
The unusually heavy traffic along Panganiban avenue on a very rainy, almost stormy night courtesy of three weather disturbances around Luzon, suddenly reminded me that this was the day the much hyped grand opening of SM took place. All parking spaces outside the mall were occupied. We were guided by guards on raincoat to a third-level parking area.


As previously feared, the arrival of SM Naga comes as shock and awe for local businesses. SM management doesn't seem to think of Naga as a provincial city in the second-most depressed region in the Philippines. Looking around and seeing the almost limitless variety of products on sale---from the dangit of Cebu, exotic vegetables that I rarely see, all species of of fish including my favorite blue marlin, cheap pork from Davao to giant flat-screen TVs and the latest Ford Ranger pick-up truck, I almost felt that every aspect of SM City Naga is an overkill.
All sections from the department stores, appliance center, food court, grocery and fruits, vegetables, meat and fish sections, including the multi-level parking areas, even the main lobby, are first-class. And, yes, National Bookstore even slips quietly into the local scene with SM.
SM's lessons in attention to details, ambiance, product presentation, marketing, automation and customer service---and, yes, lots of good taste, class and quality--- might just make local businessmen see the subtle aspects of enterprises that they have ignored for long.
The grand opening took place earlier in the day while Naga was under typhoon signal no. 1. There were no costly fireworks and blinding lights. Some observers even say the SM opening was not grand at all.
There were no celebrity guests and movie stars at the opening. And nobody seems to mind. In Naga City, no local celebrity could draw bigger crowd than an SM Mall itself.
And it is an attraction that will be a fixture of Naga---a provincial city that will never be the same again.
