neiman marcus
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Neiman Marcus
|
| Type |
Department store |
| Founded |
1907 |
| Headquarters |
Dallas, Texas, USA |
| Industry |
Retail |
| Products |
Clothing, footwear, furniture, jewelry, beauty products, electronics, and housewares. |
| Website |
http://www.neimanmarcus.com/ |
Neiman Marcus is an upscale, specialty, retail department store, operated by the Neiman Marcus Group in the United States. The company is headquartered in Dallas, Texas, and competes with such establishments as Bloomingdale's, Nordstrom, and Saks Fifth Avenue. The Neiman Marcus Group also operates the exclusive Bergdorf Goodman specialty, retail department stores on Fifth Avenue in New York City and a direct marketing division, Neiman Marcus Direct, which operates catalogue and online operations under the "Horchow," "Neiman Marcus" and "Bergdorf Goodman" names.
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Contents
- 1 History
- 2 Neiman Marcus Today
- 2.1 theshowroom of Neiman Marcus
- 3 Neiman Marcus in popular culture
- 3.1 Urban legend: The $250 cookie recipe
- 3.2 Popular media
- 4 Criticism
- 5 Holiday Catalog Cars
- 6 Current Locations and Announced Future Locations
- 6.1 Arizona
- 6.2 California
- 6.3 Colorado
- 6.4 District of Columbia
- 6.5 Florida
- 6.6 Georgia
- 6.7 Hawaii
- 6.8 Illinois
- 6.9 Massachusetts
- 6.10 Michigan
- 6.11 Minnesota
- 6.12 Missouri
- 6.13 Nevada
- 6.14 New Jersey
- 6.15 New York
- 6.16 North Carolina
- 6.17 Pennsylvania
- 6.18 Texas
- 6.19 Virginia
- 6.20 Washington
- 7 Former Locations
- 8 References
- 9 External links
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History
The Neiman Marcus headquaters and flagship store on Main Street in downtown Dallas, Texas.
Herbert Marcus, Sr., his sister Carrie Marcus Neiman and her husband, A. L. Neiman, came from Atlanta, Georgia with $25,000 to found the Neiman-Marcus retail establishment in Dallas, Texas, on 10 September 1907. Ironically, before the family members came to Dallas, they had an opportunity to invest in a new "sugary soda pop business" in Atlanta. The family decided to pass on investing in the business, which later became Coca-Cola.citation needed] Many people to this day will still joke that Neiman Marcus "was founded on a mistake."citation needed]
In 1913, a fire destroyed the Neiman Marcus store and its merchandise. A temporary store was set up and opened in a just 17 days. By 1914, Neiman Marcus reopened in its new, permanent location, on Main Street at Ervay Street. With the opening of this flagship store, Neiman Marcus increased its product selection to include accessories, lingerie and children's clothing, as well as expanding the women's apparel department. In 1929, it began offering menswear. The Main Street building, which many now call the 'original' Neiman Marcus, was given state historic landmark status by the Texas Historical Commission in 1982.
In 1927, Neiman Marcus premiered the first weekly retail fashion show in the United States.citation needed]
In 1971, the first Neiman Marcus outside Texas opened in Bal Harbour, Florida. In subsequent years, stores have opened in over 30 cities across the United States, including Chicago, Atlanta, Beverly Hills, San Francisco and Las Vegas.
In the late '90s, the company started a small boutique concept called the Galleries of Neiman Marcus, which sold jewelry, gifts and home accessories. The concept struggled and ultimately all three locations, Seattle, Cleveland and Phoenix, were shut. Some believe the locations were wrong and Neiman Marcus officials have hinted the concept might be resurrected.citation needed]
In 1999, neimanmarcus.com, and the store's online gift registry, debuted under the control of Neiman Marcus Group's Neiman Marcus Direct division.
On 22 January 2002, Neiman Marcus and the fashion world alike mourned the death of Stanley Marcus, who had served as president and chairman of the board for the company.
Over the last 20 years, ownership of Neiman Marcus has passed through several hands. In June 1987, the company was spun off from its retail parent, Carter Hawley Hale Stores, and became a publicly listed company. General Cinema, later to become Harcourt General, still had a roughly 60% controlling interest until 1999, when Neiman Marcus was fully spun-off from its parent company. On May 2nd, 2005, Neiman Marcus Group sold itself to two private equity firms, Texas Pacific Group and Warburg Pincus LLC.
