Don Quijote (store)

For other uses, see Don Quixote (disambiguation).
Don Quijote Co., Ltd.
株式会社ドン・キホーテ
Public (TYO: 7532)
Industry Retail
Founded September 5, 1980 (Tokyo, Japan)
Headquarters Meguro, Tokyo
Number of locations
163 stores (February 2011)
Area served
Japan, Hawaii
Products Clothing, food, jewelry, housewares, tools, sporting goods and electronics.
Revenue Increase ¥487 billion / $5.74 billion (2010)[1]
Increase ¥21.1 billion / $251 million (2010)[1]
Increase ¥10.2 billion / $122 million (2010)[1]
Total assets Increase ¥302 billion / $3.6 billion (2010)[1]
Total equity Increase ¥106.8 billion / $1.3 billion (2010)[1]
Number of employees
4,391
Website donki.com (Japanese)

Don Quijote (ドン・キホーテ) is a discount chain store that has over 160 locations throughout Japan as well as three stores in Hawaii.[2] It carries a wide range of products, from basic groceries to electronics to clothing. The store is well known in Japan and is often referred to by its shortened name Donki (ドンキ). Distinctly, Don Quijote tends to keep very late hours for Japanese retailing (to 3 or 5am, or even 24 hours) and it packs its goods from ceiling to floor in a distinct merchandising strategy.

History

The front of the Don Quijote building in Roppongi.

Don Quijote opened its first store in Suginami, Tokyo in September 1980 under its original name, Just Co. Originally a retail store, Just Co. quickly switched to wholesale in 1982.

The company opened its first "Don Quijote" named store in Fuchu, Tokyo in March 1989. With the name change, the store also changed its primary business from wholesale to retail. It was not until 1995, six years later, that Just Co. followed suit and it changed its corporate to Don Quijote Co., Ltd as well. In June 1998, the company was listed on the Tokyo Stock Exchange.[2]

As one of the few discount stores in Japan, the end of the Japanese economic bubble did not have disastrous effects for Don Quijote. Instead, the sudden economic uncertainty caused the Japanese public to become more thrifty and therefore helped to boost sales at its stores during the early 1990s.

In 2005, idol group AKB48 opened its theater on the eighth floor of the Don Quijote Akihabara Outlet in Tokyo.[3]

In 2013, Don Quijote purchased Marukai Corporation U.S.A. including stores in Hawaii and California.[4]

Theme song

Don Quijote is known for the distinctive song that plays in its stores. The song is called "Miracle Shopping" (ミラクルショッピング) sung by Maimi Tanaka (田中マイミ), a Don Quijote store employee.[5] "Miracle Shopping" was released as a maxi single in 1999.[6]

Controversy

A street view of the Roppongi roller coaster that sits atop Don Quijote.

Arson

In December 2004, four stores in the Kantō area were damaged or destroyed by arson attacks. Three store employees, Morio Oshima, 39, Mai Koishi, 20, and Maiko Sekiguchi, 19, died in the first arson incident. In 2007, Noriko Watanabe, 49, was found guilty of setting the fires and sentenced to life imprisonment. Don Quijote received harsh criticism at the time for poor store layout that made it difficult to find exits.[7]

Roller coaster

Coordinates: 35°39′44.73″N 139°44′5.11″E / 35.6624250°N 139.7347528°E / 35.6624250; 139.7347528

In 2005, Don Quijote began building a "half-pipe" roller coaster on the roof of its eight story Roppongi store. Roppongi is a heavily populated area in the core of Tokyo, and many residents and businesses were upset with the idea of having a roller coaster in their neighborhood because of the spectacle, noise and crowds it will likely create. The project was completed in 2006 but due to increasing pressure from concerned groups in the area it has never been operated. As of 2016, the structure still exists. Don Quijote has not announced what future plans they have for it. [8]

Overseas Assets

Don Quijote purchased the Marukai Japanese chain stores in USA in 2013, splitting it into Marukai and Tokyo Central Markets chains.[9]

References

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