tire_to_cease_online_sales/UPI-26531232457534/. Retrieved 3 February 2006. 
  5. ^ Internet Retailer (23 January 2005). "CanadianTire.ca puts the brakes on home deliveries". Press release. http://en.wikipedia…. Retrieved 3 February 2006. 
  6. ^ "Reasons for Selection, 2009 Canada's Top 100 Employers Competition". http://www.eluta.ca/top-employer-canadian-tire-financial-services. 

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