Neiman Marcus Today
Unlike many grand old department stores, Neiman Marcus is still in operation today and is still headquartered in Dallas. The Neiman Marcus Group comprises the Specialty Retail stores division — which includes Neiman Marcus Stores and Bergdorf Goodman — and the Direct Marketing division, Neiman Marcus Direct. These retailers offer upscale assortments of apparel, accessories, jewelry, beauty and decorative home products to affluent consumers. The company operates 37 Neiman Marcus stores across the United States and two Bergdorf Goodman stores, in Manhattan. Neiman Marcus' largest market is the South Florida MSA, where they operate five stores. The company also operates 16 Last Call clearance centers. These store operations total more than 5 million square feet (500,000 m²) gross.
The exterior of a typical Neiman Marcus department store at Town Center at Boca Raton located in Boca Raton, Florida.
Neiman Marcus Direct, conducts both print catalog and online operations under the Neiman Marcus, Horchow and Bergdorf Goodman brand names. Under the Neiman Marcus brand, Neiman Marcus Direct primarily offers women's apparel, accessories and home furnishings. Horchow offers quality home furnishings, linens, decorative accessories and tabletop items.
The Company also owns majority interests in two designer resources: Kate Spade, a manufacturer of accessories, and Gurwitch Products, which manufactures Laura Mercier cosmetics. Other luxury retailers that compete with Neiman Marcus include Saks Fifth Avenue and Barneys New York.
Since 1987, Neiman Marcus has accepted merhandise transactions using only its proprietary store credit cards, American Express cards, cash or check for purchases in the retail stores. However, Neiman Marcus is quietly testing the acceptance of Visa and MasterCard at a store in Missouri, as well as in several in-store restaurants in California. (Neiman Marcus has accepted all major credit cards for online purchases since the website opened in 1999.) After Neiman Marcus sold its store credit card business to HSBC in mid-2005, some insiders say that the company will make the changes chainwide later in 2006, along with adding a co-branded Visa, MasterCard or American Express credit card issued by HSBC, which the five-year agreement with HSBC allows.
For many years, Neiman Marcus has issued an annual Christmas catalog, which gets much free publicity from the national media. This is mostly due to its exciting array of unusual and extravagant gift ideas. Some have included a 'his and hers' themed item, trips and cars (see below), to name a few. More affordable gift items are also featured in the catalog.
theshowroom of Neiman Marcus
In the fall of 2004, Neiman Marcus launched a new store within a store concept, theshowroom of Neiman Marcus. This new department is dedicated to selling the high-end furniture and home collections previously only available through Neiman Marcus companion catalogues, The Horchow Collection and NM by Mail. The six Neiman Marcus stores that house the collection are located in Plano-Dallas MSA (Willow Bend), San Francisco (Union Square), Scottsdale (Fashion Square), Chicago (Michigan Avenue), Oak Brook (Oakbrook Center) and Minneapolis (Nicollet Mall).
Neiman Marcus in popular culture
Urban legend: The $250 cookie recipe
The store is featured in an urban legend involving a supposed recipe for its popular chocolate chip cookie. In the legend, a woman and her daughter enjoy a cookie while shopping at Neiman Marcus in Dallas, Texas, and ask for the recipe. The waiter informs her there will be a "two-fifty" charge, which the woman interprets as a measly $2.50. Upon receiving her VISA statement, she is shocked to discover she has been charged $250.00 instead. In revenge, she photocopies the recipe and urges her friends to distribute it for free to everyone they know so that the store will make no further profit on its sale. Because the story typically was passed along as a photocopy, it falls in the legend subcategory of Xeroxlore.
Folklorists have pointed out three chief holes in the story:
- Neiman Marcus does not accept Visa for any purchase.
- Prior to the emergence of the legend, the store did not have a chocolate chip cookie.[1]
- A similar story has been around since the 1940s, except involving a red velvet cake recipe from the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel. It wasn't until the 1980s that the focus shifted to cookies. The cookie version of the story originally was attached to Mrs. Fields Cookies, causing that company eventually to post disavowals of the notices at all its stores. Although the story is untrue, Neiman Marcus nonetheless posted a cookie recipe on its web site to quell rumors.
