I do not think it was a good idea for Sears to open a flagship store in that upscale shopping area of Chicago. I predict the store will only be open for the next year before Sears Corporate decides to close it due to poor foot traffic and sales. There is nothing innovative in terms of design or quality associated with Craftsman hand tools for the targeted affluent buyer to purchase them. Most of their ratchets have a clunky tooth count of 36 or less (except the Next Generation Thin Profile ratchets with 60 teeth). The quality of the interior chrome plating on their sockets is poor compared to Gearwrench, Toptul, Genius, and SK. The move to replace the U.S.A. made Craftsman Professional wrenches (with no similar high-end feature such as Snap-on's "Flank Drive Plus") with Chinese equivalents will not go well with affluent buyers. They will see the "made in China" COO on the back of the packaging with the high price tag and run out the door. How embarrased do you think the affluent buyer purchasing the new Chinese Craftsman full polish wrenches would be when showing them off to his affluent next door neighbor who owns Snap-on hand tools? The former guy might as well bury his head in the sand afterwards! I think the affluent tool aficionado would rather buy top quality and world renowned Snap-on hand tools at the comfort of their home from the Snap-on website with free shipping to boot!
If Sears was smart, they should eliminate reduntant products that appears at the mall stores that are also sold by nearby Sears Hardware and Orchard Supply Hardware stores. This means that the mall stores should remove from their retail space lawn mowers; tractors; paint; power (push mower and tractor parts) and hand lawn equipment (rakes, shovels, etc.); household products (clothes detergent, electric heaters, adhesives); and garage door openers. With all this new space, installation of more space efficient shelving, and reorganization, I am sure they could section off the stores to create a new premium "Craftsman Experience" area. With this reorganization of the store layout; live how-to clinics and product demos to increase foot traffic; and significant reduction in prices of all Chinese-made Craftsman hand tools to increase sales volume (while maintaining a small profit margin like Harbor Freight Tools), it will reverse the trend of falling Sears same-store sales during the last 5 years.
Dave