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Local Sears closing its doors

Jeremy77

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My local (Mobile, Al. ) Sears has announced that they will be closing in Sept. Liquidation "sale" is to begin tomorrow, the 17th. I'm one of the few here who still shop their tool/lawn and garden dept. and seem to find some decent tools at reasonable prices. I'm a bit saddened by their closing, part of it due to nostalgia, and will miss it. There are 2 of the small Sears Hometown stores within reasonable distance. About 30-35 minutes East or West from me, so I guess I can still browse the aisles. I'm not opposed to online shopping but to me it's just enjoyable to walk the aisles and check out the tools in person. I liked the Sears because they knew me there and didn't call "loss prevention" when I hung out for 45 minutes or an hour looking and trying things out. Still got Lowes, HD, TSC and HF but gonna miss Sears all the same.
 
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captain14

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Yes that's sad, they closed my closet one over a year ago and I think the closet sears outlet is Closed since it Does not show up in the local outlet list of stores.

I'm sure there are more multiple rounds of closing both Sears and Kmart until there are very few left. Usually the real estate they are sitting on is worth a sizes me amount.
 

cowboy73

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They closed the Sears here a couple of years ago. There had been a Sears store in the town since 1929! It's sad that such short-sighted management and bad decisions crippled such a once great company. There will never be a company that will sell the vast variety of things they once did. You could once buy a everything from sewing needles to an entire house package.
 

Dick in Wisconsin

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We've lost the one in Grafton (tools, appliances, lawn and garden) and the one at Bayshore Mall (suburban Milwaukee) which was a full service. HUGE tool department.

A bunch of them in smaller towns to the NW, N, and NE have closed too.
 
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Jeremy77

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A lot of people are saying "Brick and Mortar" is dying but right now there's a colossal development ( Field And Stream, Dicks, Costco, HomeGoods etc.) going up not 5 minutes from where this Sears is located. Other retailers are surviving and even thriving. I'm not sure why some of the older retailers like Sears, Montgomery Wards and J.C. Penny couldn't adapt their business models to cater to today's consumers.
 

turbowoodworker

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We lost a local Sears 8-10 mos ago. (Cary Towne Center)

I watched and walked the aisles looking for "liquidation" deals. What I found was they cranked every price to the maximum retail price, even covering up all the old sale stickers. Then everything was marked by aisle flags for 15% off. This resulted in going prices higher than the typical 25-40% off you see during Craftsman Days etc. So no deals at all.

I went back weekly and the prices only dropped the week they were taking down the fixtures. By then the selection was empty, stuff you wouldn't even think of justifying. You couldn't even convince a GJ diehard it was worth buying "just in case".

I don't know what happened to the other inventory as it never showed up in the local Sears Outlet either.

Overall very disappointed both in the store's closing and in the "liquidation" pricing.
 

warmpancakes

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We lost a local Sears 8-10 mos ago. (Cary Towne Center)

I watched and walked the aisles looking for "liquidation" deals. What I found was they cranked every price to the maximum retail price, even covering up all the old sale stickers. Then everything was marked by aisle flags for 15% off. This resulted in going prices higher than the typical 25-40% off you see during Craftsman Days etc. So no deals at all.

I went back weekly and the prices only dropped the week they were taking down the fixtures. By then the selection was empty, stuff you wouldn't even think of justifying. You couldn't even convince a GJ diehard it was worth buying "just in case".

I don't know what happened to the other inventory as it never showed up in the local Sears Outlet either.

Overall very disappointed both in the store's closing and in the "liquidation" pricing.


the store is sold in one lot to a liquidator, the liquidator will move things from store to store, as far as the fixtures, if they have a fitness department the floor in them is race deck when they closed the brighton store by me buddy did a 3 car garage in red race deck for 300.00
 

mmack66

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A lot of people are saying "Brick and Mortar" is dying but right now there's a colossal development ( Field And Stream, Dicks, Costco, HomeGoods etc.) going up not 5 minutes from where this Sears is located. Other retailers are surviving and even thriving. I'm not sure why some of the older retailers like Sears, Montgomery Wards and J.C. Penny couldn't adapt their business models to cater to today's consumers.

Brick and mortar isn't dying, but most of the dinosaur department stores are.
 

