San Diego Union-Tribune

CURBSIDE PICKUP LIKELY TO STICK AROUND AFTER THE PANDEMIC

Popularity shows that customers still want to go to stores

- BY SAPNA MAHESHWARI & MICHAEL CORKERY

When the pandemic forced Dick’s Sporting Goods to close its hundreds of stores in March, the retailer hustled to set up curbside pickup within two days. Its initial attempt, though, was just this side of a children’s lemonade stand.

“When you drove up, there was a sign in the window with a phone number, and people used the landline to call the stores and they’d deliver it out,” Lauren Hobart, president of Dick’s, said of the “very scrappy” operation. Email and text alerts would come later.

Scrappy or not, curbside pickup not only rescued Dick’s sales during the lockdowns, it has also emerged as many retailers’ best strategy for long-term survival in the e-commerce age. And what started as a coronaviru­s stopgap is likely to have a permanent impact on the way people shop, along with giving them a new reason to continue to visit beleaguere­d physical stores.

The popularity of curbside pickup reveals that the future of retail is not just more packages piling up on people’s doorsteps. Beyond satisfying the need for contactles­s shopping in the pandemic, it taps into Americans’ desire to drive to a store, a pull that can be just as strong as, or even stronger than, the convenienc­e of home delivery.

“Americans are used to their cars and actually do like stores, so this is kind of a hybrid where you’re getting the best of both worlds,” said Oliver Chen, a retail analyst at Cowen.

As of August, about three-fourths of the top 50 store-based retailers in the United States offered curbside pickup, according to Coresight Research, an advisory and research f irm that specialize­s in retail and technology. Anything from a sweater to a book is now as easy to pick up as a sandwich.

Target said its curbside sales grew more than 700 percent in the last quarter, while Best Buy reported nearly $5 billion in online revenue in the second quarter, a company record, and said 41 percent of that had come from curbside or in-store pickup.

The rise in curbside pickup, part of a larger surge in e-commerce sales, has implicatio­ns for preserving retail jobs, though workers’ duties are likely to transform. It is also helping to keep brick-and-mortar spaces relevant when thousands of storefront­s have emptied out as more customers move online.

Curbside pickup allows certain big-box retailers to

convert their stores into mini e-commerce fulfillmen­t centers, while avoiding the money-losing step of shipping goods to homes.

By driving to the store to pick up an online order, “the customer takes the last mile,” Chen said, referring to the typically expensive final step in package deliveries.

The rising popularity of curbside pickup coincided with Amazon’s struggles with its vaunted supply chain and usually seamless home delivery system in the early months of the pandemic. As people rushed to place orders for everything from toilet paper to backyard swimming pools, Amazon dealt with out-of-stock items, price gouging and delayed or inaccurate shipments.

That was a boon for chains like Dick’s, Best Buy, Target and Walmart, which harnessed the merchandis­e in their thousands of stores to new effect especially as summer began.

“Amazon struggled a bit at the beginning like everybody did, because, boom, when the demand came, it was so great it hit the whole system and kind of overwhelme­d it,” said Walter

Robb, a former co-chief executive of Whole Foods and executive-in-residence at S2G Ventures, a venture fund focused on food. “Those that have been able to be agile on their feet with these digital offerings have made some gains.”

The drive-up service is giving Walmart and other chains another significan­t advantage — the ability to make a profit on online orders, where the economics are notoriousl­y difficult. Target has said that its order pickup and curbside services at stores cost the company about 90 percent less on average than fulfilling orders from a warehouse.

On a $100 curbside order, the labor costs of picking the groceries reduce Walmart’s profit by $1.50 while still leaving $3 in profit, estimated Edward Yruma, an e-commerce analyst at Keybanc Capital Markets. By comparison, Walmart loses money on its traditiona­l e-commerce sales, in which customers order online and the products are shipped to their home, Yruma said. In its recent second-quarter earnings report, Walmart said that it had “significan­tly reduced losses” in its

traditiona­l business.

Walmart now employs 74,000 workers across more than 3,000 stores to pick groceries on orders and then take them out to customers’ cars. Five years ago, there were fewer than 1,000 of those jobs. But during the pandemic, filling those roles was a big driver behind Walmart’s hiring boom, which increased the company’s 1.5 million-person workforce by 14 percent.

But some retailers are not hiring more employees to pack online orders — they are simply adding these tasks to the workers’ workloads without increasing their pay. In fact, many retailers have ended the raises and bonuses that workers were receiving in the early months of the pandemic, a decision labor groups have criticized because workers now face both heavier workloads and the threat of contractin­g the virus in the store.

Jean-André Rougeot, chief executive of Sephora Americas, said that on a recent visit to Walmart, he saw more employees pushing carts for pickup orders than he did shoppers. He anticipate­s that people will return to Sephora’s stores to touch and try its beauty products, but acknowledg­ed that the pandemic would transform how people shopped and received goods.

“Every grandparen­t in America knows how to use Zoom now because that’s how they spoke to their grandkids for the last six months, so it’s not just young people,” Rougeot said. “The whole population has become much more comfortabl­e with technology and the ability to order things differentl­y.

“There’s a whole group of consumers that literally discovered e-commerce during this period,” he added. “These people, because of COVID, started to do that, and I don’t think you can put the genie back in the bottle.”

e-commerce

 ?? AMR ALFIKY THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Adrian Decena delivers a curbside pickup order outside a Target store in New York last month.
AMR ALFIKY THE NEW YORK TIMES Adrian Decena delivers a curbside pickup order outside a Target store in New York last month.
 ?? AMR ALFIKY THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Nichole Jackson delivers a curbside pickup order at Dick’s Sporting Goods in New York. The option has helped the retailer sur vive during the pandemic.
AMR ALFIKY THE NEW YORK TIMES Nichole Jackson delivers a curbside pickup order at Dick’s Sporting Goods in New York. The option has helped the retailer sur vive during the pandemic.

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