Store manager? Headquarters officer? A part
time sales associate does. This is reason why 7-Eleven of Japan is the number
one in Japan. Today’s story is about procurement at a convenience store.
Seven Eleven Japan (SEJ), a convenience
store company that operates 15,831 stores in Japan, has many advantages such as
three times daily delivery to a store, 9 times daily freshness control, and
POS. The most difference from competitors is said that a part time sales
associate is in charge of procurement. Actually, sale of a store of SEJ is
$1,000 a day more than that of competitors that adopt an automatic ordering system
and of which a headquarters orders [1].
SEJ values a hypothesis testing approach
about procurement of each goods at each store. To do exactly the approach three
times a day corresponding to three times daily delivery, due to workforce
limitations, a part time sales associate is needed to be responsible for
procurement. SEJ delivers information about a weather forecast, events near a
store, and a campaign of a product to a Graphic Order Terminal (GOT) of a store
so that anyone can hypothesize customer’s needs based on the various
information and can order. By POS, those who make order can also test sales
ordered goods and fresh foods.
A part time sales associate has a sense of
responsibility for selling ordered things because she or he orders. The sense
creates a virtuous cycle that makes people expect to order salable things. I
think that a positive IT investment of SEJ such as GOT and POS creates an
environment that people at a store deeply focuses on hypothesizing customer’s
needs of each good. However, SEJ does not intentionally build automatic
ordering system even it technically can do. This fact illustrates that SEJ
think that people at a store loose their sense of responsibility for selling
ordered things and happiness when a hypothesis succeeds.
Graphic Order Terminal (GOT) [4]
The relationship between an order by people
and IT seems like “automation with a human touch” concept, automation that
allows human to supervise, of Toyota Production System. Additionally I think
that an idea that a part time sales associate is in charge of procurement is
similar to a multi skilled worker in Toyota.
Indeed, SEJ started its convenience store
business in 1974 by cooperation with Southland, a company of 7-Eleven in the
United States. However, Mr. Suzuki, a founder of SEJ, said that eventually he
only brought the logo and an accounting
system from Southland. He also said that other system was built to suit a
Japanese market [2]. In 1991, when Southland went bankrupt, SEJ purchased trade
rights. So currently SEJ runs 8,144 stores in the United States [3].
This situation is quite similar to that
between GM and Toyota in 1970’s. Nowadays SEJ imports the improved operation
about a convenience store from Japan to the United States [5]. I wish to have
an affordable, fresh Bento box in the United States, but working culture and
population density of the United States are very different from Japan.
[1] Seven & i Holdings Co., Ltd. (May, 2009). Challenge of Seven & i. Retrieved from http://www.7andi.com/company/challenge/103/1.html
[2] Matsuura, D. (July, 2013 23). Why does Seven Eleven continue to grow?. Retrieved from http://toyokeizai.net/articles/-/15985
[3] Seven Eleven Japan. (August, 2013). The number of stores. Retrieved from http://www.sej.co.jp/company/tenpo.html
[4] Seven Eleven Japan. (n.d.). Photo gallery. Retrieved from http://www.sej.co.jp/owner/about/photogallery/approach005.html
[5] Sterngold, J. (May, 1991 9). New Japanese lesson: Running a 7-11. Retrieved from http://www.nytimes.com/1991/05/09/business/new-japanese-lesson-running-a-7-11.html?pagewanted=all&src=pm
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