G_P

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We lost a local Sears 8-10 mos ago. (Cary Towne Center)

I watched and walked the aisles looking for "liquidation" deals. What I found was they cranked every price to the maximum retail price, even covering up all the old sale stickers. Then everything was marked by aisle flags for 15% off. This resulted in going prices higher than the typical 25-40% off you see during Craftsman Days etc. So no deals at all.

This is pretty much what happens when any national chain store closes a location. They jack the prices up 400% and then offer 40% off of that as a "huge sale".
 

casestudies

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My Sears closed last Oct/Nov as well. I used to go in when I was bored and just poke around too. It was a convenient distance and location to go grab a tool if I needed something in the middle of a project too. I'm pretty sad it closed.

The closest stores now are a 40-60 minute drive, which is a bit too far for me to drive just to browse when I'm bored. If I did need something specifically from Sears, it'd be cheaper for me to buy it on their website and pay $7 shipping than drive 1.5-2 hours round trip to get a tool.

As far as their closing "sale", the "sales" didn't amount to much as others have mentioned. There wasn't much available that couldn't be had cheaper elsewhere at normal prices, and they didn't have the good quality Craftsman hand tools and other brands available either. The Tool section was the least discounted too if I remember correctly. I went in every week or so to see if the sales got better, but there wasn't anything that screamed "impulse buy" to me.
 

Tim37

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They closed the Sears here a couple of years ago. There had been a Sears store in the town since 1929! It's sad that such short-sighted management and bad decisions crippled such a once great company. There will never be a company that will sell the vast variety of things they once did. You could once buy a everything from sewing needles to an entire house package.

Your right on the first part the managment droped the catalog just as it was about to find a new life. For the most part there is little difference between a sears catalog and Amazon's web site. Just a different format for using it.

Oh that and they started selling junk.
 

captain14

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Usually a lot of junk will show up during these closing sales. They buy other junk to stock the store with to pad thier income.

I talked to the manager of my local store the day before the closing sale started and he said you would get a better price that day than when the liquidation started.

During the liquidation the store had crowds in it. Just think if the stores would be crowded with shoppers before they closed, they would not need to shut the operation down.
 

Stuey

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When my local beloved Sears Essential closed, I scored some heavy duty drill press vises at 25% off. Everything else was marked to full price (or higher) and then discounted, making them very poor buys. I think I got a drill press sanding drum set too.

Check the tool aisles for new old stock. I scored a random older Craftsman ratchet once, presumably because they found it in the back during cleanup in the months ahead of the closing.
 
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Jeremy77

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Thanks all on the info about the liquidation sale being a bust. I'd planned on dropping in a few times before they closed just to see. At least I'll be prepared for the "Jacked Up" pricing!
 

southalabama

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Op is referencing mobile alabama store.

I saw on the news there had been one there for a 100 years.

A couple months ago they had reset the tool section and eliminated a lot of the USA singles. I'm hoping they clean the warehouse out and bring in some old stock. I've about pieces a USA craftsman professional set of wrenches together.
 
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Jeremy77

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Op is referencing mobile alabama store.

I saw on the news there had been one there for a 100 years.

A couple months ago they had reset the tool section and eliminated a lot of the USA singles. I'm hoping they clean the warehouse out and bring in some old stock. I've about pieces a USA craftsman professional set of wrenches together.

Hey there South Alabama. Was in the Meridian Ms. Sears a few days ago and all of their loose stock full polished wrenches were stamped AE and had a sticker on them that said Made in China. Last time that I was in the Mobile store, they were U.S. but there were only 3 or 4 smaller SAE sizes and 2 double box end deep offset wrenches (8-10 and 12-14 I believe.) Maybe a bit of NOS will get put out for the closing, I wouldn't mind finishing my box end collection of CM professionals. There's also a few double open end sizes that I'd like to pick up, even if only in the Raised Panels.
 

Cato

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Alhambra, California
Your right on the first part the managment droped the catalog just as it was about to find a new life.

I remember when they dropped the catalogue - it was around 1993. I was stationed overseas in the Navy and the Sears catalogue provided me with access to a lot of products. I had the misfortune to be stationed far from any Navy Exchange or Commissary. The NEX had a catalogue but it was probably 1/4th the size of the Sears catalogue.

