Clas Ohlson: Difference between revisions
Iridescent (talk | contribs) Since almost all this company's operations are in Scandinavia, it's perverse to illustrate it with two photographs of British stores |
Rescuing 2 sources and tagging 0 as dead. #IABot (v1.5beta) |
||
Line 27: | Line 27: | ||
==External links== |
==External links== |
||
{{Commons category|Clas Ohlson}} |
{{Commons category|Clas Ohlson}} |
||
*[http://www.clasohlson.co.uk/Template/Template1.aspx?id=217670 About Clas Ohlson] |
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20090417040009/http://www.clasohlson.co.uk/Template/Template1.aspx?id=217670 About Clas Ohlson] |
||
*[http://www.clasohlson.co.uk/UK/Report.aspx Clas Ohlson Financial Reports ] |
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20080912001546/http://www.clasohlson.co.uk/UK/Report.aspx Clas Ohlson Financial Reports ] |
||
* [http://www.swedwatch.org/swedwatch/content/download/268/1355/file/Executive%20Summary.CO.April.pdf#search=%22Clas%20Ohlson%22 Executive report] |
* [http://www.swedwatch.org/swedwatch/content/download/268/1355/file/Executive%20Summary.CO.April.pdf#search=%22Clas%20Ohlson%22 Executive report] |
||
*[http://www.clasohlson.se/ Clas Ohlson Sweden] |
*[http://www.clasohlson.se/ Clas Ohlson Sweden] |
Revision as of 23:46, 8 August 2017
Company type | Publicly traded Aktiebolag |
---|---|
Nasdaq Stockholm: CLAS B | |
ISIN | SE0000584948 |
Industry | Retail |
Founded | 1918 |
Headquarters | Insjön, Dalarna, Sweden |
Revenue | SEK 6,519 million (2012/13) [1] |
Number of employees | 2,524 (2012/13) [2] |
Website | www.clasohlson.com |
Clas Ohlson is a Swedish hardware store chain and mail-order firm that specialises in hardware, home, leisure, electrical and multimedia products. It is one of the biggest of its type in Scandinavia, with a total of approximately 180 Clas Ohlson stores as of October 2013.[3] Stores also exist in Norway, Finland, the United Kingdom, Germany and Dubai. Many of the products sold in the stores are own-label items. The company uses the house brands of Asaklitt (luggage and travelware), Capere (kitchenware), Cocraft (DIY tools), Cotech (electrical tools), Coline (household electrical items), Exibel (household electrical items) and Northlight (lighting).
History
The company was founded in 1918 by the technically minded Clas Ohlson (1895–1979), as a mail order business based in the Swedish village of Insjön, Dalarna. Initially, only manuals and technical literature were sold, thus allowing people who lived in rural communities to obtain literature that would otherwise be unavailable. He opened his first shop in Insjön in 1926, but it was not until 1989, when the company opened a store in a shopping centre in central Stockholm, that it expanded into the retail business.[4] Since then, expansion has been rapid. There are now stores throughout Sweden, Norway and Finland.
In 2008, the company opened its first UK retail store in Croydon, England. It later opened stores in Cardiff, Doncaster, Kingston upon Thames, Liverpool, Leeds, Manchester, Merry Hill, near Dudley, Norwich, Newcastle upon Tyne, Reading and Watford.[5]
In 2014 the company entered a joint venture with Kuwait's Al Homaizi group. In May that year, the company opened the first Clas Ohlson branch outside Europe, a store in Dubai's Mirdif City Centre. It was, the Swedish company said, 'a first step into the fast-growing Gulf Co-operation Council region'.[6] The livestock-to-sportswear Al Homaizi group had in 1987 opened a flat-pack furniture store in Kuwait with Swedish retailer IKEA, under whose name the store traded.
References
- ^ http://news.cision.com/clas-ohlson/r/clas-ohlson--year-end-report-1-may-2012---30-april-2013,c9426443
- ^ http://www.allabolag.se/5560358672
- ^ http://news.cision.com/clas-ohlson/r/contract-signed-for-a-new-store-in-uddevalla--sweden,c9486988
- ^ "The story of Clas Ohlson " History of Clas Ohlson at the official corporate website.
- ^ http://www.clasohlson.com/uk/view/COStoreLocatorController/showStoreLocator
- ^ Clas Ohlson’s first store outside of Europe is now officially open, Clas Ohlson group website, 2 May 2014. Retrieved: 5 April 2015.