What makes Augusta So Boring? Is it because of the multiple chain stores being built in our city yearly, or because we’ve had not yet explored all the things there are to do. We may be focused too much on chain stores and not the actual city and the things that are offered. For some who may have lived in a certain place all their life they may tend to feel that the city they reside in can get boring at times. “In Praise of Chains” by Virginia Postrel she states that “Stores don’t give places there character” (p347). And I agree with that statement, chain stores do not define the city, chain stores have not turned Augusta into a boring city a boring city because of the variety, familiarity, and history. First and foremost chain stores offer …show more content…
When I travel anywhere it feels good seeing all the familiar chain stores that I am so use to seeing almost everyday like KFC, Target or Taco bell. I can never forget a few years visiting my cousin in Athens for the first time and he was showing me the town and I got so excited when I seen the Georgia Dome For the first time and he say’s “Why are you so excited about seeing it, it’s here everyday” And Now That I come to think about it, He was a local so everything that was new to me he probably has seen it over a thousand times already but that’s only because he lived there all his life and he is familiar with it.
Third Chain stores add to our rich history in Augusta such as our historical cites like The masters tournament, James brown arena, the Augusta canal and the Augusta museum of history just naming a few but while visiting some of these places you come across a few chain stores that may be located around them you may go grab a quick bite to eat or do a little shopping once leaving one of those places. To conclude Variety, Familiarity, and history are reasons why chain stores have not made Augusta boring in my opinion it kind of gives Augusta some kind of uniqueness, chain stores are everywhere “When those kids grow up, they’ll remember the food court as happily as an older generation recalls the diners and motels of Route 66 not because of businesses’ innate appeal
Ron Johnson spent a great deal of time and money to promote his ideas of “stores-within-stores” by turning floor space into an area to house several branded boutiques. He did this in order to attract a target market of a wider demographic which includes age, gender, and generation. One of the m...
Super Markets are few and far between in the south. There are plenty of different variations within a very small region that when one becomes your favorite it’s usually because if convenience. However throughout the local community of Jacksonville and most of Florida, Publix Super Markets have made a very valuable impression on its current consumers. Founded by George W. Jenkins on the idea of what makes a company successful is how they takes care of their customers but also their employees. Publix being one of the top eight privately traded companies in this industry as labeled by Forbes America’s Largest Private Companies List leaves those asking what makes Publix so different.
Each person has a place that calls to them, a house, plot of land, town, a place that one can call home. It fundamentally changes a person, becoming a part of who they are. The old summer cabins, the bedroom that was always comfortable, the library that always had a good book ready. The places that inspire a sense of nostalgic happiness, a place where nothing can go wrong.
After my assigned nightly reading, the biggest idea about the book Chains by Laurie Halse Anderson, was what does the scar symbolize? I thought the scar meant power, because it shows how Isabel is strong. “This is my country mark.”(286), said by Isabel. This quote is showing how Isabel finds out that this scar makes her strong and how she was her fathers daughter. What I’m trying to say is the scar changes from showing pain, now the scar makes her stronger. When Isabel was looking at the mirror she said, “This mark stands for Isabel.”(286) This made Isabel believe that the scar wasn’t bad, but it was a good thing. She has to go through pain to find freedom, and to be shown that she has hope.
Now, a normal sized town contains fast-food joints, supermarkets, malls, and superstores, but a small town lacks that appeal. The small-town could be the most beautiful landscape known to man, but lack the necessary luxuries in life that a typical American would benefit from. Carr and Kefalas make this statement that emphasizes the town’s lack of appeal, “Indeed the most conspicuous aspects of the towns landscape may be the very things that are missing; malls, subdivisions, traffic and young people” (26). The authors clearly state that they realize that towns, such as the Heartland, are hurting because of the towns’ lack of modernization. For all intents and purposes, the town’s lack of being visually pleasing is driving away probable citizens, not only the native youth, and possible future employee’s away from a possible internship with the town. The citizens with a practice or business hurt from the towns inability to grow up and change along with the rest of the world, yet the town doesn’t realize what bringing in other businesses could potentially do for their small town. Creating more businesses such as malls, superstores and supermarkets would not only drive business up the roof, but it’ll also bring in revenue and draw the
Over the years, the American department store has developed and evolved as not only a commercial business but also a cultural institution. While it has weathered many storms and changes since its inception and throughout history, its most predominant enemy has been a change in the lifestyle of the American people (Whitaker, 2013). As the customer’s needs and wants have shifted, department stores have struggled to keep up with demands. It has been argued that the decline of the department store has been ongoing for the last 50 years (Whitaker, 2013). This dissertation aims to understand how the department store has historically played a role in consumer culture and spending, and additionally, how this has evolved and changed in today’s retail market. Although department stores may not be able to take all the credit for inventing modern shopping, they certainly made its conventions and conveniences commonplace. They set a new standard for the way the consumer should expect to be treated, the type of services that should be provided, and the convenience that should attend the process of acquiring the necessities and niceties of life all in one place. They made shopping into a leisure pastime. This environment meant shopping was a means of freedom to look around, pick up objects with no obligations to buy. As one historian remarked, department stores: “encouraged a perception of the building as a public place, where consumption itself was almost incidental to the delights of a sheltered promenade in a densely crowded, middle-class urban space” (Whitaker, 2006). Although this perception and view of the department store has changed over the years, this paper aims to follow the trail of how and why that happened.