Anyway, Sears could have exploited online commerce and made a lot of dough. You can see its website today doesn't inspire confidence.
 

Tim37

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Anyway, Sears could have exploited online commerce and made a lot of dough. You can see its website today doesn't inspire confidence.

Yeah that was my point the internet and sites like amazon are the catalogues of today
 
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Hootbro

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.............

Anyway, Sears could have exploited online commerce and made a lot of dough. You can see its website today doesn't inspire confidence.

Sears had bad timing. In 1993 when catalog sales was closed and the sold off most of their warehouse properties and other catalog infrastructure, Online meant being through either a AOL or Compuserve dial in portal on a 56K modem. The internet browsing as we know it today was not there yet other than maybe some "intranet" between universities and govt. institutions. Had they waited another 2 years, they could have been what Amazon is today.
 

ozyborn

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When my local Sears closed it was a total joke. They jacked up the prices, then brought them back down in their "clearance specials" Even then you could go across the river to the other store and get the same item cheaper.
 

Mechanical Noise

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Anyway, Sears could have exploited online commerce and made a lot of dough. You can see its website today doesn't inspire confidence.

Back in the 70s and 80s, Sears had enough excess computer capacity that they could make good money leasing out time on them. Then the time share model faded and they didn't see what's next.

They had all the pieces of the puzzle but they never put them together.
 

finn

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When my local Sears closed it was a total joke. They jacked up the prices, then brought them back down in their "clearance specials" Even then you could go across the river to the other store and get the same item cheaper.

When chain stores close, the inventory is sold to a liquidation company and the store management and employees are fired or transferred to another outlet.

The pattern I've observed is that the liquidation company jacks prices to the highest previous posted retail (non-sale) price and starts their "going out of business" markdown from that price.

The markdowns increase in a somewhat controlled manner as inventory shrinks and selection decreases.

It's actually not a bad business model from the liquidator's standpoint. They are there to make money, afterall.

That doesn't leave room for many bargains for the consumer, though.
 
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casestudies

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When chain stores close, the inventory is sold to a liquidation company and the store management and employees are fires or transferred to another outlet.

When my store closed, I heard a lot of people asking the staff if they could do better on price. The answer was always the same from the employees stating that they could not lower the price because the prices were set by a liquidation company. So don't expect to be able to haggle the price down further at their closing sales.
 

CJM8515

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This shocks people the stores are closing? They never adapted tot he times, started selling junk 15 years ago and really started selling junk in the last 5-7 years. No real tools anymore, just gimmick ****. Oh and the local stores near me never had anything in stock time and time again.

Thier biggest mistake was going from being a walmart type setup with most anything, to a setup where they sold tools, lawn and garden, electronics an appliances and clothes and not a good bit of any of them either.
 

Evilelroy

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This is too bad. There is not any stores that can replace Sears when they leave. Just Walmart is there to get stronger and crappier. In some ways though I'm glad to hear it after learning what they did to the kid that invented quick release ratchet. Maybe karma.
 

dngrmse

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I can't figure out what keeps them in business; their food is terrible.

It's called the Big Mac, but you're right, I prefer Burger King. But i rarely go to either these days. A 5 Guys opened up by me, and their burgers are awesome.
 

Goohead

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McDonald's is cheap, you can buy some **** that will kill your arteries for way less than some healthy food, but America is cheap so..
 

RivennHewn

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We had a large sears location close awhile back.

I was disappointed in the sale. They had a lot of signs out, but the prices were still crazy high.
 

southalabama

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Okay. I went today and took wife.

Clothes 30 percent off. She didn't buy a thing. Their normal sales were a better deal.

In the tool section all craftsman tools 10 percent off and 10 percent off most everything else. I saw people standing in line buying like they were giving it away. I saw one guy buying a dewalt saw. Even with the ten percent it was still cheaper at lowes or Home Depot. Only thing I could figure these folks running up a sears charge card.

They had 20 percent off flashlights and batteries. That stuff was overpriced to begin with.

I went ready willing and able to spend money. I checked online on several items and the sears online price beat the closing sale price. I didn't spend a dime. I'm not sure when they will up the percentages. My guess a week. At some point the odds and ends that never go on sale will be a good deal but not now. Tool sets and boxes regularly are discounted. No need to pay full retail minus 10-20 percent.

