From what I understand Sears has had several stores that were not performing well and they were being carried by stores that were doing well. Sears has been closing the poor performing stores and keeping the good stores open. I have also heard Sears has been trying to have a store open to serve a certain zone or geographic market area. It sounds like Sears is pulling back, recovering from the losses on the books from underperforming stores, and keeping a minimum presence in the market. For all I know Sears might begin building new stores in the future that might be more appealing.
With Walmart closing stores it sounds like difficult times for now. They say Walmart has been closing small Walmart stores. It sounds like brick and mortar stores are having a heck of a time in today's online market. With more USA jobs going offshore it just keeps adding to an economic downturn in a lot of ways.
Everyone mentions the tools in Sears - but if you walk around you'd see one of the most popular clothing lines is no longer sold at Sears either.. There is no longer one rack that has anything from Carhartt in the stores I've been in.. Only thing they have is the socks, and maybe the boots (I'm not sure about the boots).. If you ask me, that's a HUGE opportunity missed. I live in one of the most densely populated areas in the U.S. - and there is NO Carhartt outlet anywhere for hundreds of miles, and only a handful of Carhartt stores in the country. It seems Sears dedicated the rack space to try and push Craftsman labeled work clothes, which is probably the worst thing they could have done. All they would need to do to bring in a large number of shoppers is to start selling the COMPLETE line of Carhartt clothes..
Carhartt has expanded its line again and again, and it's one of the hardest clothing lines to purchase accurately online because everything they have fits differently. Shopping online for their stuff is a nightmare, and my thought is because they use SO may different countries to produce their stuff.. I have some shirts that I need a large to fit into, some needs to be XL, same with the jackets.. I go from Large to XL, to XL tall depending on the model. Seems like if Sears would just carry their complete line, it would promote business for BOTH companies.. Takes me 2 tries for some things to order the right sizes of Carhartt stuff online.. Even Timberland has outlet stores I can shop at, but Carhartt is a nightmare, and STILL one of the most popular jackets and jeans around..
for lots of carhartt in nj, go to flemington department stores, good selection of work wear and boots, and just about everything else in the world too
I thought Sears still owned Craftsman, but I noticed some interesting info on the Craftsman Club site:
https://club.craftsman.com/discussions/1936
The three Sears brands were packaged into KCD (Kenmore, Craftsman, Diehard) and given to Sears Reinsurance in Bermuda.
I went to the Sears near me to get a gear puller and was happy to find one made in the USA behind the Taiwanese variants. Went to the counter and said to the older guy "got the last American one!" he looked at me like I was a nut lmao. People just don't understand.
As far as warranty goes, since Craftsman doesn't actually make the tools, I'm sure their contractors (Western Forge, Mayhew, Wilde, and the like) can still honor lifetime warranty replacements on hand tools.
It's not just Sears guys, If we were paying attention we would have noticed the hundreds of other big name stores are closing, It's been a long drawn out recession of nearly 8 years! Some are gone all together, Best Buy, Walmart, Radio Shack, Sears, Macy's, Dillard's, the list goes on and on. We now have adults our age working at carwash's and McDonalds.
Radioshack was about two decades late to get around to admitting their problem:
I don't know who wrote the story, But they screwed up, K-mart owns Sears not the other way around.
that was true at one time now an investment group owns it all Bain Capital
The "upside" to this, if anything, is that the brands have been separated from the monolith entity that is "Sears" so if the entire retail chain crashes, the brands are still around to be licensed out.
So, who makes craftsman now? Are they Apex products?
Or just generic Chinese?
So, who makes craftsman now? Are they Apex products?
Or just generic Chinese?
In my frantic quest to find the remaining Craftsman made in USA socket sets and a few other tools, I have been visiting one big Sears in the mall and two Sears "Hometown" stores that are in towns of about 15,000 people. I have also been visiting 4 Ace Hardware stores and having good luck.
The big store is a ghost town but the "Hometown" stores have pretty steady business. The stores owner(s) are usually working and they are very competent and knowledgeable compared to the lifeless workers at the big store.
The Hometown stores seem to do a steady business in washer/dryers and lawn mowers. The employees think I'm half-nuts spending an hour picking around for the last USA set in the back of the rack but it affords me a good opportunity to hear what kind of business they're doing. The bins that hold the "hot deals" are one half empty or more so it looks like they sell a fair amount of tools as well.
I think there will always be a place for a brick and mortar store that sells large items like washers and dryers and lawn tractors. These are items not usually bought online, I think?
So, is there a future for the Hometown stores?
I have to say that the hunt for the last USA made tools that I'm currently into is fun. The time is right now to grab the last of the USA stuff. For example, in most cases the USA set or tool is the last one remaining. The prices actually are less than online prices as many online sellers are tacking a "USA" premium onto their prices.
Yeah, I have made an effort to stock up on some of the last of the made in USA Craftsman hand tools. Do you have a Sears Outlet near you? Some of them have had some good deals on made in USA Craftsman hand tools during the past few months. Like you said earlier, Ace Hardware stores have a good selection of USA tools also. A lot of the sockets are 6 pointers.
I could care less if all of our Sears stores shut down.
I think you mean "COULDN'T CARE LESS". Or, maybe, you do care??