Harvey Norman

Harvey Norman Holdings Limited
Public (ASX: HVN)
Industry Retail: Computer, Electrical, Furniture and Bedding goods
Founded Auburn, New South Wales (October 1982); 33 years ago
Founder Gerry Harvey
Ian Norman
Headquarters Homebush West, New South Wales, Australia
Number of locations

194 (Australian, franchised)

86 (overseas, company owned)
Key people
Gerry Harvey, Chairman/Co-Founder
Ian Norman, Co-Founder
John Slack-Smith, Chief Operating Officer
Katie Page, Managing Director
Chris Mentis, Chief Financial Officer
Revenue IncreaseA$7.76 billion (2011)
Including revenue from franchisees
IncreaseA$417 million (2011)
IncreaseA$252 million (2011)
Number of employees
Est. 10,000 (Australia Only)
407 (Homebush West Headquarters) (29 September 2006)
Slogan Go Harvey, Go!
Website www.harveynorman.com.au (AU)
www.harveynorman.co.nz (NZ)
Footnotes / references
[1]

Harvey Norman is a large Australian-based, multi-national retailer of furniture, bedding, computers, communications and consumer electrical products. It mainly operates as a franchise[2](except stores outside Australia), with the main brand and all company-operated stores owned by ASX-listed Harvey Norman Holdings Limited.[3] As of 2016, there are 280 company-owned and franchised stores in Australia,[4] New Zealand, Europe and South-East Asia operating under the Harvey Norman, Domayne and Joyce Mayne brands in Australia, and under the Harvey Norman brand overseas.[5]

History

Gerry Harvey and Ian Norman opened their first store in 1961, which specialised in electrical goods and appliances.[6] Harvey and Norman had first met when both were working as door-to-door vacuum cleaner salesmen.[6] The store's success prompted Harvey and Norman to expand the business and conduct talks with retailer Keith Lord, who sought to expand his own retail group. They could not settle on a name for the new business, with Harvey and Lord reluctant to take on the other's name. They eventually decided to retain Norman's name and that of its first store manager, Peter Ross. This spawned the retail chain Norman Ross.[7]

Norman Ross became one of the largest appliance retail chains and by 1979 controlled 42 stores with sales exceeding A$240 million.[6][8] In the early 1980s, Alan Bond and Grace Bros. sought to acquire the chain, spawning a bidding war that saw Grace Bros incorporate the chain in 1982. Three weeks later however, a determined Alan Bond successfully convinced the Grace Bros. director Michael Grace to sell the chain to Bond. Shortly after, Harvey and Norman were given notice and redundancy package of six months pay. Reasons for their sacking were not publicised, although Harvey later told The Daily Telegraph:

I said I wished Alan Bond would pack up his marbles and go back to Perth. Then I got a telegram telling me I was sacked.
Gerry Harvey[7]

Norman Ross later went into liquidation in 1992.[9] In October 1982, Harvey and Norman purchased a new shopping centre in outer Sydney suburb Auburn for A$3 million, and opened the first Harvey Norman store. The enterprise was intended to be a single store but its success led to the opening of others. Harvey Norman Holdings Limited was listed on the Australian stock market on 3 September 1987.

In the early 1990s, Harvey Norman adopted the superstore format then successful in the United States and entered the computer and furniture markets. The first computer superstore was opened at Bennetts Green, Newcastle in late 1993 with much fanfare. This was later followed by the opening several weeks later with a larger superstore at Auburn (Sydney, NSW). Many stores later expanded their computer sections. Much support was provided by distributors such as Merisel, Dataflow, Tech Pacific, and Marketing Results. Extra support and funding was supplied by vendors (supplied by these distributors) such as Microsoft, Corel, Symantec, WordPerfect, etc. Staff also received weekly training from companies on a constant basis in order to provide better product knowledge (than similar larger retailers). Harvey Norman also sold Apple Computer products for several years, until Apple decided in the late 1990s to no longer supply Harvey Norman. Apple returned in 2004 with the iPod range, which later expanded into iPads, iPhones, iMacs etc. The launch of Windows 95 was a huge success with a few Sydney stores opening at midnight. This came with a bonus pack. Some regional areas opened at 6 AM. This was also the realisation that the CD was taking over. Demand for the CD version was under-estimated. The bonus back featured Harvard Graphics on CD, as well as an introductory Internet offer from OzEmail.

