retail member kit80ec4822782e2a37d9ee-478852ca0c5c18669502b2f9c7e01a0d.r61.… · l brands, inc....

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nrf.com/membership RETAIL MEMBER KIT Thinking of joining NRF? Great! As a member of the world’s leading retail trade association, NRF provides you with a wide array of resources and tools to navigate the retail landscape. NRF membership is company-wide and extends to all employees within your organization. In this kit you will find: RETAIL MEMBER BENEFITS Our members turn to us for the best in advocacy support, communities and peer networking, as well as retail education. ADVOCACY ISSUES NRF is advocating for you in Washington, and membership lets you help shape the policy that impacts our industry. The retail industry’s agenda is focused on jobs, innovation, and consumer value. PARTIAL RETAIL MEMBER LIST NRF’s member community is more than 18,000 companies strong. KEY NRF COMMUNITIES NRF offers communities where members with different areas of expertise connect with like-minded peers. RETAIL APPLICATION SIGN UP FOR YOUR ACCOUNT TODAY! myNRF.com Join NRF today. How can retail’s most powerful organization help you?

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Page 1: RETAIL MEMBER KIT80ec4822782e2a37d9ee-478852ca0c5c18669502b2f9c7e01a0d.r61.… · L Brands, Inc. Little Caesars LVMH, Inc. Macy’s McDonald’s MEIJER Michaels Stores Modell’s

nrf.com/membership

RETAIL MEMBER KITThinking of joining NRF? Great!

As a member of the world’s leading retail trade association, NRF provides you with a wide array of resources and tools to navigate the retail landscape. NRF membership is company-wide and extends to all employees within your organization.

In this kit you will find:

RETAIL MEMBER BENEFITS Our members turn to us for the best in advocacy support, communities and peer networking, as well as retail education.

ADVOCACY ISSUESNRF is advocating for you in Washington, and membership lets you help shape thepolicy that impacts our industry. Theretail industry’s agenda is focused on jobs,innovation, and consumer value.

PARTIAL RETAIL MEMBER LISTNRF’s member community is more than18,000 companies strong.

KEY NRF COMMUNITIESNRF offers communities where memberswith different areas of expertise connectwith like-minded peers.

RETAIL APPLICATIONSIGN UP FOR YOURACCOUNT TODAY!

myNRF.com

Join NRF today. How can retail’s mostpowerful organization help you?

Page 2: RETAIL MEMBER KIT80ec4822782e2a37d9ee-478852ca0c5c18669502b2f9c7e01a0d.r61.… · L Brands, Inc. Little Caesars LVMH, Inc. Macy’s McDonald’s MEIJER Michaels Stores Modell’s

ADVOCACY. Make Your Voice Heard

NRF is advocating for you in Washington, and membership lets you help shape the policy that impacts our

industry. Join NRF, and you can:

• Discuss issues and the implications of specific

legislation with a team of expert lobbyists.

• Participate in committees that address important

retail issues.

• Use NRF’s grassroots programs to communicate

directly with Congress and lobby Congress directly

through visits arranged by NRF.

COMMUNITIES. Network with Retail’s Best and Brightest

NRF offers communities where members with different areas of expertise connect with like-minded peers. Join NRF, and

you’ll:

• Benchmark your business practices, form policy and drive technology standards with your peers through NRF’s 50+

committees.

• Build and strengthen valuable relationships with other retail industry leaders.

• Chart the course for NRF’s research efforts and priorities.

• NRF Communities:

Digital Retail (Shop.org)

Chain restaurants (NCCR)

Technology (including ARTS, the

Association for Retail Technology

Standards)

Finance

Supply Chain

Mobile

Marketing

Loss Prevention

Legal

Human Resources

Global (FIRAE)

COMMUNICATIONS. Help Tell the Story of Retail

NRF is working to elevate retail’s image by telling the true story of retail’s impact on careers, communities and innovation.

Join NRF, and you’ll have the opportunity to:

• Post retail career opportunities for free on the NRF job board and reach tens of thousands of qualified applicants.

• Highlight your company’s successes through editorial opportunities such as media features and speaking at NRF events.

• Participate in Retail Across America events and join the conversation online: Follow @this_is_retail on Instagram for a look

behind the scenes and see the latest stories.

