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{{Infobox Company | name = HMV Group PLC | logo = | fate = | type = Public () | foundation = London, England in 1921 | founder = | slogan = Get closer | location_city = Maidenhead, Berkshire | location_country = United Kingdom | locations = 692 stores, 7 countries (2008) | area_served = The United Kingdom | operating_income = £70.3 million (2009)
Simon Fox has been Chief Executive Officer since 28 September 2006. For this role he is paid an annual salary of £493,000.
HMV stands for His Master's Voice, a painting created in 1899 by Francis Barraud, A.R.A., of the dog Nipper listening to a cylinder phonograph. For advertising purposes this was changed to a wind-up gramophone, and eventually used simply as a silhouette.
, London.]] In 1966, HMV began expanding its retail operations in London. Throughout the 1970s, the company continued to expand, doubling in size, and in six years became the country's leading specialist music retailers. It faced new competition, however, from Virgin Megastores, established in 1971, and Our Price, established a year later.
In 2002 the Company floated on the London Stock Exchange as HMV Group plc, leaving EMI with only a token holding.
All HMV stores in Germany were closed in 2003.
In 2006, the HMV Group took over the Ottakar's book chain, via Waterstone's, with which it was merged into, in a similar situation to the acquisition of Dillons. This merger tied in to HMV's strategy for growth, as many of the Ottakar's branches were in smaller towns and outposts.
On 13 March 2006, HMV released a press statement declining a second offer from the private equity firm, even though it increased the value of the company, HMV felt that their firm was being undervalued and so rejected that offer of takeover as well. By the beginning of March 2006, HMV released a statement that the Permira offer undervalued the medium and long term prospects for the Group, resulting in Permira's withdrawal from the bidding.
In 2007, HMV selected CLIC Sargent as its charity partner until 2010.
In the 2008 MCV Industry Excellence Awards, HMV was given the title 'Entertainment Retailer of the Year'.
On 1 September 2008, HMV Group launched Get Closer, a social networking site which allows users to import their own music library and rivals current providers including Napster and the iTunes Store which are both examples of an online music store.
As part of HMV's chief executive Simon Fox's plans to turn the retailer into an entertainment group for all seasons. HMV started a joint ventre with Curzon Artificial Eye to bring cinemas to HMV and Waterstone's stores across England. The first trial store was in Wimbledon, London. The cinema is located above the the shopin a former storage room and has been converted in to three sperate screens and a bar. It has its own entrance, so it can be accessed outside store hours, as well as one within the store. The trial was deemed a success and HMV plan to open more, with HMV in Cheltenham, Gloucestershire and Waterstone's in Piccadilly, London lined up next.
On 5 January 2011 HMV announced that profits would be at the lower end of analyst's forcasts due to falling sales, resulting in the share price falling by 20% and an announcement of the groups intention to close 40 HMV stores, as well as 20 Waterstone's stores, mainly in towns where the company operates at multiple locations.
Waterstones then announced that it had successfully negotiated a takeover of Ottakar's on 31 May 2006.
All 130 Ottakar's stores were rebranded as Waterstone's prior to Christmas 2006. In March 2007, new Group CEO Simon Fox announced a 10% reduction over three years in the enlarged Waterstone's total store space, comprising mostly dual location shops created by the acquisition of Ottakar's.
On 18 February 2009, five additional Zavvi stores were purchased by HMV Group, all will be rebranded to HMV outlets. A 6th store has been taken over from Zavvi: this is a store in Exeter's modern Princesshay Development. The acquisitions by HMV were investigated and cleared by the Office of Fair Trading in April 2009.
A few months later HMV entered into an joint venture with MAMA Group. The Group had purchased a 50% stake in MAMA Group in January 2009 as part of a deal to introduce the HMV brand to live music venues, including the Hammersmith Apollo. On 23rd December 2009 it decided to buy the whole of the MAMA Group in live music takeover deal worth £46m.
On 1 April 2007, HMV Group announced that Gromit, the animated dog of Wallace and Gromit fame, would stand in for Nipper for a three month period, promoting children's DVDs in its UK stores.
HMV's Australian flagship store, located in Pitt Street Mall, Sydney, was shut down on Friday 31 August 2007, when the Mid City Centre shopping centre it was located in, was closed for demolition.
HMV stores in Canada do not have the rights to the Nipper trade mark.
HMV had a handful of stores in the Eastern United States, which in their final years were overseen by HMV's Canadian operations. In the 1990s they had a significant presence in Manhattan.
Poor real estate decisions made in the early 1990s rendered the United States stores uneconomical and HMV gradually extricated itself from leases, with the final store in the United States, having lost £500,000 in 2003 and £1 million in 2004, closed on 3 November 2004.
In contrast, HMV has a strong position in Canada's music market, with 116 stores as of October 2007. For the last two decades, HMV has been awarded "Canadian Music Retailer of the Year".
In 2005, HMV Canada took over a Virgin Megastore in Vancouver, allowing it to own, "Canada’s largest store dedicated to music and DVD".
In recent years, HMV Canada has encountered controversy by removing from sale all music and video recordings made by artists that have made exclusive distribution deals with other retailers for particular limited-edition or early-release titles; artists affected by this move include Alanis Morissette, The Rolling Stones and KISS.
There are currently five HMV stores in Hong Kong.
It is generally higher priced than other independent shops, and the local chains like Gramophone and That CD Shop pose a serious challenge. HMV, however, is the only store that also sells games, T-shirts, books and audio gear in addition to their music and video collection.
Category:Companies established in 1921 Category:Defunct retail companies of the United States Category:Companies based in Berkshire Category:Music retailers of the United Kingdom Category:Bookshops of the United Kingdom
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