H-E-B homes in on growth with new decor departments

2022-08-26 22:08:22 By : Ms. Judy Xiong

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A Home by H-E-B department in one of the San Antonio company’s stores in New Braunfels.

The two-story True Texas BBQ section at and H-E-B store in New Braunfels.

The roughly 2,500-square-foot Home by H-E-B department at the company’s store at U.S. 281 and Evans Road includes over 500 items.

The roughly 2,500-square-foot Home by H-E-B department at the company’s store at U.S. 281 and Evans Road includes over 500 items.

The roughly 2,500-square-foot Home by H-E-B department at the company’s store at U.S. 281 and Evans Road includes over 500 items.

The roughly 2,500-square-foot Home by H-E-B department at the company’s store at U.S. 281 and Evans Road includes over 500 items.

The roughly 2,500-square-foot Home by H-E-B department at the company’s store at U.S. 281 and Evans Road includes over 500 items.

The roughly 2,500-square-foot Home by H-E-B department at the company’s store at U.S. 281 and Evans Road includes over 500 items.

Home by H-E-B has been in the works for nearly two years. The concept was launched in this New Braunfels store in April.

Inside the sprawling H-E-B plus! store at U.S. 281 and Evans Road, customers browse colorful throw pillows, rugs, vases, frames, chairs, ottomans, doormats and bundles of dried lavender.

Mirrors and wall hangings are displayed near table linens, lamps and plant holders below a sign that reads: “Welcome to your happy place.”

The new department, dubbed Home by H-E-B, is one of the San Antonio-based grocer’s latest moves to grow its business. While adding store locations — which it’s doing as it pushes into the Dallas-Fort Worth area — is a key avenue to growth, in mature markets like San Antonio, growth can require something new.

“Integrating higher-margin categories like home into the mix allows H-E-B to plump up profits without stepping too far out” of its geographic footprint, said Carol Spieckerman, president of retail advisory firm Spieckerman Retail, based in Bentonville, Ark. “Retailers like Walmart and Target use grocery as a traffic-driving lure that translates to sales in more profitable categories. Grocers like H-E-B can reverse that game by layering on non-grocery categories.”

The strategy is not new. Supermarket chains such as Iowa-based Hy-Vee, Ohio-based Kroger and others have experimented with new formats that add home goods, apparel and even fitness equipment. They know expansion into such non-food categories provides a means for increasing traffic, sales and profits.

H-E-B this year is pushing hard into the home goods segment. After launching the Home by H-E-B concept in April at its Walnut Avenue store in New Braunfels, the company has since expanded it to four other stores, in San Antonio, Brownsville, Burleson and Corpus Christi.

On ExpressNews.com: Inside H-E-B’s new home decor department in the swanky New Braunfels location

It plans to add it to about 27 stores across the state this year, including new stores in Frisco and Plano.

Home by H-E-B has been in the works for nearly two years, said Sabina Israelian-Garcia, the company’s group vice president of general merchandise, drug store and beauty.

“We’re always looking at new categories and always making sure that we’re putting the best in front of our customers,” she said.

At its store in San Antonio, the roughly 2,500-square-foot section within the 130,000-square-foot store includes more than 500 items and is among the largest Home by H-E-B departments.

It includes two brands: Haven + Key and Texas Proud. The former includes furniture, accent pieces and home textiles, and the latter features items made by Texas-based artisans and businesses, such as leather goods from Lucio Tailoring Co. in San Antonio.

The company is known for tailoring its stores to their surrounding areas, and the home department will be no different, Israelian-Garcia said.

Beyond local connections, H-E-B has long capitalized on the wellspring of Texas pride and its foray into home decor reflects that — wall art is emblazoned with the state flag, longhorn throw pillows are lettered with “Howdy,” and a display features “God bless Texas” signs.

On ExpressNews.com: Report: H-E-B’s grip on the San Antonio market tightened in 2021, but a new competitor is on the way

“From a product perspective and a brand perspective, we will continue to innovate and evolve as time goes on, so customers can expect continued freshness of products over time,” Israelian-Garcia said.

In the San Antonio area, where the company last opened a new store in 2020, H-E-B’s expansion into non-food categories is necessary for increasing sales and profits, retail experts said. It and other grocers are facing more competition in an industry with razor-thin margins and must move beyond traditional grocery items to grow.