A Norman Ross store was opened at Bennetts Green in 1995, with the purpose of being a clearance centre. This had mixed results, and was closed within 12 months. This however paved the way for the Bennetts Green store to expand into larger premises in 1996, where the store operates today. Part of the relocation was a dedicated educational centre, named Kidscape. Specialist employees were employed from Dataflow, to provide advice to parents on which software was best for their child. Kidscape was installed at a number of stores; however, it was disbanded at a number of stores, within two years.

A number of stores also opened early for the Windows 98 launch. This included a number of offers (including an SPC CD with Harvard Graphics, Quicken etc.). Other products were promoted at $98, such as modems, printers etc.

Harvey Norman has relied on 'bricks & mortar' as its strength. When suppliers (such as Compaq and IBM) started supplying direct, Harvey Norman stopped selling those products in-store. After Compaq later stopped selling direct, Harvey Norman returned to selling Compaq PC products.

Harvey Norman growth came organically until it acquired Joyce Mayne in 1998. A number of electrical stores in Western Australia, some of which were owned by Wesfarmers, were purchased. Further acquisitions followed and by 2000 the chain had 100 stores. In 2006, Retravision was struggling, and a number of Retravision stores were acquired by Harvey Norman. These were later converted to either Harvey Norman or Joyce Mayne stores. The stores that were not successful were closed down. [10]

A Harvey Norman superstore in Wagga Wagga, New South Wales

Company structure

Harvey Norman's operating structure is unusual in that each store department (bedding, furniture, computer and electrical) is operated by a separate entity of management. Thus many superstores are a combination of three or four separate businesses managed independently contributing revenue to Harvey Norman Holdings Ltd. through lease payments and a portion of sales.[11] Overseas, Harvey Norman stores are directly owned and operated by the ASX-listed, Sydney-based parent company, Harvey Norman Holdings Limited. However, sales commissions are still heavily used across all departments of the store to motivate salespeople, drive sales and improve service.

Retail marketing consultant Kevin Moore argues that this 'high reward-based remuneration structure' drives Harvey Norman's point of difference and is what contributes, at least partly, to its retail dominance. "Almost all the people in a Harvey Norman are there because they are great salespeople, can propose solutions for customers and are paid in line with what they sell... So when you walk into a Harvey Norman, the guys on the floor have a real reason to help you. You walk away happy at the end of the day having spent money with them. And so do the staff because some of the money you left in the store goes to them... for helping you solve a problem in your life." [11]

Harvey Norman

Harvey Norman is the flagship brand of Harvey Norman Holdings Pty Ltd. Harvey Norman is mainly a household goods retailer - with items being sold in their stores including major appliances, small appliances, information technology (such as computers, printers and mobile phones), furniture and bedding among other things. There are 166 Harvey Norman franchised complexes in Australia, as at the 30th of June 2015, with separate franchisees owning and operating separate departments. New South Wales is the state with the most Harvey Norman stores (57), followed by Victoria (38), Queensland (36), Western Australia (19), South Australia (10), Tasmania (6), Northern Territory (2) and the Australian Capital Territory (1).

Harvey Norman in the Queen Street Mall, Brisbane

Home renovations

Harvey Norman Design and Renovations is a subsidiary of Harvey Norman Holdings Limited. The design and renovations arm of the company specialises in bathroom, kitchen, wardrobe, home office, bars and home theatre renovations, and featured showroom franchises in Victoria, South Australia and New South Wales. The Victorian and South Australian outlets have since closed, leaving 5 New South Wales outlets in operation.

Domayne

Domayne is a furniture, bedding and homewares chain independently operated by franchisees (and whose brand is owned by Harvey Norman Holdings Ltd). They focus on 'fashion and design' in their furniture range, with a hallmark of theirs being their range of 'contemporary', Australian-made furniture. While their focus is on furniture and bedding, certain outlets (such as former Joyce Mayne stores) also stock electrical goods and computers as well as higher-end cooking appliances.[12][13] As of the 30th of June 2015, there are 18 Domayne franchised complexes Australia-wide, with 12 in New South Wales, 3 in Queensland, 2 in Victoria and 1 in the Australian Capital Territory.

Joyce Mayne

Joyce Mayne (slogan: Where the smart money shops) is a retail chain offering similar products to Harvey Norman. They mainly offer whitegoods, small appliances, stationery and IT products (such as mobile phones, computers and printers).[14] There are 7 Joyce Mayne stores left in Australia as of the 30th of June 2015 - 5 in Queensland and 2 in New South Wales.

