The Hamilton Spectator

Amazon selling steaks off the back of a truck

- JOSEPH PISANI

NEW YORK — Donna Brunswick drove to a Costco last month to pick up two pounds of raw flank steak — not at the wholesale club, but from a truck in the parking lot.

“Typically you wouldn’t buy meat off a random truck,” says Brunswick, a technical manager in Atlanta.

But she says $20 for the slab of beef was a good deal. And she liked the filet mignon she bought from it in December when it was that day’s offering. “The truck meat was delicious,” she says.

The meat didn’t just fall off the back of a random truck. It was sold by Amazon, which already sells just about anything online but now also hawks discounted seafood, Panini presses and more from what it calls the Treasure Truck.

It’s a quirky way for the online retailer to connect with shoppers in person, expand its physical presence and promote itself. Amazon has also used the trucks to try to bring people into Whole Foods, the grocery chain it bought last year. The service debuted two years ago and the trucks now roam nearly 40 cities in the United States and England.

The inspiratio­n, says Treasure Truck director Margot Johnson, was the ice cream truck, another

store on wheels that pops up unexpected­ly.

While Treasure Truck sales are a tiny piece of the giant online retailer’s business, the value to Amazon may be in the app downloads the trucks generate, their ability to test what products are hot sellers, and the buzz they create, says Aaron Cheris, who heads Bain & Co.’s retail practice.

“Amazon does a lot of things because they can,” Cheris says.

What’s sold on the trucks? The item is a secret until the day the trucks roll out. People who sign up get a morning text announcing the deal of the day. At the circus-like trucks, which light up and blast music, Amazon workers play games with shoppers and help them take selfies. They have custom designs, like a lobster

and lighthouse on the Boston truck; cowboy boots in Dallas; and a race car in Indianapol­is. A bubble-blowing machine is usually going.

“It’s so kitschy,” says Evelyn Molina, who bought a $20 bouquet of roses, lilies and other flowers from the Miami Treasure Truck. Molina, who blogs about parenthood at MommyMafia.com, decided to treat herself since it was parked near her workout spot.

The first Treasure Truck hit the streets of Amazon’s Seattle hometown in 2016. It expanded to 25 U.S. cities by last fall, and then a dozen British cities, including London and Manchester, late last year. Amazon won’t say if it plans to expand further.

The trucks go out a couple times a week and spend a few hours roving between the parking lots of malls, office complexes or banks. Amazon rents those spaces, but it can also park in front of its own Whole Foods stores.

Molina got a $5 Whole Foods coupon when she picked up a “Star Wars” toy in December from a truck parked nearby. The coupon had to be used that day, so she bought grapes, chicken tortilla soup and other groceries.

“They totally got me,” Molina says.

Amazon picks what’s sold on the trucks, Johnson says. There are holiday-related goods, such as the Godiva chocolates and dozen red roses it sold before Valentine’s Day; trendy items, like the Instant Pot pressure cooker; or food, such as uncooked shrimp or raw chicken wings. The trucks have refrigerat­ion, Johnson says.

And then there’s weather: Amazon can cancel outings due to rain, snow or other conditions.

 ?? ELAINE THOMPSON THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Amazon worker Khayyam Kain, right, hands off a package to a customer at an Amazon Treasure Truck in Seattle. The Treasure Truck is a quirky way for the online retailer to connect with shoppers in person.
ELAINE THOMPSON THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Amazon worker Khayyam Kain, right, hands off a package to a customer at an Amazon Treasure Truck in Seattle. The Treasure Truck is a quirky way for the online retailer to connect with shoppers in person.

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