A battle is brewing for Quebec arts and crafts shoppers as North American giant Michaels prepares to enter the province Friday with the opening of seven stores.
The move by the Texasbased retailer will put it in closer competition with homegrown DeSerres, which is opening its 18th location in the province and 28th across Canada.
After three years of planning, Michaels will open stores in suburban locations in Gatineau, LaSalle, Lachenaie, StJeansurRichelieu, Saint-J脙漏r脙麓me, Vaudreuil-Dorion and Laval. The move comes 17 years after it expanded into English Canada.
"We wanted to make sure we were 100 per cent compliant to the rules and regulations of the Quebec government and we wanted to make sure that we were going to provide an unbelievable shopping experience to our customer," said Tom Making, president of Michaels Canada.
He said Michaels translated 2.5 million words to ensure that its packaging and signage was trilingual in English, French and Spanish to service customers in Quebec and the United States.
Michaels has invested $20 million in the Quebec stores, hired 500 workers and developed a new store prototype that includes better lighting, wall graphics and wider aisles. It has also signed up four Quebec vendors to supply books, stamping and scrapbooking materials.
The Quebec stores will offer the same merchandising as its 92 other stores in Canada, but it will target the Quebec consumer with a larger yarn department, beading area and expanded framing section. "The Quebec public is a very creative customer in crafts, in fine arts and we offer that unique shopping experience in all of our stores."
Making said the arrival of Michaels will "enhance" the market along side the 104-year-old DeSerres chain. "We offer a different product line. Our objective is to bring a whole new crafting experience to the Quebec consumer and I think we will enhance one another."
DeSerres president Marc DeSerres said Michaels will only have a short-term impact on a few of its nearby stores.
"You always have to be concerned when someone with large means comes in your territory but I feel we are prepared," he said.
"We have a different offer, we're based here, we're 91原创-owned, we know the market and we adjust our stores based on the market."
Michaels operates more than 1,070 big box stores averaging 1,800 square metres and plans to add more stores in Quebec in the next five years.
About nine per cent of its more than US$4.2 billion of sales in fiscal 2011 came from Canada.
The stores carry more than 35,000 products. Nearly half its sales are in general products and children's crafts, according to its 2011 annual report. The rest is divided among home decor and seasonal, framed and scrapbooking goods.
Opened in 1983, it was purchased in 2006 by private equity firms Bain Capital, founded by U.S. presidential candidate Mitt Romney, and The Blackstone Group.