F&F,
the fashion subsidiary of UK’s largest grocery and general merchandise
store Tesco, will on Friday open its first African store at Deacons’
outlet at The Hub in Karen even as it plans to use Kenya as its
expansion launch pad.
Deacons, the local franchise
holder of the UK brand, is also gearing up to open the second F&F
store at the Sarit Centre in Westlands on January 19 and is scouting for
new viable locations in major towns across the country.
The
franchise agreement between the two firms outlines the opening of five
stores over five years, with the possibility that some of the other
three outlets will be in Rwanda or Uganda.
“Our
research indicated that Kenya was the ideal launch pad for F&F’s
expansion into Africa,” said Marcus Chipchase, F&F’s managing
director for global partnerships.
F&F, a
15-year-old brand that has a presence in six European markets as well as
17 other markets including the US and Asia, stocks a wide range of
clothes and accessories for women, men and children.
Tesco,
the world’s third largest retailer by revenue, houses F&F stores
within its supermarkets and adopts the franchise model to expand outside
the UK.
The Deacons partnership is its first in Africa.
The Deacons partnership is its first in Africa.
“The
market is growing and we believe Kenyans appreciate quality and have
shown they are receptive to new brands. We chose to work with Deacons
because of their proven track-record in building brands in the local
market,” said Mr Chipchase.
Deacons had for years been
the exclusive franchise holder of South Africa’s luxury brand
Woolworths. In 2012, the multinational opted to trade locally through a
joint venture with Deacons in which it owned a 51 per cent stake.
This
rejigged partnership ended late last year when Woolworths bought
Deacons’ minority stake and opted to go it alone in the Kenyan market.
Woolworths
contributed 49 per cent of Deacons’ overall revenues and the fallout
dented its portfolio, even delaying the firm’s listing on the Nairobi
Securities Exchange (NSE).
Deacons says the termination
of this partnership left them exposed in some customer segments --
mainly lingerie and men’s formal wear -- which will now be catered to by
F&F’s portfolio.
“The brand is about international
flavour at very competitive price points. We identified a gap in the
market and F&F is our solution to plug it,” Deacons’ chief
executive, Muchiri Wahome, said on Thursday.
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