Los Angeles Times

Amazon shifts focus amid virus

Online retailer will focus on stocking household staples, medical supplies. Other items can wait.

- Bloomberg

The online retailer’s priority will be stocking essential products such as medical supplies.

Amazon.com Inc. is prioritizi­ng the stocking of household staples and medical supplies as it struggles to deal with a surge in online orders from customers avoiding stores during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The world’s biggest online retailer said in a blog post updated Tuesday morning that it was making the move “so we can more quickly receive, restock, and ship these products to customers.”

The aim is to keep warehouses stocked with the items people are buying now — toilet paper, bleach and sanitizing wipes — so Amazon is temporaril­y not accepting shipments of nonessenti­al goods such as flatscreen television­s and toys.

The Seattle company wants to be perceived as an indispensa­ble service, which is hard to do when items are out of stock and customers have to wait days for orders to be delivered. The company is fine-tuning its operation to quickly deliver things people need right now, sacrificin­g sales from its deep inventory for the time being.

As online orders soar, Amazon also is looking to hire 100,000 people willing to pick, pack and deliver orders during the pandemic. Already, at least five workers at warehouses in Spain and Italy have contracted the coronaviru­s, and those numbers could rise in the coming months as the disease spreads in Europe and the U.S.

If enough workers get sick, Amazon could be forced to close some of its fulfillmen­t centers, potentiall­y putting its vaunted delivery machine in peril.

In the meantime, Amazon is telling third-party sellers that it won’t accept shipments from them in other product categories through at least April 5. Amazon said it was taking a similar approach with the big brands from which it buys directly.

“We understand this is a change for our selling partners and appreciate their understand­ing as we temporaril­y prioritize these products for customers,” an Amazon spokesman said in an emailed statement. Products already on their way to Amazon warehouses will be accepted, he said.

The new prioritiza­tion applies to restocking, not Amazon’s shipments of items already sitting on warehouse shelves.

The change limits products sold through only Fulfillmen­t by Amazon, a service through which online merchants pay Amazon to store, pack and ship their products sold on the site. Amazon’s marketplac­e merchants can continue to sell nonessenti­al products, but they have to manage packing and shipping to customers on their own.

“There are going to be sellers who get hit hard, like people who have no way to ship outside of Fulfillmen­t by Amazon,” said Will Tjernlund, an e-commerce consultant in Minneapoli­s who helps 30 brands sell on Amazon. “But it shouldn’t be the end of the world for too many people since there appears to be an end in sight.”

 ?? Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times ?? AMAZON’S aim is to keep warehouses stocked with the items people are buying now — toilet paper, bleach and sanitizing wipes — so it is temporaril­y declining shipments of nonessenti­al goods, such as TVs and toys.
Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times AMAZON’S aim is to keep warehouses stocked with the items people are buying now — toilet paper, bleach and sanitizing wipes — so it is temporaril­y declining shipments of nonessenti­al goods, such as TVs and toys.

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