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J.C. Penney's Sales Plummet: How Couponing Moms Cost The Store $55 Million

Posted: Updated: 05/17/2012 3:20 pm

Ron Johnson, the new star CEO of J.C. Penney, wishes that couponing fanatics would just listen to him already and stop fussing with those little scraps of paper.

"Coupons were a drug," said the CEO on Tuesday evening at a conference with analysts. Earlier that day, J.C. Penney announced abysmal results for the first three months of this year, with sales plummeting 18.9 percent at stores open at least a year. Net losses for the period were $55 million. Executives blamed the results on the departure of deal-hunting shoppers after the company changed its pricing strategy in early February to abandon coupons.

"We did not realize how deep some of the customers were into this," noted COO Michael Kramer about couponing. "We've got to wean them off this and educate our consumers."

Johnson, the wizard behind Apple's retail stores whom J.C. Penney hired in November, has been working hard to de-frump the company, by adding more fashionable brands, updating stores, redesigning the logo and hiring Ellen DeGeneres as a spokeswoman. Simple, consistently low prices -- about 40 percent below what they were before -- are key to his new strategy. "People are disgusted with the lack of integrity on pricing," Johnson declared at a media event in New York in January.

But J'aime Kirlew, a paralegal and mom of three who writes a Jamie Kirlew Couponing blog, was more upset by J.C. Penney's commercials featuring women shrieking as coupons poured out of their mailboxes that aired in January and February. "This was a super annoying commercial," said Kirlew. "I'm totally turned off."

On Tuesday, Johnson was humbled by the earnings news but still confident, admitting that J.C. Penney's marketing had not been completely effective in communicating the company's new strategy to customers. In the last three months, foot traffic at stores dropped 6 percent on weekdays and 12 percent on weekends. "It's going to take time," he said. The company is now launching a new ad campaign that compels customers to "do the math" on its new prices.

Amber Bustanoby, a self-described "frugal mom" who writes another Coupon Connections blog, says people like her will never abandon coupons because the slips help them make ends meet. "I don't think it's a drug," she said. "For me as a mom, I want to do the best I can with the resources I'm given. We live on one income in a two income world." Bustanoby, whose family makes about $50,000 a year, says J.C. Penney's prices didn't drop enough to get her back into its stores. Bustanoby, like Kirlew, has appeared on TLC's reality show "Extreme Couponing."

History lies on the side of coupons. Macy's once tried and failed to reduce coupons after it acquired May Department Stores in 2005, leading to consumer backlash, weak sales and a declining stock price. In 2007, CEO Terry Lundgren reinstated coupons. At an investors' conference in April, Karen Hoguet, Macy's chief financial officer, reminded attendees of the lesson. "People love these coupons. They love thinking they got us," she said. "From the customer perspective, it’s been very important."

The lingering effects of a recession, meanwhile, have made coupons even more appealing to consumers. A 2011 survey from market researcher Nielsen highlighted the resurgence of coupons, which have come "back in vogue" with a tepid economy, it said. Sixty-six percent of the Americans questioned use coupons, according to the survey of Internet users. New sites like Groupon are also making it easier for companies to deliver deals.

But the new Johnson-lead J.C. Penney doesn't want to follow the crowd. Johnson, who worked at Target for 16 years before leaving for Apple, is hoping to refashion J.C. Penney into an innovative destination where shoppers go for the experience as much as the savings. At Tuesday's conference, an in-person event in Manhattan attended by Martha Stewart, Johnson's team attempted to soothe anxious Wall Street investors with mentions of hip new lines by Cynthia Rowley and Vivienne Tam, nuggets of data from customer surveys and references to Johnson's time spent in Silicon Valley. Johnson promised to run J.C. Penney "like a startup."

And on Wednesday, investors fled. As of Wednesday afternoon, J.C. Penney's stock has plummeted 19.7 percent, even more than during one of the company's worst days in history, Black Monday of 1987.

But some analysts are still are optimistic. In a note titled "Rome Wasn’t Built in a Day, But It Was Fantastic When it Was Finished," analyst Liz Dunn of Macquarie praised J.C. Penney's new brands and its marketing, blaming bad sales on "slow customer adaptation to [the] new approach."

The new spokeswoman and a catalog image featuring a gay couple have led to protests from conservative groups but also won plaudits from others.

Bustanoby thinks that until J.C. Penney spruces up its 1,100 some stores, it doesn't make sense for the company to abandon coupons. "Store experience is huge, but you don't get much of an experience at J.C. Penney," she said. "Target is cleaner and more organized." Target also offers coupons.

This doesn't mean that Bustanoby will choose to shop at either Target or J.C. Penney just for a pleasant experience. "I’m a typical mom like everyone else that likes to save her family money," she said. "Couponing has allowed me and my husband to not both have to work. I think this is a big accomplishment."

CORRECTION: Because of an editing error, an earlier version of this article incorrectly stated that Michael Kramer is the Chief Executive Officer of J.C. Penney. He is the Chief Operating Officer.

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Ron Johnson, the new star CEO of J.C. Penney, wishes that couponing fanatics would just listen to him already and stop fussing with those little scraps of paper. "Coupons were a drug," said the CEO...
Ron Johnson, the new star CEO of J.C. Penney, wishes that couponing fanatics would just listen to him already and stop fussing with those little scraps of paper. "Coupons were a drug," said the CEO...
 