Stationery

In August 2007, market analysts suggested Harvey Norman would launch a rival "big-box" stationery and office supplies competitor to Officeworks before June 2008. Harvey Norman has registered the brand name OFIS and as a result of the acquisition of former Megamart and Retravision stores, has access to well-placed potential sites on which to open Officeworks-sized outlets.[15] In December 2007, Harvey Norman announced it would be opening its first two OFIS stores in Albury and the Sydney suburb of Auburn in March 2008. They aimed to have 100 stores within ten years.[16] In all, five OFIS outlets were established, but proved unprofitable and in February 2009 Harvey Norman stated it would close all of the stores by June 2009 and abandon the concept.[17]

The School Locker

School Locker is aimed at primary and high school students, selling school uniforms, stationary as well as sports and musical equipment. There is 2 big box style retail stores in NSW and 4 in Queensland in addition to a dozen School Campus Stores. [18]

BiG BUYS

There is four BiG BUYS in Australia, that are in Springvale, VIC, Cambridge, TAS, Munno Para, SA and Auburn, NSW. They sell most Harvey Norman's range, plus music instruments, camping gear, luggage, pet and baby products. BiG BUYS also has an online store via Harvey Normans.[19]

International

Harvey Norman store at Millenia Walk Singapore

As of the 30th of June 2015, Harvey Norman Holdings' overseas operations (all conducted under the Harvey Norman brand) are in[5]

Excepting Malaysia and Singapore, all overseas operations are directly owned and operated by Harvey Norman Holdings Ltd. or its associated companies.

The Harvey Norman stores in Malaysia and Singapore are ultimately owned and operated by a Singaporean company, Pertama Holdings Limited. Harvey Norman Holdings Ltd. and its associated companies effectively own 80.2% of the company, with a Singaporean sporting goods and fashion distributor, Ossia International, holding 19.8%.[20] Formerly listed on the Singapore Exchange (SGX), on July 8, 2013, it was finally delisted after the proportion of shares in free float fell below 10%. Under the former ownership structure, as of July 2013 Harvey Norman Singapore (a wholly owned subsidiary of ASX-listed Harvey Norman Holdings Ltd.) and Harvey Norman Ossia (Asia) Ltd. - a 60/40 joint-venture with Ossia International - had held over 83% of Pertama's shares.[21]

The 86 company-owned overseas stores of Harvey Norman contributed around 10%, or AU$36.5 million, of the parent company's AU$378 million profit in the financial year ended 30 June 2015 - an increase of 32% from the previous financial year. This excludes the financial impact of the overseas property Harvey Norman owns for its stores. New Zealand operations were the only one to have recorded a rise in profit over the last financial year (from AU$49.75 million to AU$53.11 million), with operations in Slovenia and Croatia posting a small profit decline (from AU$3.02 million to AU$2.70 million) and all other overseas operations recording losses.[5]

Norman Ross

Harvey Norman Holdings Ltd previously operated Norman Ross stores in New Zealand. The first store opened on 4 December 2007 in Lower Hutt. All Norman Ross stores were rebranded as Harvey Norman in February 2013.[22]

Online store

On 22 December 2011, Harvey Norman launched Harvey Norman Direct Import based in Ireland to ship games to buyers in Australia.[23] The prices for video games are cheaper than the Australia-based online store of Harvey Norman.[24]

Controversies and criticism

Relationship with Flexirent

Flexirent has had very close ties to Harvey Norman since 1995 and is heavily marketed in stores. Flexirent is alleged to have strong elements of predatory lending practices.[38][39]

In addition, Gerry Harvey has himself asserted on primetime Australian television in a January 2008 airing of Today Tonight that Flexirent should be turned down by the average family. This is despite Harvey Norman's indiscriminate promotion of the product onto its entire customer base.[40]

Sponsorship

Harvey Norman's major sponsorships include

Sponsorship of Rugby League dates back to the ARL competition in 1997.