Popular media
- Neiman Marcus's high-end image was portrayed on the small screen in the 1980s on The Facts of Life, where wealthy character Blair Warner enjoyed shopping there.citation needed] Similarly, in an episode of A Different World in which the well-to-do Whitley Gilbert must return all her credit cards to her father, she is especially loath to give up her Neiman's card and reminisces wistfully over past N-M purchases.
- The shopping scenes from Blu Cantrell's "Hit 'Em Up Style (Oops!)" were filmed at a Neiman Marcus store.citation needed]
- In the adventure game Nethack "you hear Neiman and Marcus arguing" when you are hallucinating and there is a shop on that level.
- American parodist "Weird Al" Yankovic released a song entitled "I'll Sue Ya" on his album Straight Outta Lynwood. In a satire of America's fame for litigiousness, the singer lists various lawsuits he has filed for diverse reasons, including suing Neiman Marcus as because they "put up their Christmas decorations way out of season."
- During the Apollo 8 mission in December 1968, Marilyn Lovell, wife of astronaut Jim Lovell, who was the Command Module Pilot, received, as a Christmas present, a mink coat that was delivered to her by a Neiman Marcus driver in a Rolls-Royce car. The coat was wrapped in shiny blue wrapping paper with two styrofoam balls — one for the Earth and the other for the Moon — and had a card that read, "To Marilyn, from the Man in the Moon." citation needed]
Criticism
Due to the high prices of much of its upscale merchandise, Neiman Marcus is sometimes called "Needless Markup."
A parody of the Neiman Marcus logo against their fur industry.
Some animal-rights activists claim that Neiman Marcus' fur sales contribute to the unnecessary deaths of millions of animals every year. While the company claims that it is humane to farm animals for fur, other groups, such as PETA, cite the fact that there are no laws ensuring humane care on US fur farms [1].
Holiday Catalog Cars
Neiman Marcus has often offered limited-edition automobiles in its holiday catalogs. These are usually coordinated with manufacturers as a publicity stunt, though the cars themselves are normally special versions unavailable from other sources and produced in limited numbers.citation needed]
- 1970 "His and Hers" Ford Thunderbird
- 1995 BMW Z3 James Bond edition
- 1996 GMC Suburban Sony edition
- 1997 Audi TT
- 1997 Ducati 748L
- 1998 BMW X5
- 1998 Aston Martin DB7
- 2000 Lexus SC 430
- 2001 Ford Thunderbird (200)
- 2002 Cadillac XLR (101)
- 2003 BMW 645Ci
- 2004 Maserati Quattroporte (at $125,000)
- 2005 Lexus GS 450h (75 at $65,000)
- 2006 BMW M6
Current Locations and Announced Future Locations
Arizona
- Phoenix MSA/Scottsdale - Scottsdale Fashion Square - 118,000 sq ft. (opened 1992)
California
- Los Angeles MSA/Beverly Hills - Wilshire Boulevard (freestanding) - 185,000 sq ft. (opened 1979)
- Los Angeles MSA/Los Angeles (Canoga Park) - Westfield Topanga - 120,000 sq ft. (scheduled to open 2008)
- Los Angeles MSA/Newport Beach, Orange County - Fashion Island - 154,000 sq ft. (opened 1978)
- San Diego - Fashion Valley Mall - 106,000 sq ft. (opened 1982)
- San Francisco - Union Square (freestanding) - 251,000 sq ft. (opened 1983)
- San Jose MSA/Palo Alto - Stanford Shopping Center - 120,000 sq ft. (opened 1986)
Colorado
- Denver - Cherry Creek Shopping Center - 90,000 sq ft. (opened 1991)
District of Columbia
- Washington, D.C. - Mazza Gallerie - 130,000 sq ft. (opened 1978)
Florida
- Central Florida MSA/Orlando - The Mall at Millenia - 90,000 sq ft. (opened 2003)
- South Florida MSA/Fort Lauderdale, Broward County - The Galleria at Fort Lauderdale - 94,000 sq ft. (opened 1983)
- South Florida MSA/Bal Harbour, Dade County - Bal Harbour Shops - 97,000 sq ft. (opened 1971)
