Learning from Kmart's mistakes: New improvements on Mydin Hypermarket's Business strategies

In Malaysia, the hypermarket business is an extremely competitive venture. Beside the high amount of capital that one needs to invest in, the business also exposes new players to global and well-structured competitors such as Giant, Carrefour and Tesco, to name a few. The current paper explores and...

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Published in:CSSR 2010 - 2010 International Conference on Science and Social Research
Main Author: Omar N.B.; Sanusi Z.M.; Aziz N.A.; Ismail N.A.
Format: Conference paper
Language:English
Published: 2010
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-79959676579&doi=10.1109%2fCSSR.2010.5773915&partnerID=40&md5=79b4e29e8984838d4c3867f3abe0f8e1
id 2-s2.0-79959676579
spelling 2-s2.0-79959676579
Omar N.B.; Sanusi Z.M.; Aziz N.A.; Ismail N.A.
Learning from Kmart's mistakes: New improvements on Mydin Hypermarket's Business strategies
2010
CSSR 2010 - 2010 International Conference on Science and Social Research


10.1109/CSSR.2010.5773915
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-79959676579&doi=10.1109%2fCSSR.2010.5773915&partnerID=40&md5=79b4e29e8984838d4c3867f3abe0f8e1
In Malaysia, the hypermarket business is an extremely competitive venture. Beside the high amount of capital that one needs to invest in, the business also exposes new players to global and well-structured competitors such as Giant, Carrefour and Tesco, to name a few. The current paper explores and describes the experiences of one Malaysian player, the Mydin Hypermarket in its quest to champion the local consumer market. A 2003 publication of a US bestseller entitled KMart's Ten Deadly Sins had a tremendous impact on the business strategy and future direction of the Mydin business in this country. Originally built in the 1990s to emulate the then highly successful K-Mart Superstore in the United States, the Mydin Business had to immediately change its business strategic direction. Premised on interviews, site visits, observation and document analysis, this article provides a qualitative narration and a discussion on the various counter strategies undertaken by the management of Mydin Hypermarket in order to avoid having to face the same fate as KMart Superstore. Today, the Mydin Hypermarket understands its niche. To remain relevant in this highly competitive business, Mydin Hypermarket needs to understand its customers, reckons the capability of its competitors and be at ease with technology as a strategic tool. The question now, has Mydin found its forte?. The paper further explores. © 2010 IEEE.


English
Conference paper

author Omar N.B.; Sanusi Z.M.; Aziz N.A.; Ismail N.A.
spellingShingle Omar N.B.; Sanusi Z.M.; Aziz N.A.; Ismail N.A.
Learning from Kmart's mistakes: New improvements on Mydin Hypermarket's Business strategies
author_facet Omar N.B.; Sanusi Z.M.; Aziz N.A.; Ismail N.A.
author_sort Omar N.B.; Sanusi Z.M.; Aziz N.A.; Ismail N.A.
title Learning from Kmart's mistakes: New improvements on Mydin Hypermarket's Business strategies
title_short Learning from Kmart's mistakes: New improvements on Mydin Hypermarket's Business strategies
title_full Learning from Kmart's mistakes: New improvements on Mydin Hypermarket's Business strategies
title_fullStr Learning from Kmart's mistakes: New improvements on Mydin Hypermarket's Business strategies
title_full_unstemmed Learning from Kmart's mistakes: New improvements on Mydin Hypermarket's Business strategies
title_sort Learning from Kmart's mistakes: New improvements on Mydin Hypermarket's Business strategies
publishDate 2010
container_title CSSR 2010 - 2010 International Conference on Science and Social Research
container_volume
container_issue
doi_str_mv 10.1109/CSSR.2010.5773915
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-79959676579&doi=10.1109%2fCSSR.2010.5773915&partnerID=40&md5=79b4e29e8984838d4c3867f3abe0f8e1
description In Malaysia, the hypermarket business is an extremely competitive venture. Beside the high amount of capital that one needs to invest in, the business also exposes new players to global and well-structured competitors such as Giant, Carrefour and Tesco, to name a few. The current paper explores and describes the experiences of one Malaysian player, the Mydin Hypermarket in its quest to champion the local consumer market. A 2003 publication of a US bestseller entitled KMart's Ten Deadly Sins had a tremendous impact on the business strategy and future direction of the Mydin business in this country. Originally built in the 1990s to emulate the then highly successful K-Mart Superstore in the United States, the Mydin Business had to immediately change its business strategic direction. Premised on interviews, site visits, observation and document analysis, this article provides a qualitative narration and a discussion on the various counter strategies undertaken by the management of Mydin Hypermarket in order to avoid having to face the same fate as KMart Superstore. Today, the Mydin Hypermarket understands its niche. To remain relevant in this highly competitive business, Mydin Hypermarket needs to understand its customers, reckons the capability of its competitors and be at ease with technology as a strategic tool. The question now, has Mydin found its forte?. The paper further explores. © 2010 IEEE.
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