See also

References

  1. "2011 Full Year Results". Retrieved 1 September 2011.
  2. "Company Profile". Harvey Norman (Generic Publications Pty Limited). Retrieved 7 February 2013.
  3. "Harvey Norman Corporate Profile". Archived from the original on 2007-06-21. Retrieved 2007-06-25.
  4. "Harvey Norman Store Finder". Harvey Norman Online. Retrieved 7 February 2013.
  5. 1 2 3 "Harvey Norman Holdings Limited 2015 Annual Report" (PDF).
  6. 1 2 3 Greenblat, Eli (2014-05-29). "Harvey Norman co-founder Ian Norman dies". Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 2014-06-25.
  7. 1 2 "Harvey Norman Holdings Ltd - Company History". Funding Universe. Retrieved 2009-02-04.
  8. Carter, Bridget (2014-05-31). "Harvey Norman co-founder Ian Norman dies at 75". The Australian. Retrieved 2014-06-25.
  9. "Harvey looks to bring back Norman Ross brand in NZ". Retrieved 2008-12-25.
  10. "Official Company Profile - History" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-04-21. Retrieved 2007-06-25.
  11. 1 2 A, Moogy. "Clive Peeters an eeeasy model for success to Harvey Norman - SmartCompany". SmartCompany. Retrieved 2016-04-21.
  12. "About Us". Domayne Online. Retrieved 2016-04-21.
  13. NORRIS, SAM. "Joyce Mayne becomes Domayne at Rutherford". The Maitland Mercury. Retrieved 2016-04-21.
  14. "About joyce Mayne Online | Joyce Mayne Australia". www.joycemayne.com.au. Retrieved 2016-04-21.
  15. "Harvey will get into stationery". Sydney Morning Herald. 30 August 2007. Retrieved 2007-08-30.
  16. "Harvey to take on Officeworks". The Australian. 4 December 2007. Retrieved 2008-12-19.
  17. "Harvey Norman closes five OFIS stores". The Age (Melbourne). 3 February 2009. Retrieved 2009-02-03.
  18. theschoollocker.com.au/
  19. http://www.harveynorman.com.au/big-buys/
  20. "CORPORATE | Ossia International Limited". www.ossia.com.sg. Retrieved 2016-04-21.
  21. migration. "Electronics company Pertama Holdings told to delist from SGX, exit offer to be made". The Straits Times. Retrieved 2016-04-21.
  22. "Norman Ross to become Harvey Norman". Manawatu Standard. Retrieved 20 April 2013.
  23. "Harvey Norman launches online game-seller site, in competition with own stores". The Courier-Mail. 22 December 2011.
  24. Cook, Henrietta (22 December 2011). "Harvey Norman peddles GST-free computer games". The Sydney Morning Herald.
  25. "Harvey Norman undertakings after catalogue advertising errors". Retrieved 2007-06-25.
  26. "ACCC institutes against Harvey Norman Holdings Pty Ltd.". Retrieved 2007-06-25.
  27. "Today in the press". RTÉ News. 27 November 2008.
  28. McDonald, Gary (2008-11-26). "Tycoon faces Irish backlash over potato famine remarks". The Irish News. Archived from the original on 6 July 2009.
  29. "Harvey regrets his Norman invasion". Irish Independent. 27 November 2008.
  30. "Live News". Business World. 2 December 2008. Archived from the original on 6 July 2009.
  31. "Recession likened to potato famine". 3 December 2008. Archived from the original on 26 May 2011.
  32. "Harvey Norman chief unapologetic over ‘potato famine’ jibe". Irish Echo. 2 December 2008. Archived from the original on 5 December 2008.
  33. "ACTIVISTS SCALE SYDNEY OPERA HOUSE". Yahoo7.
  34. 1 2 Ferguson, John (9 February 2012), Kim Carr hammers GetUp! ad campaign, AAP, retrieved 12 February 2012
  35. Penberthy, David (12 February 2012), A campaign without a leg to stand on, The Punch, retrieved 12 February 2012
  36. "Harvey Norman fined $1.25m over misleading TV ads". News Limited. 9 December 2011. Retrieved 2011-12-09.
  37. "Offshore tax move could backfire". Fairfax Limited. 7 January 2011. Retrieved 2011-01-07.
  38. "Flexirent Deals Require a Long Hard Look" (PDF) (Press release). ACT Office Of Regulatory Services. December 2006. Retrieved 2013-02-07.
  39. The Micah Law Centre (2007), A Loan In Lease Clothing: Problems identified with instalment-based rent/purchase contracts for household goods (PDF), Greensborough, Melbourne, Australia
  40. Pape, Scott (16 February 2008), "Get tough, Wayne (Barefoot Investor editorial)", Herald Sun

External links

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