“Margins on nonfood, including homewares, are much better and can bolster H-E-B’s profits,” said Neil Saunders, managing director of the retail division at London-based data analytics and consulting company GlobalData.

“If the offer is good, adding home products can help boost sales as shoppers will explore the range as they do their grocery (shopping) and will probably buy things on impulse,” Saunders said.

Amid high gasoline prices, it’s also important to customers to get more of their shopping done at a single store — “offering yet another rationale for category expansion,” said Spieckerman, the Arkansas-based consultant.

Another factor in diversification is that H-E-B has large stores, providing it with room to test various concepts, said Venky Shankar, director of research at Texas A&M University’s Center for Retailing Studies.

“They have the space, and post-pandemic when people want to indulge in looking around, why not try a few concepts?” he said.

While H-E-B has built a loyal following in part by emphasizing its Texas ties through its product assortments, competitors such as Walmart and Target are not nearly as proficient at that, said Jon Hauptman, senior director of e-commerce at Inmar Intelligence, a retail analytics company in Winston-Salem, N.C.

“They’ve built their entire business on appealing to local tastes and local needs,” Hauptman said.

On ExpressNews.com: H-E-B beats out Amazon and Walmart as top the U.S. online grocery retailer, a new study finds

But new product lines come with new challenges. Managing housewares and decor involves a different business model than managing groceries, Hauptman added.

The speed at which an item is put on a shelf and purchased is much longer for nonfood items, and higher gross margins are necessary to offset higher costs of bringing in and handling those items, he said.

“By bringing in the right people to do it and dedicating the resources and space in the store, it is possible to do it very well,” Hauptman said. “But it’s not easy.”

H-E-B has experimented with other departments inside its stores.

Along with Home by H-E-B, the store at U.S. 281 and Evans includes nearly 4,000 square feet devoted to beauty items.

The company added the department in 2019. It includes cosmetics, hair products and skin care, along with test stations and an interactive screen where customers can pose for photos.

H-E-B’s store in New Braunfels has the company’s first two-story True Texas BBQ restaurant, which provides another stream of customers who may come for a bite and stay to pick up groceries.

It also has small shops at some of its stores: Mia’s Mirror, Bonita Brows Bar, Diamond Decks and River City Flooring.

On ExpressNews.com: The 5 best shops inside H-E-B Plus! stores in San Antonio

And the company is pursuing other avenues to boost its bottom line.

H-E-B is opening more health clinics, which offer primary care, nutrition and pharmacy services, and physical therapy.

In May, it added its first clinic in Austin after opening locations in San Antonio and Houston, and said it “plans on rapidly expanding throughout Texas with both primary care and nutrition services over the next few years.”

The clinic openings are reflective of “retailers’ pushes into solutions and services, particularly in health and wellness,” Spieckerman said.

Also in Austin, H-E-B’s Central Market in April opened what it calls a “meatless butcher,” the company’s response to increasing demand for plant-based foods. If it works there, it could be rolled out to H-E-B’s other stores.

The company is also investing in curbside and delivery services by building more facilities and devoting more square footage within its stores to stocking and preparing orders.

On ExpressNews.com: Even as H-E-B invests in pickup, delivery, stores, a report shows it lost ground in S.A.

“Convenience is another major expansion area for retailers,” and curbside and delivery services “add to H-E-B’s convenience arsenal,” Spieckerman said.

Such moves are important as competition keeps growing for online shoppers. In recent days, for example, Kroger has re-entered San Antonio with a delivery-only service.

H-E-B opened an e-commerce fulfillment center in Leander in mid-July, the fifth it has constructed since 2018. The company plans to add more such facilities across Texas, including in Plano, as it pushes into the Dallas-Fort Worth market with its first namesake stores.

It has operated its upscale Central Market stores in North Texas since 2001 but not H-E-B stores. Its namesake stores in Frisco and Plano are scheduled to open later this year, and two others under construction in McKinney and Allen are slated to be finished next summer.

H-E-B also continues to expand in its existing markets, including in the San Antonio area. New stores in Cibolo and near Fair Oaks Ranch are in the works.

Madison Iszler covers real estate, retail, economic development, and other business topics for the San Antonio Express-News.

Reach Madison at 210-250-3242, madison.iszler@express-news.net and @madisoniszler.