I'm gonna make a list of things that would be nice to have if I can get them at a good deal.

As far as fixtures I'm sure they will go at some point but regular gondola shelving takes up a lot of room. I'd be more interested in what kind of racks they have in the back room.
 
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Jeremy77

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Okay. I went today and took wife.

Clothes 30 percent off. She didn't buy a thing. Their normal sales were a better deal.

In the tool section all craftsman tools 10 percent off and 10 percent off most everything else. I saw people standing in line buying like they were giving it away. I saw one guy buying a dewalt saw. Even with the ten percent it was still cheaper at lowes or Home Depot. Only thing I could figure these folks running up a sears charge card.

They had 20 percent off flashlights and batteries. That stuff was overpriced to begin with.

I went ready willing and able to spend money. I checked online on several items and the sears online price beat the closing sale price. I didn't spend a dime. I'm not sure when they will up the percentages. My guess a week. At some point the odds and ends that never go on sale will be a good deal but not now. Tool sets and boxes regularly are discounted. No need to pay full retail minus 10-20 percent.

I'm gonna make a list of things that would be nice to have if I can get them at a good deal.

As far as fixtures I'm sure they will go at some point but regular gondola shelving takes up a lot of room. I'd be more interested in what kind of racks they have in the back room.


That snap flooring where the lawn equipment is at would be nice to pick up cheap. Not crazy about the green color but it's still nice flooring. Yeah, I went in today myself. Saw the same high prices as you. Might check back in a couple of weeks and see if anything of value is around. They actually had a few offset ratcheting wrenches in the loose stock area that I was interested in. They were locked up and when I inquired about them, I was told that the person with the key was at lunch and could get them for me in about 20 minutes. They are always full price anyway so I figured 10% off was an actual deal but I guess Sears wasn't in the selling mood.... Oh well.
 

mjoekingz28

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Your right on the first part the managment droped the catalog just as it was about to find a new life. For the most part there is little difference between a sears catalog and Amazon's web site. Just a different format for using it.

Oh that and they started selling junk.


Yeah I think they went the wrong way on that idea. I think they should have charged MORE and brought in their Industrial and Professional lines to sell tools to us that more closely resembled tool truck tools. We could then enjoy the high quality materials, metallurgy and craftsmanship that only the big tool trucks seem to have. Regular homeowners, enthusiasts, DIYer, etc never had real access to high qualitytools, but Sears always had good stuff and even replaced it no questions asked when we abused them.


Then, the internet, eBay, Harbor Freight (and Chinese pollution, stanky steel and illegal labor) helped seal the deal, I think.



Now, anyone can buy just about any tool made with an internet connection, shipping address and a credit card. It appears you no longer have to work on the tool truck's route to get superb quality. Now, where do you want your Chinese tools from? HD, HF, Lowe's, parts houses, WM and now Sears. We, the ignorant consumer, focused all of our intellect on the numbers after the $ sign. Now, some of us, are realizing the metal miners, foundries, refineries, metallurgists, machines to shape the tools, techniques to shape and form the tools, paying all these Americans a decent and happy liveable wage, AND, then packaging it, transporting it, and giving the store and/or salesman a commission costs money, time, labor, resources. And doing it all without ****** and pillaging the environment.


It does seem odd that a tool that 'does the same thing' from the next state over costs 5-10 times the monetary value of one that comes from halfway around the world.

Alot of pollutions apparently stems from having an ocean liner span the entire length of the Pacific and then USPS bring it to a local store or shipped to your home.


We should probably try to have 'less is more' , quality over quantity and support our neighbor who is trying to help make a quality product that will enrich our lives and help us enjoy using it instead of cussing it and throwing it in the trash when it causes more harm than good.

Pony up the dough and let us try to pay GM sticker price. Give the companies what they want! I think they are NOT trying to screw us by overcharging. They just want fair trade IMO. Instead of Jewing them down a few grand off sticker price and having them ship even more jobs out of the country and make live worse.

Is not that what it is all about! Making our lives AND the Earth a happier, healthier, all together better place to live and give our offspring more time to smell the roses than we did.







Btw, where are all of these tools going? You would figure by now, we would all have quality tools passed down from our ancestors. When will Snap-on get a break and get caught up? Are we losing the tools, wearing them out, thieves?, or what
 
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