ValueVision Media, which operates upscale home-shopping network ShopNBC, took a hit to its bottom line in the first quarter, as new CEO Rene Aiu works to refocus the company in the midst of a massive slowdown in consumer spending.
She's shifting to more affordably priced products that encourage repeat business from its core customers -- women 35 and older -- instead of the high-priced jewelry and electronics the network has been selling.
"To get back to a really healthy business, you need a really healthy customer base of repeat buyers," said Aiu, who joined the company in March and has more than two decades of experience in TV shopping.
Aiu said ShopNBC's traditional high-end sticker prices will move toward more "entry-level price points."
"That makes impulse [purchases] much more readily attractive," she said.
ValueVision swung to a net loss of $18 million in the quarter ended May 3, compared with a year-ago profit of $34 million. Last year's earnings were buoyed by the company's sale of its equity interest in polo.com, which it sold for a $40 million gain.
First-quarter revenue plunged 17 percent to $156 million in preliminary results released Monday.
ValueVision took a $3.8 million noncash charge on inventory -- mainly on gold and gemstone jewelry priced over $1,000 -- which it expects to liquidate at a loss.