Chapter 13
IKEA’s Household Appeal
No matter where you live, no matter what kind of household you live in—married with children,
samesex couple, single, single parent, or just roommates— IKEA
[http://bi.galegroup.com/essentials/company/492600?u=tlearn_trl] wants to be “your partner in
better living.” The Swedish retailer rings up $33 billion in sales through 284 stores in 26
countries, offering stylishly designed furniture and quality housewares at affordable prices. In
fact, IKEA continues to lower prices year by year on popular items so it can both attract new
customers and stimulate repeat business, even among consumers whose household incomes are
stalled or falling. Offering a range of good-better-best products widens the store’s appeal to
consumers setting up new households, families getting ready for new babies, families where
children regularly travel from one parent’s household to another, and households that are buying
on a limited budget. Also, consumers who might have bought IKEA’s top-of-the-line items
before the recession now have more choices if they’re trading down to less-expensive products.
Shopping at IKEA is deliberately family-friendly. Many of its stores feature a play area where
youngsters can be dropped off while parents browse the store for adult or children’s furniture and
make purchases without their children. The stores also are equipped with restaurants that serve
Swedish-style foods for breakfast, lunch, and dinner, and have high chairs for the youngest
shoppers. When the IKEA store in Wednesbury, England, added a children’s play area and
expanded the restaurant, it saw an immediate sales increase and found that the length of the average
customer visit had doubled, to about four hours.
Yet not every family member looks forward to an IKEA shopping trip. For Father’s Day
weekend in Australia, the IKEA store in Sydney set up a temporary Manland, a room where men
could watch sports programming and play video games while their wives or girlfriends shopped.