rstinnettBoonville, MO
2009 President's Circle
Quote_l3Remember, it's not about the "stuff", it's about the person you are.Quote_r3

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    rstinnett's Blog

    has written 7 blog entries

    displaying 1 to 7 of 7 items/page: 15 | 30 | 50

    OCT
    10
    2009

    We went to the Jefferson City, MO Kmart for the first time since last winter.  Our normal store is the Sedalia, MO Kmart.  I was AMAZED at what had changed!

    Coming down the road the new road sign caught our eye.  It had the new Kmart logo and looked really good.  Pulling into the parking lot we knew something was different -- it was packed!  Keep in mind this Kmart is right across the street from both Target and Wal-Mart, but I'm telling you the lot was the fullest I've seen a Kmart parking lot in years.

    Next we noticed the new drive-thru pharmacy which looked like it was recently completed.  Going into the store the aisles were clear, the tile was shining bright -- but the best was yet to come.

    The entire pharmacy area had been gutted and remodeled.  It looked absolutely fantastic.  Very open, very bright and very welcoming.  It was a mass improvement over the old, cluttered, "hidden" pharmacy.

    The restrooms also had a brand new makeover and they looked fantastic.  It seemed everywhere you went in the store you ran into people asking you "do you need assistance?"  And best of all, the store was just packed with people doing their regular shopping. 

    All I can say is WOW!  You guys really turned this store around and made it look great.  If this is what is happening in all Kmart stores then you guys are on the road to success.  Judging by the number of people in this store, you guys are on the right track!

    SEP
    13
    2009

    Seems like all too often we only hear about the negative things with Sears and Kmart.  A recent article in Advertising Age highlighted some of the more positive aspects of Sears and Kmart that we don't here about.  A good read ... http://adage.com/cmostrategy/article?article_id=138945

     

    AUG
    21
    2009

    This past week I was traveling in the Northern Virginia area for work and decided to take some time off in the evenings to visit some of the Kmart stores that are local to the region.  I was impressed with a few because of their recent remodel and at the number of people shopping there -- just goes to show the "K" has a lot of life left in it!

    Unfortunately, I only had my cell phone to take pictures, but they turned out pretty good.  You can view all the various pictures of Kmart I took over at http://www.flickr.com/rstinnett

    My favorite of the bunch is Mr. Bluelight greeting customers at the Fairfax, VA store!

    JUL
    26
    2009

    Kmart beats out Wal-Mart in same-store sales.  Now this is cool -- could Kmart be making a comeback?  Let's hope so! 

    P.S. - Feel free to COME BACK to Columbia, MO anytime.  <Hint, hint>

     http://adage.com/article?article_id=138134

     

     

    JAN
    9
    2009
    For those of you who don't know, now through January 10th Kmart is having double-coupon days!  Find out more at www.kmart.com.  Perfect way to save some money -- and we could all use some help in that area nowadays.
    DEC
    30
    2008

    Found this very heartwarming story about a Kmart employee down in Austin, TX that just made my day.  This was originally from the Austin Daily Herald, Dec 30, 2008.

    'Stranger' donates kidney to local woman

    By Lee Bonorden | Austin Daily Herald

    Published Tuesday, December 30, 2008

     

    Lists and labels are convenient.

    They take the mystery out of life.

    While Jacqueline Buie-Green was on a list, she inadvertently acquired a label at Big Kmart Store in Austin.

    She was the woman sitting on a tall stool at a check-out counter in the Austin discount store.

    Couldn't miss her. "Did you find everything you were looking for today?" she asked customers. "Thank you for shopping Kmart," she told them.

    No wasted motion swiping bar codes on sales tickets. No wasted words.

    If anyone thought it was rude for the clerk to remain seated as they emptied their shopping cards, Buie-Green ignored their stares.

    She was there to do a job and that job she would do no matter how sick, how weak she became.

    Even her boss, store manager Everett Hackensmith, saw the irony.

    "People don't wear labels or name-tags saying they're disabled and can't stand up or do everything we can, so nobody knew what she was going through," Hackensmith said.

    Buie-Green endured a lot during her nine years as a Big Kmart Store associate.

    "We knew, of course, what she was going through," Hackensmith said.

    "She had been on the list for so long and then things fell through, and then she was off it. She went through quite an ordeal," Hackensmith said.

    She was used to it: a lifetime of missed opportunities.

    Buie-Green grew up on the mean streets in the federal housing projects in Philadelphia, where surviving another day tested her to the max.

    Fifteen years ago, she saved her money and boarded the train with a son and a daughter and three nieces and nephews, and they came to Austin to get away from it all and start over.

    The kids said the blue collar, meatpacking town was "boring," but Buie-Green liked it right away.

    She got work first at the Social Security Administration office and then at Cedar Valley Services, Inc. and finally at the Big Kmart Store.

    She liked that best of all.

