Gazette

J.C. Penney closes the book on hefty catalogs

THE DALLAS MORNING NEWS

DALLAS — J.C. Penney's "Big Book" is dead — a victim of shoppers' growing reliance on the Internet.

Plano, Texas,-based Penney confirmed that its fall/winter 2009 catalog is its last semiannual, telephone-book-size volume.

The Internet has made the 1,000-page shopping venue obsolete, and printing and transportation costs have been rising annually. The move also improves Penney's environmental footprint, reducing its catalog paper use by 30 percent next year.

Smaller, more frequent mailings of specialty catalogs targeting customers' shopping habits make more sense today, said Mike Boylson, Penney's chief marketing officer.

"It became a very ineffective way to communicate to our customers," he said. "It forced us to bring product in too early and locked in pricing. It was an outdated way of shopping and the last big book in America."

Penney has catalogs supporting its large home-goods business, including its private label Cooks kitchen catalog and Rooms Babies Love. Along with several women's and men's apparel catalogs, the company determined that shoppers increasingly use catalogs as "look books" and inspiration for their store and online purchases.

In the last two years, Penney consolidated its buying and marketing teams, which previously operated separately for stores, catalog and Internet sales.

"We had two buyers of everything, like Noah's Ark," he said. "The biggest, more important store items weren't even in the catalog."

Big Book sales have been on a decline since 2000 as more shoppers turn to jcp.com. Penney's online sales hit $1 billion a year in 2006.

"It has an aging customer. Younger customers don't shop the Big Book," Boylson said.


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