EDUCATION. Learn from leaders and visionaries

NRF events and conferences help you transform your business with inspired ideas and leading technology solutions. Join NRF,

and you’ll: • Receive discounted registration on all NRF events, including:

NRF Annual Convention & EXPO (Retail’s BIG Show)

Shop.org Digital Summit

NRF PROTECT (formerly NRF Loss Prevention Conference & EXPO)

• Gain complimentary entry to NRF’s invitation-only retail technology leadership event: NRFtech

RESEARCH & INSIGHTS. Work Smarter

Join NRF, and your entire company will have access to a steady stream of relevant, thoughtful content to help you make better

decisions and achieve your goals, including:

• Specialty newsletters, research studies, consumer

spending surveys, annual benchmarking reports, retail

industry economic data and planning guides for busy

shopping seasons.

• Members-only access to retail technology standards.

• Members-only webinars with insight and analysis from

retailers and industry partners.

• Essential industry news through our daily e-newsletter,

the NRF Smartbrief, NRF Global Smartbrief and Shop.org

Smartbrief.

Page 3: RETAIL MEMBER KIT80ec4822782e2a37d9ee-478852ca0c5c18669502b2f9c7e01a0d.r61.… · L Brands, Inc. Little Caesars LVMH, Inc. Macy’s McDonald’s MEIJER Michaels Stores Modell’s

As the nation’s largest private sector employers, decisions made every day in Washington have a profound effect on retailers’

ability to do business and serve their customers. NRF’s Retail Opportunity Index measures support of policies that contribute to

a vibrant, health economy. The index encourages Congress to invest in U.S. jobs, open markets for consumer goods, modernize

U.S. infrastructure, support workforce investment, foster innovation in customers experience and promote technology

development. A few of the key issues include:

COMPREHENSIVE TAX REFORM

Retailers benefit from few of the tax credits and

deductions that ease other industries’ tax burdens.

NRF supports efforts to “broaden the base” by

eliminating such provisions and using the revenue that

would be generated to lower tax rates for all

businesses. Doing so would make U.S. businesses more

competitive and help create U.S. jobs.

CREDIT AND DEBIT CARD SECURITY

NRF is leading the retail industry’s efforts to block

criminal attacks in which consumers’ credit and debit

card numbers are stolen in order to commit fraud. NRF

is asking banks to require use of a Personal

Identification Number with new chip-based “EMV”

cards, saying a signature is no longer sufficient to

authenticate that a card is being used by the actual

owner. Beyond chip-and-PIN, NRF is seeking federal

legislation making it easier to share information about

data crimes to ensure that they are thoroughly

investigated and prosecuted, and passage of a uniform

federal data breach notification law.

SALES TAX FAIRNESS

NRF has led the fight for a level playing field where all

retailers operate by the same tax rules for more than a

dozen years. Legislation that would allow states to

require online sellers to collect sales tax the same as

local stores passed the Senate in 2013 but died in the

House in 2014. Lawmakers are working on a new

version of the bill and hope to get it to President

Obama during the 2015-2016 session of Congress.

HEALTH CARE REFORM

Now that implementation of the Affordable Care Act

has begun, NRF is seeking passage of legislation that

would make it more workable. NRF is particularly

concerned by the ACA’s requirement that employers

provide health insurance to “full-time” employees and

its definition of full time as 30 hours a week. NRF is

working to change the threshold to 40 hours a week.

PATENT ABUSE

NRF believes retailers should be protected against

frivolous lawsuits brought by “patent trolls.”

Legislation passed the House in 2013 but died in the

Senate in 2014. NRF has formed a new coalition to

support passage of a new bill during the 2015-2016

session of Congress.

LABOR REGULATIONS

NRF has filed a lawsuit against National Labor Relations

Board regulations that would allow union organizing

elections to be held with little notice to employers.

“Ambush” elections would let unions quietly lobby

workers for months or longer while giving employers

insufficient time to respond.

IMMIGRATION

NRF supports practical, comprehensive immigration

reform that addresses the needs of both employers

and today’s transient workforce. The current

immigration system is broken, unworkable and in

desperate need of reform.

SUPPLY CHAIN INFRASTRUCTURE

It is critical that the United States’ transportation

infrastructure meet the growing demands of the retail

industry and growing population. Washington must

develop a national freight policy, prioritize funding of

freight-related transportation projects, and move

ahead with initiatives that support U.S.

competitiveness, economic growth and job creation.

SWIPE FEES

The U.S. Supreme Court has refused to hear NRF’s

appeal in a lawsuit saying the Federal Reserve’s cap

on debit card swipe fees is higher than intended by

Congress, but NRF hasn’t given up. NRF could ask the

Fed to reconsider the level of the cap when it comes

up for review in 2015. And a separate lawsuit over

credit card swipe fees remains under appeal.

