Culture Kmart Ditches 'Plus-Sized' For 'Fabulously Sized' Amid Bold Expansion Of Larger Sizes - Only the perfect way to attract potential customers

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Kmart Ditches 'Plus-Sized' For 'Fabulously Sized' Amid Bold Expansion Of Larger Sizes
Courtesy of Kmart

Kmart boasts it’s now the only U.S. retailer to extend the sizing in all of its apparel brands and product categories.


Kmart’s new apparel ad campaign is all about celebrating — not marginalizing — “plus sized” women while putting that full-figure label to rest for good.

In the tradition of Dove’s buzzy and groundbreaking "Real Beauty" campaign, Kmart’s new "I Can” ad push fetes women of all shapes and sizes and marks the expansion of its signature brands — from Joe Boxer and Basic Editions to Jaclyn Smith — to larger sizes such as 1X and 5X.

With this move, Kmart boasts it’s now the only U.S. retailer to extend the sizing in all of its apparel brands and product categories, including intimates, swimwear, and even footwear in wider widths, Kelly Cook, chief marketing officer of the 432-store chain, told me.

Integral to this “inclusive apparel movement” is the rebranding of Kmart's “plus-sized” section to the “fabulously sized” moniker based on feedback from shoppers. To that end, the discounter is taking down plus-sized signage in stores nationwide and replacing it with new rack toppers in stores that read “Fabulously Sized,” as it rewrites marketing materials.


Campaign Launches Amid The Backdrop Of An Imperiled Retailer

The “I Can” campaign and apparel revamp come at a business in long decline in the grip of Sears Holdings.





Sears' sales have been plummeting for about a decade, as it bleeds market share and shutters stores at both Sears and Kmart. For the most quarter recent ended July 29, Kmart’s comparable store sales fell 9.4%.

When asked about the outlook for Kmart’s also down trending apparel business, Cook said the retailer is eliminating underperforming lines, but wouldn’t elaborate; refreshing assortments more frequently; and marketing head-to-toe looks to boost business. Apparel bright spots include its off-price “Deal Flash” area launched this year, and growth from athleisure wear and “fabulously-sized” merchandise, she said.

By adding larger size options to its brand mix, full-figured shoppers can find everything from casual, basic fare to “date night” looks, like “a little black dress in a size 18,” Cook says.

The size expansion and the message of the T.V. and digital "I Can” campaign, which launched on Sept. 10, reflects input from Kmart’s Shop Your Way loyalty consumers, whose members account for about three-quarters of its sales.

"When we reached out to our members on social media, they told us we needed to have a better assortment and that we should we call it something different,” Cook said. “They absolutely love this whole mantra of ‘Fabulously Sized.’”

What’s more, shoppers polled said they wanted their clothes to engender feelings of confidence, empowerment, body positivity and self expression—“to feel like I’m Oprah, and I can conquer the world,” in the words of one shopper.

That verbiage is reflected in the campaign, which dovetails with a trend in the market towards what Kmart calls “diversity promotion.”

It’s no secret that despite the fact that the average American female is a size 16, women sized 12 and up have been treated as second-class citizens in the clothing aisle. Designers have long turned their noses up at extending their product range to larger sizes, and while that’s been changing, the dearth of apparel choices remain.

Full-figure women account for a healthy 22% of Kmart’s consumers and are loyal shoppers: Over 32% shop the chain 11 times or more a year, according to the company.

Kmart says plus-sized departments are “let downs” offering limited styles, patterns and prints, and the retailer is looking to level the playing field. Still, the plus-sized market is getting more crowded, with hipper players from H&M to ModCloth competing in the space.

Kmart enjoys “a strong niche,” according to Cook. “We have incredible, entry-level price points [and brands] for every sort of fabulously sized woman’s closet. From trendy to more conservative looks,” she said. And now “We’re no longer restricting women in their choices or alienating them due to their size.”
 
I guess it's the opposite for me since I've had Kmart all my life, there has yet to be a Walmart in my section of town at all, though they kept trying to open one at a township that kept saying "NO!" a lot (old people and their ways, it's always about traffic).

They have a valid point, too. When WalMart comes to town, they cause a lot of things to shut down because it's hard to compete with them.
 
They have a valid point, too. When WalMart comes to town, they cause a lot of things to shut down because it's hard to compete with them.
This area doesn't really have competition at all, it used to be really rural for decades until the end of the 20th century and it's gotten pretty suburban (just being across the state line from me). The best they now have is a Kroger Marketplace location that is very bloated and I find myself a little bewildered going there, but I guess that's how these hypermarkets work.
 
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Those are owned by a separate company.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kmart_Australia

You be surprised how many former American establishments manage to still thrive elsewhere, like Woolworth's in Mexico!
https://www.woolworth.com.mx/


I would say it was a bad idea to merge those two from the start.

EDIT: Both stores had different philosophies that kinda got destroyed thanks to the approach the ended up going (shopping carts at Sears is one example).
Mannequin was filmed at Woolworth's! Boys II men still keepin' up the beat!
https://youtu.be/FOCjeDOFGxI
 
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Mannequin was filmed at Woolworth's! Boys II men still keepin' up the beat!
Hmmm, didn't know that! Thought it was a basic fancy flagship location. Have to watch that again someday to see.

For me, the best memories of Woolworth's was tormenting the parakeets and hamsters, they were always stuck in open bins near the toys section!
 
If Kmart want's to save itself step one shoudl be to make it look like a riot hasn't just happened in their store. I haven't been into a Kmart in years that looks clean, new, or organized in years. Its like stepping back to the 80's
Yeah, ours closed a few years back.
It was always a mess. Clothes all over the floor, ceiling tiles water-stained or missing, two registers open on a busy Saturday, clerks not giving a shit, garbage all over the place, and so on.
Last time I went there, people were pushing their carts over clothes strewn on the floor.
 
Yeah, ours closed a few years back.
It was always a mess. Clothes all over the floor, ceiling tiles water-stained or missing, two registers open on a busy Saturday, clerks not giving a shit, garbage all over the place, and so on.
Last time I went there, people were pushing their carts over clothes strewn on the floor.
It's a shame when they even open up the underwear packages as often there'll be one missing in those packs. I suppose we live in a world where people don't really respect everyone else's property these days.
 
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