Hotel Chocolat
This coverage examines Hotel Chocolat’s operations, strategy, and positioning within the UK retail and confectionery market. Reporting highlights store performance, product innovation, marketing campaigns, sustainability efforts, and executive leadership shaping the brand’s growth. Retail executives, brand managers, and buyers can gain insight into how Hotel Chocolat navigates consumer trends and competitive pressures in the premium food and gifting sectors.
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Sep- 2019 -25 SeptemberHigh Street
Hotel Chocolat beats high street woes with strong revenue growth in 2019
British chocolatier Hotel Chocolat has reported a 14% increase in revenues to £132.5m for the year ending 30 June 2019. Profit before tax grew by 11% to £14.1m during the period, and the group results included £0.5m of sales and £1.2m of losses relating to new investments in locations in…
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Jul- 2019 -18 JulyHigh Street
Hotel Chocolat revenues jump 14%
Chocolate retailer Hotel Chocolat Group has reported a 14% increase in revenue to £132m for the year ending 30 June 2019. The retailer opened 16 new stores in the year contributing 5% to group sales year-on-year. Two of the new openings were in the USA, and the group also entered…
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Jan- 2019 -23 JanuaryLuxury Goods
Hotel Chocolat posts 15% festive retail revenue rise
Hotel Chocolat has announced it has seen strong festive retail figures, amid a disappointing period for many on the high street. The luxury chocolatier said it had seen a 15% revenue rise year-on-year over the 13 weeks to 30 December. Despite Hotel Chocolat’s positive figures, British consumers cut back on…
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Jul- 2018 -18 JulyHigh Street
Hotel Chocolat reports another strong year of growth
Chocolate retailer Hotel Chocolat has a reported a 12% increase in revenue for the financial year ending July 1 2018. The business opened 15 stores in the year, which contributed 6% to the retailer’s year-on-year sales, added 200,000 new online buyers and has developed a number of new products for…
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May- 2018 -11 MayAnalysis
The death of the UK high street
The high street as we know it is dead. Boring stores are dead. Or if they are not dead yet, they will be if retailers do nothing. The high street started to decline because retailers saw firstly that out-of- town, and then online were what customers wanted. It’s always driven…
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