Flying Tiger Copenhagen

(Redirected from Tiger (store))

Flying Tiger Copenhagen (formerly Tiger) is a Danish variety store chain.[2][3] Its first shop opened in Copenhagen in 1995 and the chain now has nearly 1000 shops. Its largest markets are Denmark, the UK, Italy, and Spain. Before June 2016, it operated as Tiger (or Tiger Copenhagen) in most markets, as T·G·R in Sweden and Norway, as Flying Tiger Copenhagen (or just Tiger Copenhagen) in Ireland, Japan, Belgium, and the Netherlands.[4] The chain sells a variety of items, mostly accessories and toys.[5] According to the company's founder, the company had about 39 million customers in 2014.[6] Tiger takes its name from how the Danish pronunciation of the animal name tiger (IPA: [ˈtsʰiːɐ]) sounds roughly the same as the Danish word tier (IPA: [ˈtsʰiˀɐ]), used to denote a 10 kroner coin; in the first stores in Denmark, all items cost 10 kroner.[7]

Flying Tiger Copenhagen
Company typePrivately held company
IndustryRetail
Founded1995 (1995) in Copenhagen, Denmark
FoundersLennart Lajboschitz (founder)
Suzanne Lajboschitz (co-founder)
Headquarters,
Number of locations
950
Area served
Worldwide
Revenue4.274 billion DKK
OwnerZebra A/S
Websiteflyingtiger.com
Footnotes / references
[1]

History

Logo in some countries until June 2016
Tiger shop, Copenhagen city centre
Tiger shop, Putney, London

Lennart Lajboschitz opened the first shop at Islands Brygge in Copenhagen in 1995.[4]

In 2005, the company opened its first shop in the United Kingdom in Basingstoke, later followed by other parts in the United Kingdom, such as Glasgow in Scotland, Cwmbran in Wales and Newry and Belfast in Northern Ireland. They no longer operate in Northern Ireland as of 2021 due to poor sales.[8]

In 2012, EQT Partners acquired a 70% stake in the chain Tiger via its investment in its parent company Zebra A/S.[9]

In January 2015, the company appointed former The Body Shop director Xavier Vidal as its new chief executive officer.[10] The company opened its first store in the United States in New York City in May 2015, [11][12] a 5,000-square-foot/152 mq store in Manhattan's Flatiron District.[13] In 2016, the company officially changed its name worldwide to Flying Tiger Copenhagen; it has previously used other names due to the name "Tiger" not being allowed in all markets, the name "Flying TigerCopenhagen.[14]

In November 2018, the company announced the opening of four shops in Massachusetts and planned to open 20 more locations in New England in the next few years. The CEO, Mette Maix said the format of the shop is "like a treasure hunt" by adding at least 300 random, new items each month to the shop selection.[1]

In November 2020, Flying Tiger closed all US Stores, to focus on other markets.[15]

Online shopping

Flying Tiger opened their global online shop in July 2021,[16] catering to most of Europe. The online store ships to Belgium, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Greece, Italy. Ireland, Lithuania, Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Poland, Czechia, Germany, Hungary, Austria, Slovakia, Spain, Sweden, Turkey and the UK.

The online store is opening the range of product for a much broader audience than the network of physical stores are catering to.[citation needed]

New products are added to the store each week.[17] Many products are limited edition and only for sale for a limited time.

Number of shops per country

Tiger shop at Amerikamura in Chūō-ku, Osaka.

Flying Tiger operates almost 1,000 shops worldwide, of which 937 are in Europe.[18]

CountryShops[19]
 Italy129
 Spain118
 United Kingdom85
 Denmark51
 France43
 Poland44
 Sweden42
 Norway35
 Japan35
 Portugal36
 Germany33
 Finland31
 Belgium23
 Ireland23
 South Korea22
 Netherlands20
 Czech Republic17
 Austria13
 Switzerland15
 Greece13
 Hungary11
 Israel8
 Slovakia8
 Estonia7
 Latvia6
 Lithuania6
 Cyprus6
 Iceland5
 Saudi Arabia5
 Malta3
 United Arab Emirates2
 Indonesia9
 Philippines4
 Turkey10*

Awards and recognition

In 2014, Tiger Stores Ireland won Company of the Year and Best Small Company at the Retail Excellence Ireland awards.[20] In the same year, the company received "Good design" award by Chicago Athenaeum.[21][failed verification]

References