TokyoReuters — 

Toshifumi Suzuki, the founder of Seven-Eleven Japan and widely regarded as the father of Japan’s convenience store industry, died of heart failure on May 18, Seven & i Holdings said on Monday. He was 93.

Born in Nagano in 1932, Suzuki joined retailer Ito-Yokado in 1963 after working at a book wholesaler. Defying skepticism at the time, Suzuki partnered with Southland Corp, the US operator of 7-Eleven, to launch Seven-Eleven Japan in 1973, opening the first store in Tokyo the following year.

He pioneered the use of data to tailor inventory and built a business model centered on ready-to-eat meals and rapid inventory turnover, helping transform convenience stores into a cornerstone of Japan’s retail landscape.

Japan has more 7-Eleven stores than anywhere

<p>The 7-Eleven brand came to Japan in the 1970s. And the stores have taken convenience to new heights, churning out snack after new snack. They let CNN's Hanako Montgomery in on their cream-puff-making process.</p>

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Suzuki also led the successful restructuring and rescue of Southland in the early 1990s after the 7-Eleven parent filed for bankruptcy due to massive debt from a leveraged buyout.

Suzuki went on to establish Seven & i Holdings in 2005 and oversaw its expansion into a retail conglomerate. The avid book reader stepped down as chairman in 2016 after a management dispute but remained an influential figure in Japan’s retail industry.

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