Bangkok Post

Go stores may come to airport near you

- JEFFREY DASTIN

Amazon.com Inc is looking at bringing its futuristic checkout-free store format to airports in an effort to win business from hungry, time-pressed travellers, according to public records and a person familiar with the strategy.

The move underscore­s how a company that started as an online bookseller is making forays into brick-and-mortar retail to capture a greater share of shoppers’ spending.

For months, the world’s largest online retailer has been expanding Amazon Go, where customers scan their smartphone­s at a turnstile to enter, and then cameras identify what they take from the shelves. When shoppers are finished, they simply leave the store and Amazon bills their credit cards on file.

Amazon has opened seven of the stores to the public since January: in Chicago, San Francisco and its hometown Seattle, mostly catering to workers in nearby offices looking for a quick lunch.

Amazon is evaluating top US airports for new locations, according to public records requests to several airport operators.

“The lead for Amazon Go requested a meeting,” read a June 27 email from a technology adviser who supports Los Angeles Internatio­nal, the second-busiest airport in the country, to a concession­s official. “Interested?”

“Yes. Thanks!” the concession­s official replied.

A few hundred miles north, in the heart of Silicon Valley, an account manager at Amazon’s cloud unit asked San Jose Internatio­nal Airport for a meeting and referenced Amazon Go, as “one of many possibilit­ies we can discuss.”

After the June meeting took place, during which Amazon discussed how the stores work, an airport informatio­n technology manager wrote: “I am looking forward to moving forward with the Amazon Go technology at the airport.”

Officials from both airports have since told Reuters they had no further correspond­ence about Amazon Go and that the retailer would have to undergo a competitiv­e bid process to become a concession­aire, as is typical.

The company’s cloud unit, Amazon Web Services, has been in touch with airports for other purposes. The status of the Amazon Go effort is unclear.

An Amazon spokeswoma­n declined to comment.

A person familiar with the strategy confirmed that Amazon is studying how to get the checkout-free stores into airports and that an employee with experience in business developmen­t was assigned to

the task.

“Think about how you can expose your brand,” the person familiar with the matter said, on condition of anonymity. “You’ll be able to build broad awareness just being in a dozen of the best airports.”

More than 350 million passengers boarded flights at the country’s top 12 airports last year, according to US Department of Transporta­tion data.

Operating in airports will present new challenges for Amazon Go.

Workers must gain clearances to staff concession­s after security checkpoint­s, and square footage in busy sections of an airport can be expensive to lease. What is more, many airports are publicly run and require would-be concession­aires to put in public bids for retail space.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A sign of the Amazon Go store on 7th Avenue in Seattle.
REUTERS A sign of the Amazon Go store on 7th Avenue in Seattle.

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