Page 4: RETAIL MEMBER KIT80ec4822782e2a37d9ee-478852ca0c5c18669502b2f9c7e01a0d.r61.… · L Brands, Inc. Little Caesars LVMH, Inc. Macy’s McDonald’s MEIJER Michaels Stores Modell’s

Abercrombie & Fitch

A.C. Moore

Academy Sports + Outdoors

Aéropostale

Ahold Delhaize

Albertsons

Alex and Ani, Inc.

American Eagle Outfitters

Ann Taylor

Arby’s Restaurant Group

Army & Air Force Exchange

Barnes & Noble

Beall’s

Bed Bath & Beyond

Belk

Benjamin Moore & Co.

Big 5 Sporting Goods

Big Lots

BJ’s Wholesale Club

Bloomin’ Brands

Blue Nile

Brinker International

Brookstone

Brooks Brothers Group, Inc.

Build-A-Bear Workshop

Burger King

Cabela’s

Carter’s

Chick-fil-A, Inc.

Children’s Place Retail

Stores Christopher & Banks

Church’s Chicken

CKE Restaurants

Claire’s Stores

Coach

Cracker Barrel Old Country

Crate and Barrel

Crocs, Inc.

Darden Restaurants, Inc.

David’s Bridal

Denny’s

Dick’s Sporting Goods, Inc.

Dillard’s

Dine Equity

Disney

Domino’s Pizza

DSW

Dunkin Brands

Ethan Allen Interiors

EXPRESS

GAP

General Nutrition Companies

Genesco Inc.

Giorgio Armani Corporation

Godiva Chocolatier

Gymboree

Haverty Furniture

H & M Hennes & Mauritz L.P

Henri Bendel

Hobby Lobby Stores Inc.

Hot Topic, Inc.

Hudson’s Bay

HSN

IKEA

International Dairy Queen

In-N-Out Burger

Jack In The Box

J. C. Penney

J. Crew Group

J. Jill

Kate Spade

Kohl’s

Kroger

Lands’ End

L Brands, Inc.

Little Caesars

LVMH, Inc.

Macy’s

McDonald’s

MEIJER

Michaels Stores

Modell’s Sporting Goods

Neiman Marcus Group

Nine West

Nordstrom

Northern Tool + Equipment Co.

Papa John’s International

PETCO Animal Supplies

Pier 1 Imports, Inc.

Pilot Flying J

QVC

RadioShack

Ralph Lauren Corporation

REI, Inc.

Rent-a-Center

Restoration Hardware

Ross Stores

Saks Incorporated

Sam’s Club

Sonic Corp.

Spencer Gifts

Starbucks Coffee Company

Stein Mart

Sur La Table

Tailored Brands

Talbots

Texas Roadhouse

The Cheesecake Factory

The Container Store

Tiffany & Company

TJX Companies

Tractor Supply Company

Tuesday Morning

ULTA Beauty

Under Armour

Urban Outfitters

Waffle House

Walmart

Wendy’s

West Marine

Whataburger Restaurants

Whole Foods Market, Inc.

Williams-Sonoma Inc.

Page 5: RETAIL MEMBER KIT80ec4822782e2a37d9ee-478852ca0c5c18669502b2f9c7e01a0d.r61.… · L Brands, Inc. Little Caesars LVMH, Inc. Macy’s McDonald’s MEIJER Michaels Stores Modell’s

CHAIN RESTAURANT (NCCR) ROB GREEN, Executive Director, NCCR

[email protected]

SCOTT VINSON, VP, NCCR

[email protected]

Key Committees:

• NCCR Food Safety Task Force

• NCCR Food Supply Chain Committee

COMMUNICATIONS KATIE MCBREEN, VP, Communications & Public Affairs

[email protected]

Key Committee:

• Retail Communicators Network

DIGITAL RETAIL (SHOP.ORG) ARTEMIS BERRY, VP, Digital Retail

[email protected]

Key Committees:

• Digital Council

• Shop.Org Content Committee

• Shop.Org Email Collaboration Group

• Shop.Org Policy Advisory Group

• Shop.Org Research Committee

• Shop.Org Social Media Collaboration Group

• Shop.Org Think Thank

FINANCE CARLEEN KOHUT, EVP and COO

[email protected]

RACHELLE BERNSTEIN, VP, Tax Counsel

[email protected]

Key Committees:

• Financial Executives Council

• Internal Audit and Compliance Council

• IT Audit Council

• Taxation Committee

GOVERNMENT RELATIONS DAVID FRENCH, SVP, Government Relations

[email protected]

Key Committees:

• Government Affairs Policy Council

• Patent Troll Legislative Committee

• Small Business Retail Council

HUMAN RESOURCES / LABOR NEIL TRAUTWEIN, VP, Employee Benefits Policy Counsel

[email protected]