Publix Super Markets, Inc. is a Florida-based grocery chain that has flourished since its inception in 1930. The first store opened in Winter Haven, Florida and to this day Publix has expanded to well over 1,000 stores in Florida, Georgia, South Carolina, Alabama and Tennessee. The supermarket chain now boasts over $25 billion in sales annually (Mujtaba and Johnson, 2012). To withstand the test of time and develop such a stronghold on the market, Publix has excelled in its global business community or macroenvironment, as well as its market environment or microenvironment.
I walked into the front of the store to see a crowd of people searching for a good grocery cart. One that wouldn’t wobble every second that you pushed it. I took a look at many of the faces as they were beginning or ending their shopping experience. The people walking in looking for a cart seemed unsure or not pleased to be there in the first place. While the people leaving looked happy and eager to get home. I took this as a clear sign that this was not the most enjoyable place to ...
Part of what makes Publix more inviting is the look of their stores. They have a cool vintage look
In general merchandise retailing, Wal-Mart’s primary competitors are Target and Kmart. Retail superstores such as Circuit City and Bed, Bath, and Beyond, also provide retail competition. A survey found that the majority of respondents favored Wal-Mart over stores like Target and Kmart. Respondents claimed Wal-Mart offered lower prices, better variety and selection, and good quality. The needs of consumers is an important economic feature in all competitive environments. What attributes (price, variety, quality, etc.) prompt buyers to choose one retailer over another is very important in the competitive landscape.
The survey offers insight into shopper partiality toward each store identifying the general attitude for the respondents toward each shopping area. Survey results were captured through a telephone based survey of 150 local residents conducted by the Archimedes Group, Indiana, PA (Weiers, 2008).
During the Great Depression, while the competitors were cutting costs and reusing outdated designs, Kress was expanding and building more elaborate stores than their previous ones. The architecture was referred to as an “emporium” evoking an elegant atmosphere more suited to a fine cloth or furniture store in New York rather than the five & dime stores dotting small town America. Many wonder what the driving force was behind these design decisions, especially during a national time of economic recession. Perhaps simply to outpace the competition, but perhaps more importantly Samuel Kress was an avid art collector and a proponent of public art enhancing a community. In this way the Kress legacy of the brand became more than a retail business, it became a symbol of small town civic pride.
Growing up in Midwest America, there is not much to look at. The trees, fields of grass, rolling hills, and small towns offer a dull environment for a teenager. There are hardly any monuments, sculptures, or architectural feats to gaze at in admiration. Ultimately, the Midwest appears very mundane. This monotonous landscape seems to push the idea of a typical lifestyle of conformity; one that customarily consists of attending school, finding a career, and settling down with a family. To fully procure an awareness and acceptance of different lifestyles, one must travel. Whether from town to town or on the other side of the planet, traveling allows a person to see the different cultures, beliefs, and beauties that make up our world; I believe in traveling.
If a person is to walk into a Wal-Mart most people can agree that it is a very convenient store having a wide variety of not only beverages and food, but other sections as well. The store has cosmetics, toys, electronic devices, crafts, and clothes. This happens to not only be half of what the store actually carries. This makes Wal-Mart the perfect shopping place to pick up all needs from garden utensils and plants as well as a new TV for a super bowl with their layaway feature! To top it all off this super store is open twenty four hours a day for any purchase that needs to be made. It is four in the morning and forgot the year anniversary is in the morning! Not to worry! Wal-Mart is open to pick up a diamond necklace and a set of matching earrings. Making Wal-Mart one of the superstores that anyone could really want in their town. All in all Wal-Mart is a phenomenal store to have in a town especially with lowest prices around. These examples are the only positive reasons for having a Wal-Mart being placed where an average of 179,000 square feet of trees are supposed to reside, but they are not just trees. They are
Looking back on a childhood filled with events and memories, I find it rather difficult to pick on that leaves me with the fabled “warm and fuzzy feelings.” As the daughter of an Air Force Major, I had the pleasure of traveling across America in many moving trips. I have visited the monstrous trees of the Sequoia National Forest, stood on the edge of the Grande Canyon and have jumped on the beds at Caesar’s Palace in Lake Tahoe. However, I have discovered that when reflecting on my childhood, it is not the trips that come to mind, instead there are details from everyday doings; a deck of cards, a silver bank or an ice cream flavor.