Posts Tagged ‘ industry ’

Sainsburys leads IT spending

Tuesday, August 17th, 2010

Sainsbury’s has bucked the economic trend away from spending on new technology.

Investment in technology in the retail industry is set to be stagnant in the UK for the foreseeable future, as most high street stores and supermarket chains brace themselves for another economic downturn.

The austerity budget and impending VAT rise has seen widespread speculation that the industry could be confronted with a period of loss, leading to financial outlays for development of existing technology to be capped as most leading companies say that they have no IT overhauls planned. In some cases, computer systems are up to 20 years as old but are kept on as long as they do the job.

According to a report published last week by Martec International, a leading retail sector consultancy specialist, Tesco is the retailer that seems most content with its incumbent IT system. Their latest upgrade was in 2007 while the yearly spend on IT investment is £200 million. Rival Sainsbury’s spends around £220m per year on IT according to the Martec study, which also reported that UK’s leading supermarket chain is planning on updating its store, e-commerce and supply chain systems next year. The in-house system used by staff, installed first in 1995, will be upgraded the following year.

While Frances Riseley, practice manager at Martec, said that many retailers were hesitant to reveal their IT plans for fear of rivals being alerted to their developments, his group’s survey did establish that 19 per cent of the 142 British retailers polled said the reason for not revealing any details was that they were either being finalised or had not been considered.

Former Marks and Spencer India boss joins local rival

Monday, August 16th, 2010

The man behind the expansion of Marks and Spencer into India has teamed up with a local competitor.

Mark Ashman, who oversaw the establishment of the joint venture in India between M&S and Reliance Retail, will become the chief executive at Hypercity in the autumn.

Hypercity is a rapidly growing local chain that has since 2006 sold Waitrose products to millions of Indians under an exclusive supply agreement. Waitrose and M&S are already renowned for their UK rivalry, and now the battle has spilled over onto the subcontinent the focus is firmly on India as a producer.  Last year, Mark Price, Waitrose’s chief executive and Sir Stuart Rose, the chairman of M&S, became embroiled in a public slanging match over which company’s products were cheaper.

Mr Ashman held the role of chief executive of Marks & Spencer Reliance Retail, which, in collaboration operated 18 stores across India, with 15 more set to open over the next two years. The partnership said that there will be an estimated 50 M&S stores in the country by 2015. Ashram had left his position in April to return to Britain to lead M&S’s European and Middle Eastern operations. He was wished all the best for his new role by his former employers.

Meanwhile, rival Hypercity operates seven hypermarkets across India, with the group being part owned by another of India’s leading retail organisations Shoppers Stop. The country has had its fashion production industry come increasingly under the media spotlight in recent months, as allegations of poor working conditions have led high street retailers such as Next and Gap to launch independent investigations.