ANGELA ELDER, VP, Career Development Programs

[email protected]

Key Committees:

• Committee on Employment Law

• Health and Employee Benefits Committee

LEGAL MALLORY DUNCAN, SVP & General Counsel

[email protected]

MONICA ANDERSON, VP, Associate General Counsel

[email protected]

Key Committees:

• Credit Executives Committee

• General Counsel’s Forum

• Lawyers Committee

• Payment Systems Task Force

• Privacy Working Group

• NRF ADA Task Force

LOSS PREVENTION ROBERT MORACA, Vice President, Loss Prevention

[email protected]

Key Committees:

• LP Council

• LP Subcommittees: Awards and Recognition Committee, Content

Committee, Diversity Committee, Education and Research

Committee, Legislative Committee, ORC-Investigator’s Network, and

Women in Loss Prevention.

MARKETING KELLY GILMORE, VP, Retail Marketing and Advertising

[email protected]

Key Committee:

• CMO Council

SUPPLY CHAIN & TRADE JONATHAN GOLD, VP, Supply Chain and Customs Policy

[email protected]

Key Committees:

• Product Safety Committee

• International Trade Advisory Committee (ITAC)

• Strategic Supply Chain Council

TECHNOLOGY (including ARTS, the Association for Retail Technology Standards)

TOM LITCHFORD, VP, Retail Technology

[email protected]

KAREN SHUNK, VP, Technology Standards

[email protected]

Key Committees:

• ARTS Council

• CIO Council

• IT Security Council

• Women in Retail IT

Talent Acquisition Group

Page 6: RETAIL MEMBER KIT80ec4822782e2a37d9ee-478852ca0c5c18669502b2f9c7e01a0d.r61.… · L Brands, Inc. Little Caesars LVMH, Inc. Macy’s McDonald’s MEIJER Michaels Stores Modell’s

Company/Parent Company:

Address 1:

Address 2:

City: State: Zip Code:

Phone: Fax:

Email Address: Website:

Number of Retail Units: Annual Sales Volume:

Contact Name: Job Title:

Signature: Date:

NRF RETAIL MEMBERSHIP APPLICATION

DOMESTIC MEMBERSHIP DUES:

Companies that focus on the sale of consumer products and/or services to the public with retail operations located within the United States.

RETAILERS WITH ANNUAL SALES GREATER THAN $250 MILLION:

$0 to $10,000,000 $2,750

$10,000,001 to $25,000,000 $3,250

$25,000,001 to $50,000,000 $3,750

$50,000,001 to $100,000,000 $4,250

$100,000,001 to $250,000,000 $4,750

$250,000,001 and up (see below)

Enter your company’s total annual sales:

SELECT YOUR RANGE AND FOLLOW THE FORMULA TO CALCULATE YOUR ANNUAL DUES:Sales Range Total Annual Sales Minus Multiplier Based Dues Annual Dues

$250-$500M - 250M = x .0000150 = + $5,500 =

$500-$2.5B - 500M = x .0000100 = + $10,500 =

$2.5-$10B - 2.5B = x .000050 = + $30,500 =

$10.0-$25B - 10.0B = x .000010 = + $68,000 =

$25B and up - 25B = x .000005 = + $83,000 =

QUESTIONS? Call the membership department at:202-783-7971 or email: [email protected]

Companies principally engaged in retailing are eligible for membership in the Federation. Under NRF’s bylaws, each member must pay dues based on total annual sales volume as reported in the most recent fiscal year. Total Sales must include sales received from all retail operations including stores, catalogs, online stores and franchise fees.

For federal income tax purposes, dues payments to the National Retail Federation are not tax deducible as a charitable contribution. In addition, the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993 includes a provision denying a tax deduction for lobbying activities conducted by trade associations such as NRF. NRF estimates the nondeductible portion of the above dues – the portion allocable to lobbying – is 86%.

PAYMENT INFORMATION

CHECKS: Please make checks payable to:

National Retail FederationPO Box 781081Philadelphia, PA 19178-1081 Note: All checks must be drawn on a U.S. Bank in USD Funds

WIRE TRANSFERS: For details please email your request to: [email protected]

AMEX VISA MASTERCARD

Card Number:

Exp Date: Amount: $

Cardholder Name:

Billing Address:

City: State: Zip:

Authorized Signature:

National Retail Federation / 1101 New York Avenue NW, Suite 1200,Washington, DC 20005 / Phone: 202-783-7971 / Fax: 866-223-5383

EIN#13-5582627