Borders Group

From Free net encyclopedia

Template:Infobox Company$3.903 billion USD (2004) }} Borders Group (sometimes written BORDERS) (Template:Nyse) is an international bookseller based in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Borders is a Fortune 500 company, and is (as of 2005) the second-largest bookstore chain in the United States (after Barnes & Noble), selling a wide variety of books, CDs, DVDs, periodicals, as well as gifts and stationery. Borders owns a majority stake in Paperchase Products Limited, a leading gifts and stationery retailer in the United Kingdom, and showcases their products in their stores, as well as Books etc., Tim Waterstone's other, mostly London based bookshop chain. In 2004, Borders reached an agreement with Starbucks subsidiary Seattle's Best Coffee, and is converting all their in-store cafes to the new brand. Some Borders' in-store cafes in Australia have Gloria Jeans branded coffee houses in place of Starbucks.

The original Borders bookstore is located in Ann Arbor, Michigan, where it was founded in 1971 by brothers Tom and Louis Borders. The Borders brothers' inventory system tailored each store's offerings to the community it was in. This may have contributed to the chain's rapid expansion nationwide. K-Mart acquired Borders' rival Waldenbooks in 1984, but a stock buyback enabled Borders and Waldenbooks to form its own corporation, the Borders Group. There are now approximately 462 Borders stores across the United States, and around 700 Waldenbooks and Borders Express stores in malls across America. Borders also has another 44 international stores outside the country in the United Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand, Puerto Rico, and Singapore, and 35 Books etc. stores throughout Britain. However due to the fierce competition in the UK marketplace a number of these Books etc. stores will be closed and will be replaced by larger Borders stores in retail parks on the edge of town, like in the case of the Manchester Books etc. store at the Printworks that was replaced by Borders at Manchester Fort.

The music sections of Borders stores feature a wide variety of music styles and artists and typically have 100 or so current releases set up for individual listening.

On February 21st, 2006, Borders launched the Borders Rewards program, a free customer loyalty card that earn people rewards when the they shop at any US Borders, Borders Express, Borders Airport, or Waldenbooks.

Contents

Franchise Stores

Image:Borders flagship store.jpg Image:BordersDubuqueIowa.jpg In April, 2005, Borders Group opened its first franchise store with Malaysia's Berjaya Group Berhad in Kuala Lumpur. It is located in Berjaya Times Square, which is arguably the worlds biggest mall with 7,500,000 square feet (700,000 m²). Incidentally, the store in Berjaya Times Square is advertised as being the worlds biggest Borders at 60,000 square feet (5,600 m²). This is almost twice the next largest bookstore in Malaysia, MPH Bookstore at 1 Utama, Bandar Utama 40,000 square feet (3,700 m²).

The essayist Sven Birkerts worked at the flagship Borders store on State Street in Ann Arbor during the 1970s and wrote about his experiences in The Gutenberg Elegies. Writer Benjamin Cheever also wrote about his brief tenure as a Borders employee in Selling Ben Cheever.

Diversity

Borders received a 100% rating on the Corporate Equality Index released by the Human Rights Campaign starting in 2004, the third year of the report.

Unions

Borders retail employees at two store locations in Minneapolis-St. Paul and Ann Arbor are currently represented by the United Food and Commercial Workers union (UFCW). More information about Borders workers union organizing efforts and an employee discussion board can be found at www.bordersunion.org.

Muhammad cartoon controversy

On March 29, 2006, in response to the ongoing controversy over cartoons depicting the prophet Muhammad, Borders Group announced that Waldenbooks and Borders bookstores would decline to carry the April-May issue of Free Inquiry magazine, because of that magazine's decision to publish some of the controversial cartoons.[1]

See also

Image:DSCN3474.JPG

External links