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Shaping China's home-improvement market: An interview with B&Q's CEO for Asia

Steve Gilman says that because Chinese consumers are changing so quickly, retailers must change quickly to keep up with them.

JUNE 2006 • Georges Desvaux and Alastair J. Ramsay

Marketing, Strategy Article, china's home improvement market

In This Article

It might be easy to forget what the early days in China were like, when today you have 50 stores in eight cities, 10,000 employees, and more than £300 million (about $524 million) in sales. But not if you are Steve Gilman, the chief executive officer for Asia of the do-it-yourself (DIY) chain B&Q, a unit of the United Kingdom's Kingfisher. Gilman vividly recalls the ordeal of setting up the first store in China, in Shanghai, during the late 1990s: "By the winter of '98—we opened in June '99—there were over 50 of us working in this semidetached house. We had one toilet, which never worked, and it had a bucket with water in it, which we had to fill up and flush every time you went to the loo. I was there, off and on, most of the winter with four or five layers of clothing on because we didn't have any heating, either."

B&Q China has come a long way since then. In this interview at B&Q's UK headquarters, the plainspoken Gilman, a retailer for 32 years—27 of them at B&Q—describes what it took to make his company the biggest home-improvement chain in China, with annual sales growing...

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