Why Dollar General is winning with store count

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Dollar General reached a milestone in February with the opening of its 20,000th store in southeastern Texas. And the retailer wants to keep growing. 

During an earnings call in March, Dollar General said it expects to complete 2,385 real estate-related projects this year. That includes opening 800 more new stores, remodeling 1,500 locations, and relocating 85 stores.

Comparison helps put Dollar General’s substantial size in context. Just five states – Texas, Georgia, Florida, North Carolina and Pennsylvania – have over 5,800 Dollar General stores, which is more shops than Walmart has in the U.S. overall.

In the face of persistent inflation and discretionary spending pressures, Dollar General’s real estate strategy is accelerating. As the management of brick-and-mortar retail assets becomes more important than ever, the company has maintained consistent store growth despite ever-shifting trends.

Dollar General’s achievement of opening 20,000 stores didn’t happen overnight,” Jonathan Zhang, an associate professor in business at Colorado State University, told Retail Dive in an email. Zhang, who studies retail and consumer behavior, said the Tennessee-based retailer’s strategic maneuvering, ability to understand the pulse of the consumer and unwavering commitment to under-served markets helped enable the retailer’s rise.

Virginia-based Dollar Tree, which also owns the Family Dollar brand, is close behind Dollar General, with a store count of about 16,774 locations between both banners as of Feb. 3. 

The retailer said in a February regulatory filing that it saw more room for growth, with a long-term potential to support more than 10,000 Dollar Tree and 15,000 Family Dollar stores in the U.S. But in a reversal last month, Dollar Tree said during an earnings call that it plans to close 600 Family Dollar Stores this year. The company plans to close 370 more Family Dollar locations and 30 Dollar Tree stores as leases expire – 1,000 in total. 

Dollar Tree's corporate logo and signage is shown at the organization's corporate headquarters.

Dollar Tree corporate headquarters in Virginia

Nate Delesline III/Retail Dive

 

“The dollar stores have been on an expansionary tear over the past ten years and now have extremely large store estates,” Neil Saunders, managing director of GlobalData, told Retail Dive in emailed comments ahead of the rival retailers’ earnings announcements. “Most of this is because dollar stores serve relatively small catchments, so there’s a lot of potential sites for new stores, including in rural areas. The [payback] time on a new store is quick, so it is relatively easy to push heavy expansion from a capital investment standpoint.”

However, in the wake of Dollar Tree’s decision to shrink its footprint, Saunders said later in emailed comments that nearly 10 years after acquiring Family Dollar, “Dollar Tree is still sifting through the mess it inherited and has not been able to completely turn around.” Family Dollar as a banner tends to underperform in the segment, with core shoppers who use the store more out of convenience than anything else, Saunders said.

Offering the right products in the right place

Zhang said small towns and rural communities, where the nearest big box retailers might be miles away, are Dollar General’s core market. By placing itself close to customers who may not have many choices and offering convenience and affordable prices, the retailer has charted a successful path for growth. “This approach ensures that each store can be opened with less capital and run more efficiently, making the rapid expansion financially feasible,” Zhang said.

One part of what makes this work, Zhang continued, is Dollar General’s lean operating model. The foundation of that model includes smaller stores with a curated product selection that includes quality private-label products. Dollar General stores average about 7,500 square feet in size, although the company is transitioning to a new primary store format of 8,500 square feet of selling space.

Saunders echoed Zhang in saying that dollar stores’ focus on rural areas is a cornerstone of their success and growth. Retail competition in rural communities is often weak, “so dollar stores have a very captive market and are often a very convenient option for consumers who would otherwise have to drive further afield for everyday essentials. While price is often cited as a reason for the success of the dollar stores, the convenience angle should not be underestimated.”

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