WSL Future of Health Event

Associations cannot be static

The reordering of mass retailing, which is rapidly transforming the industry and making old definitions obsolete, is quickly accelerating. So it is that such traditional drug chains as Walgreens and CVS are transitioning into health care providers. The retail outlets once easily identified as discount stores are now challenging traditional food retailers for leadership in

It’s not a new year, it’s a new era

Mass retailing has embarked on an extended season of unprecedented change, which will inevitably reorder the segment’s long-settled order of things. Where or when this season will end is anyone’s guess. How the ending will impact the community is far from certain. This much, however, is certain: What’s past is prologue — and the future

Take note: Walmart goes upscale

Take note: Walmart goes upscale

All early evidence points to an inescapable fact: Walmart is serious about expanding its customer base by upgrading its offerings, presentation and consumer options, both in-store and online. Initial documentation of the retailer’s intent came with the opening, earlier this year, of an upscale store in Springdale, Ark., a location adjacent to its Bentonville, Ark.,

The renaissance of supermarkets

The renaissance of supermarkets

Amid the myriad retailing developments that have distinguished — for good or ill — the retail landscape thus far in 2022, perhaps the most surprising (though not entirely unexpected) alteration has been the emergence (or reemergence) of the supermarket segment of the mass retailing community. If this re-ignition has taken some industry people by surprise,

Industry leaders are optimistic

Industry leaders are optimistic

On Thursday, March 3, the editors of Racher Press, publisher of MMR and Chain Drug Review, gathered together five industry-leading personalities to discuss the state of the world and the retailing industry. Without naming names, those on hand included a senior executive with one of the nation’s leading food retailers, two senior consumer packaged goods

Kmart’s main flaw: Complacency

Kmart’s main flaw: Complacency

As we relive American retailing history, which we occasionally do, we’re reminded that Kmart, once the largest general merchandise retailer in the United States, has dwindled a bit in size. The current store count for the former Troy, Mich., dynamo is … five. Five? That’s correct. In mid-January, Kmart’s holding company announced that it plans