muganda wrote:Okay maybe you don't shop at Bata, but another company worth touting, not in a very different line is DEACONS.
Have these guys grown in the Kibaki government or what? Within the last couple of years from nowhere Mr.Price and Mr.Price Home taking over all malls....
@muganda; Deacons did not come from nowhere!! It's a very old enterprise, dating back to the colonial days - used to be known as "Dodwell East Africa Cash On Nails Store" or something like that. Ownership has changed over the years and so has the strategy.
In the 70s and 80s, Deacons was a country-wide middle-income family fashion house with branches in every major town. I do recall going there from Christmas outfits as a young boy in the 70s.
They used to stock mainly Kenyan-made clothes [Yuken, His & Manhattan shirts; Raymond's suits; etc]. Bata was also in the same category - almost every mid-income child went to school in
Bata PrefectsThen Moi opened the mtumba clothes floodgates and Kenya textiles cam crumbling down like dominos! Deacons [and Bata] almost collapsed due to lack of supplies and stiff [and unfair] competition from the mtush.
Both had to re-think and they came up with similar strategies - they up-scaled themselves to the upper class and started stocking goods way out of reach for the middle class. They both closed many of their branches to consolidate their positions.
Deacons went the franchise way - picking up the Woolworths brand when they pulled out [do you recall that the Nakumatt Downtown premises was a Woolworths Supermarket in the mid 80s?]
Bata scaled down their local production [almost closing down the Limuru factory] and instead relied on imported superior brands [Clarks, CART etc]
The trick worked [albeit, two-and-a-half decades later] and today they are now expanding as the economy grows and more people get into the upper income bracket [6-figure salaries - sh100k+]
As of August last year, Bata had 75 branches and they are still growing
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