The "One" Secret to Home Depot's Success

Since its founding in 1978, Home Depot (NYSE: HD) has seen great success. It has grown from two home-improvement stores near Atlanta to an empire of nearly 2,300 locations stretching across North America. While investors have made plenty of money investing in Home Depot since it went public, they didn't have to get in early or time things particularly well to get it right. The stock price is up more than 40% year to date, and currently sits near all-time highs.

Like all phenomenal business success stories, this one has had several catalysts driving it over the years, including exclusive and innovative products, successful acquisitions, and ever-increasing traffic from professionals. Yet one of the more underrated aspects of Home Depot's success has been the integration of its e-commerce business with its traditional brick-and-mortar business. Let's take a closer look at what Home Depot is doing to bring these two worlds of retail together.

A Home Depot storefront seen at an angle
A Home Depot storefront seen at an angle

"One Home Depot" is the phrase the company uses to signify its efforts to integrate digital retail with its brick-and-mortar empire. Image source: Home Depot Inc.

One Home Depot

Home Depot refers to its efforts to integrate online and physical sales as "One Home Depot" -- as in, there is only one Home Depot shopping experience, and it frequently involves aspects of both the digital and physical retail worlds. At the company's recent investor and analyst conference, CEO Craig Menear said [transcript via S&P Global Market Intelligence]:

The front door of our store is no longer at the front door of our stores. It's in the customer's pocket. It's on the job site. It's in their home. Developing the One Home Depot experience by bringing the physical and digital worlds together, with ability to handle the scale of Home Depot, required us to complete a re-platform of our website. This re-platform gives us the ability to create differentiated experiences for the customers going forward.

This renovation of the company's website was necessary, said Menear, because the company was previously built in "silos," with each store serving as its own platform. Later, when an online retail component was first added, it was also done in "a siloed capacity." Menear further informed investors that, on top of what the company has already done, the work to integrate Home Depot's platforms into one seamless shopping experience is far from over; it will require further investment in both the digital and physical sides of the equation.