 
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01:18 AM on 12/29/2012
Are you kidding me? Blaming the CUSTOMERS for your failures?! Please, without customers you don't have business. If you don't bring in customers, it means change YOUR strategy not the customers'. What a joke of a CEO.
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Dick Stone
My Andalusian works hard and loves his job
12:54 AM on 08/02/2012
Surely a bright young writer from HP can get to the bottom of why JC Penney's sales are plummeting. Chick-Fil-A's , sales on actually on the rise although yesterday HP wrote an article about how their public image plummeted, now trying to cover up why Penney's sales are in the dirt, America doesn't like a particular segment of the population trying to dictate their ways and opinions on them. Wake up people, you had a fairly decent acceptability rate with America until you started all the born this way rhetoric, and you can't speak out against my life style or it will ruin your business, Wrong, because the large majority of American's have lost their ability to tolerate your loud and squeaky voices.
05:17 PM on 07/23/2012
It definitely would not take a coupon to shop at JCP, that's for sure. I go into a mall, I walk around and immediately when I reach the doors, I walk right past JCP. I don't need a coupon to go in, nor do I need a "freebie." What I need to know is that the company is looking out for me and my family by offering the best deal. I've learned from experience that when you walk in a store and you walk out empty handed, not once but more than a couple, it's time to move on and look at other options.
02:37 AM on 06/28/2012
Thanks for sharing!

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05:42 PM on 06/07/2012
That incompetent CEO should own up to his own mistakes. I was in that store every week spending $$$. Penny's was my store. And then BAM. Penny's deceides to cater to the gay crowd. Yay they love you now. Only you alienated your core group who shopped for merchandise. What you have now is a minority who love you for championing their gay cause. Your stores are horrible now. So bad. Looks like a neglected thrift store. All the gays in the world wont save that sinking ship.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
legnotsothrilled
11:44 PM on 07/30/2012
Great fit: A store with horrid clothes and the "gay" community.

We are in for quite a battle come November. I'm stoking up on popcorn myself.
01:38 PM on 06/05/2012
This is why I shop KMart for all of my clothes.They are well made and they last. The prices are a lot better too!
12:19 PM on 06/03/2012
And Ellen has nothing to do with it? Hiring a lesbian is the death knell for a business supported by American moms. JCP is dead.
04:30 AM on 05/28/2012
This change has brought me back to the store.
01:13 PM on 05/22/2012
It is extremely disappointing to hear a CEO blame the customer for poor sales and on top of that call us uneducated. Talk about being out of touch with the real world. Obviously he’s never heard the phrase, “ The Customer is King”. What does a guy that makes tons of money can teach a Mom about clothing her family with a “normal” salary?? This is a joke, I used to buy there all the time but since the coupons went away so did my desire to shop at their stores.
11:47 AM on 05/22/2012
The fact that the CEO feels he needs to blame others... customers! no less.. rather than take responsibility for his decisions, says something of his character. Hopefully, he will learn from Macy's and Target, so that JCP can survive or else stay in rank with Sears.
11:47 AM on 05/21/2012
I can't shop at any big box discount store; everything is sweatshop made polyester. I'd rather buy from the Salvation Army to save money, and for the few things I buy new, I'd rather spend more to make sure the sourcing is ethical.
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12:49 AM on 05/21/2012
That headline should read "Why JC penny traded coupons for"discounts".
10:58 PM on 05/20/2012
The clothes lately are incredibly ugly,especially in the womens section! And I can tell you the ONE maternity shirt I wanted has yet to go on sale at it's "best price." Why would I want to shop at a store where the few things I would buy aren't the items that are on sale.
12:40 PM on 06/21/2012
The ugliness seems to be a trend not only there, but in most big stores as well. Have you been to H&M lately? Absolutely dreadful.
08:08 PM on 05/20/2012
I would also say that you would be hard pressed to find anything wearable if you're between the ages of say 16 and 70. I used to shop there a good bit for work clothes. Now I only go in to get to the Sephora inside JC Penney store. I'll wander through some of the departments and everything is poorly cut, the colors wretched (I know this 'let's make orange the color of the year' is not just JCP, but they jumped on it with 2 feet and grabbed with both hands. Seriously, how many women look good in orange???!!!).

I used to find great deals there, now, a basic black pencil skirt of their brand costs considerably more than you'll find elsewhere of a name brand. And their lingerie - forget it! Their brand of bra was 'everyday' higher priced than a name brand a Macys. We looked for prom dresses, there were very few a teen would wear. Sorry, but my 17 YO daughter isn't wearing a cocktail dress that her grandmother might wear. The store was practically deserted.

From here out, the Sephora store is the only draw to the store for us. I've spent many years working in retail, if you don't market to your customers they won't come back. When I heard about the new marketing plan, I said that 'no sales' may work for Apple, but it won't work for JCP. We stupid, unedumacated, couponing mothers ARE your client base sir, market to us.
10:12 AM on 05/20/2012
It's not couponing that is killing JCP, its JCP's ridiculously high prices. Look around at the economy Mr. Kramer. Things have changed and its not the couponing mom's fault. I never shopped at your store, I walked through it and the prices were up to 10 times the cost of Target, Kolh's and even Sear/Kmart. You have your own-self as a company to blame. People are money smarter now and are not going to pay high prices anymore, coupon or not!
05:11 PM on 07/23/2012
agreed, it has nothing to do with coupons. Now you have these coupon hoarders that claim a "VICTORY" over the issue, claiming it's a win for customers all because they claim JCP's losses are directly attributed to the loss of their fans. It's ridiculous. Savings, venue and perks is what it's all about. Changing the philosophy of a company also comes at a price.