    It was a match made ... literally in the Work Force Development Center at Riverland Community College, but figuratively in heaven.

    She was good at it, liked her bosses and co-workers and liked the people she met coming through the store.

    One of the health problems she suffered - but only one of many - was the failure of a kidney. She needed a transplant.

    Her condition weakened her, and that was why she was the woman sitting down at the checkout counter at the Big Kmart Store in Austin.

    Buie-Green's health continued to deteriorate and she was admitted to St. Mary's Hospital, Rochester.

    A week before Christmas - Thursday, Dec. 18 - she rested in a bed. Waiting, hoping, praying for a kidney that could save her life.

    Here is where she picks up the story.

    Kmart, a kidney and an angel

    "Kmart had been all I had. I walked a lot when I could, but my job was the most important thing to me at Kmart," she said. "When I couldn't stand or walk no more on my legs, I had to sit down."

    "They said I needed a kidney transplant," she said. "They said I wouldn't live without one."

    "All I could do was wait and hope. Have patience and pray and then one day, just like that, somebody came in off the street and they were a match, and I got my kidney."

    "It was a miracle," she said.

    The donor has remained anonymous, while Buie-Green recovers in a Rochester hospital.

    Her husband died in 1994 and a sister, Gertrude Allen-Barron is wheelchair-ridden.

    Her son, Brahein Buie, lives at the Twin Towers.

    Nobody has come forwarded to tell her who donated the kidney.

    "We were in surgery the same day. My operation lasted four hours, but I don't know who gave me a kidney," she said. "I was excited when I went in for the surgery. There were so many people around me that day. I wasn't scared or anything because I felt the prayers of all my relatives and friends working for me."

    "Whoever done that -- gave me one of their own kidneys -- is my angel. She's looking over me," the transplant recipient said.

    Buie-Green remembers the dialysis treatments. "Three days a week I would take dialysis, and three days a week I would work at Kmart. I only had one day a week off," she said.

    "No matter what happened to me, Kmart would work around that for me," she said.

    "I had breast cancer in January and February of 2007 and was off work before I could come back," she said.

    "My husband my father and my father-in-law all died within three months of each other," she said. "And now this."

    When Buie-Green is well enough to be released from the hospital, she will go to a nursing home for further recovery.

    When the recovery is complete, she will return to work.

    There's no doubt in her mind about the latter.

    "Of course I will," she said. "They have promised me my old job when I go back to work, and I'm looking forward to that already."

    "A lot has happened to me, but I've come through it every time," she said. "It takes patience and prayer."

    Her boss is waiting.

    "She has overcome so many obstacles in life it's just amazing," Kmart store manager Hackensmith said. "She's very dependable at her work and we all wish her a speedy recovery."

    "I think her faith has a lot to do with it," he said.

    "You bet it does," Buie-Green remarked after being told of her boss' observation. "You've got to have faith all the time in life no matter what you do."

    Everyone at the Big Kmart Store in Austin is excited about Buie-Green's kidney transplant, but no one more than Buie-Green.

    "This is the best thing that has ever happened to me; It's a miracle," she said.

    No picture is a shame indeed.

    No way to recognize the woman who endured so much.

    Who was on a list for so long and labeled ... however incorrectly it was.

    Close your eyes.

    Picture a woman behind the counter at the Big Kmart store.

    Can't miss her. "Did you find everything you were looking for today?" she asks customers. "Thank you for shopping Kmart," she tells them.

    No wasted motion swiping bar codes on sales tickets. No wasted words.

    If anyone thinks it's rude for the clerk to remain seated as they empty their shopping cards, ignore their stares.

    She is there to do a job and do that job no matter how sick, how weak she feels.

    Not every blue light special is at the end of an aisle.

    One of them smiles back today with life.

    DEC
    4
    2008

    One of the best memories I have as a kid is shopping with my mom in the Maplewood, MO Kmart. Unfortunately the Maplewood, MO store closed a few years back and mom passed away two years ago.  However, those memories are what keep me a loyal Kmart shopper.

    Unfortunately, 4 years ago my local Kmart in Columbia, MO was closed when the lease ran out.  So now it's a 30 mile drive to Jefferson City, MO or Sedalia, MO to shop at Kmart.  However, I still do it because I just love the brands and value.  The merchandise at Kmart -- at least some of it -- just seems to be of better quality than I could find at Wal-Mart.  I also like the fact that I can find more "Made in the USA" items at Kmart than Wal-Mart.

    One of my favorite commercials from Kmart is from 1986 when Kmart was America's favorite store to shop at.  It's a great commercial that reminds me of my childhood back then [Search on Youtube for "kmart favorite"].  Kmart really was America's store and I hope that they can once again be a great store. 

    And if anyone at Sears Holdings is reading this ... a lot of people in Columbia, MO would love for you to consider opening a Kmart here again.  Make this a test market, or a concept store -- you might be surprised how many loyal customers you attract!