- South Florida MSA/Coral Gables, Dade County - The Village at Merrick Park - 136,000 sq ft. (opened 2002)
- South Florida MSA/Boca Raton, Palm Beach County - Town Center at Boca Raton - 136,000 sq ft. (opened 2005)
- South Florida MSA/Palm Beach, Palm Beach County - Worth Avenue (freestanding) - 53,000 sq ft. (opened 2001)
- Tampa-St. Petersburg MSA/Tampa - International Plaza and Bay Street - 90,000 sq ft. (opened 2001)
Georgia
- Atlanta - Lenox Square - 154,000 sq ft. (opened 1973, expanding fall 2007)
Hawaii
- Honolulu - Ala Moana Center - 181,000 sq ft. (opened 1999)
Illinois
- Chicago - Michigan Avenue (freestanding) - 188,000 sq ft. (opened 1984)
- Chicago MSA/Northbrook - Northbrook Court - 144,000 sq ft. (opened 1976)
- Chicago MSA/Oak Brook - Oakbrook Center - 119,000 sq ft. (opened 1982)
Massachusetts
- Boston - Copley Place - 111,000 sq ft. (opened 1984)
- Boston MSA/Natick - Natick Mall - 100,000 sq ft. (scheduled to open September 2007)
Michigan
- Detroit MSA/Troy - The Somerset Collection - 157,000 sq ft. (opened 1993)
Minnesota
- Minneapolis - Gaviidae Common on Nicollet Mall - 119,000 sq ft. (opened 1989)
Missouri
- St. Louis MSA/Frontenac - Plaza Frontenac - 148,000 sq ft. (opened 1975)
Nevada
- Las Vegas - Fashion Show - 174,000 sq ft. (opened 1981, expanded 2002)
New Jersey
- New York MSA/Paramus - Westfield Garden State Plaza - 141,000 sq ft. (opened 1997)
- New York MSA/Short Hills - The Mall at Short Hills - 137,000 sq ft. (opened 1996)
- Philadelphia MSA/Lawrenceville, New Jersey - Quakerbridge Mall (scheduled to open 2010)
New York
- New York MSA/Syosset, Long Island - The Mall at Oyster Bay - 100,000 sq ft. (scheduled to open fall 2007)
- New York MSA/White Plains - The Westchester - 138,000 sq ft. (opened 1981)
North Carolina
- Charlotte - SouthPark Mall - 80,000 sq ft. (opened 2006)
Pennsylvania
- Philadelphia MSA/King of Prussia - The Plaza at King of Prussia - 142,000 sq ft. (opened 1996)
Texas
- Austin - The Domain - 80,000 sq ft. (scheduled to open March 2007)
- Dallas Fort Worth Metroplex/Dallas - One Marcus Square (flagship) - 129,000 sq ft. (opened 1908)
- Dallas Fort Worth Metroplex/Dallas - NorthPark Center - 218,000 sq ft. (opened 1965)
- Dallas Fort Worth Metroplex/Fort Worth - Ridgmar - 119,000 sq ft. (opened 1977)
- Dallas Fort Worth Metroplex/Plano - The Shops at Willow Bend - 153,300 sq ft. (opened 2001)
- Houston MSA - The Galleria - 224,000 sq ft. (opened 1969)
- San Antonio - The Shops at La Cantera - 120,000 sq ft. (opened 2005)
Virginia
- Washington, D.C. MSA/McLean - Tysons Galleria - 130,000 sq ft. (opened 1990)
Washington
- Seattle MSA/Bellevue - The Bravern - 125,000 sq ft. (scheduled to open spring 2009)
Former Locations
Texas
- Dallas Fort Worth Metroplex/Dallas - Big Town Mall (opened 1959, closed the same year)
- Dallas Fort Worth Metroplex/Dallas - Preston Center (opened 1951, replaced at NorthPark 1965)
- Dallas Fort Worth Metroplex/Dallas - Prestonwood Town Center - 123,000 sq ft. (opened 1979, replaced at Willow Bend 2002)
- Dallas Fort Worth Metroplex/Fort Worth - Camp Bowie Boulevard (opened 1963, replaced at Ridgmar 1977)
- Houston - Town & Country Mall - 153,000 sq ft. (opened 1983, closed 2005)
Washington
- Seattle - Westlake Center - 12,000 sq ft. (opened 1999, closed 2002) *The Galleries of Neiman Marcus
References
External links
- Neiman Marcus
- Neiman Marcus Group
- Neiman Marcus Cookie Legend
- Website Against Neiman Marcus's Fur Industry
Categories: Cleanup from July 2006 | Articles lacking sources | NPOV disputes | Articles with unsourced statements | 1907 establishments | Department stores of the United States | Companies based in Texas | Dallas-Fort Worth Texas based companies | Fortune 1000 |