Santa Fe New Mexican

Fewer fights, long lines on Black Friday

- By Tiffany Hsu

Black Friday has long been, and will most likely remain, the busiest shopping day of the year.

But the features that have made it a cultural phenomenon — the discounted electronic­s, the predawn openings, the curbside campsites, the incivility — are changing with the broader retail landscape.

Shoppers can now find bargains well before and long after Black Friday, and some deals are explicitly intended to draw spending away from the main event. The retail bonanza is increasing­ly met with indifferen­ce or disapprova­l by Americans who want to spend time with their families, sleep in and give underpaid retail employees a break. Foot traffic into stores on Black Friday is slipping while e-commerce claims a growing portion of the sales.

Here is a look at Black Friday, past and present.

Store closings reshape lines:

Many of the retailers that drew the longest lines on Black Fridays past are now gone, shut down by corporate parents crushed by debt or forsaken by customers migrating online. Retailers closed nearly 8,000 stores in 2017, a record high, according to UBS. Toys R Us shuttered all its stores this summer. Sears filed for bankruptcy in October.

Rethinking sidewalk campsites:

Staking a claim on the first spot in a Black Friday line, often weeks in advance, was often considered a point of pride. Days before the shopping event in 2011, shoppers waited on lawn chairs and in tents outside a Best Buy in Mesquite, Texas.

But the psychologi­cal drivers that once compelled shoppers to shiver in the dark for hours seem to be less and less effective. One recent survey of more than 2,000 people found that nearly 60 percent planned to skip inperson Black Friday shopping this year.

Instead, a majority of consumers planned to take advantage of free shipping deals. Others opted for outdoor activities, prompted by discount admission offers from park organizati­ons and REI’s 3-year-old anti-Black Friday marketing campaign.

Wider shopping window, calmer lines:

Enthusiasm for Black Friday has boiled over into rage when waits have been long and parking spots scarce. Brawls have broken out in California, Texas, Pennsylvan­ia and elsewhere. A dispute over line-cutting outside a busy Target in Bowling Green, Ky., in 2012 quickly escalated into shoves and screams.

Passions still flare in stores, but Black Friday has become increasing­ly sedate as it stretches into Black November and shoppers find deals online through events like Amazon’s Prime Day and Cyber Monday.

Security upgrades:

Sometimes, Black Friday outings are deadly. Shoppers have been pummeled, shot and stabbed. At the Green Acres Mall in Valley Stream, N.Y., in 2008, thousands of antsy shoppers shattered the sliding glass doors at a Walmart store and stampeded inside, injuring 11 people and fatally trampling a worker, Jdimytai Damour. In a settlement the following year, Walmart agreed to pay nearly $2 million, avoiding criminal charges.

Since then, Walmart has worked with crowd management experts and local law enforcemen­t to keep shoppers safe, it said. Retailers have also learned to temper customers’ fear of losing out.

“The chaos was being caused by the frenzy of trying to get to limited supplies and the great unknown of what was going to be inside the store,” said Marshal Cohen, a retail analyst with the NPD Group. “Retailers never really tipped you off to what was going to be inside, but nowadays, you can find out even a month in advance.”

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