The Morning Call (Sunday)

After being left for dead twice, RadioShack is reborn online

- By Matt Ott

SILVER SPRING, Md. — RadioShack, a fixture at the mall for decades, has been pulled from brink of death — again.

It’s the most prized name in the basket of brands that entreprene­ur investors Alex Mehr and Tai Lopez have scooped up since the coronaviru­s pandemic bowled over the U.S. retail sector and sent a number of chains into bankruptcy protection, including Pier1, Dressbarn and Modell’s.

Mehr and Lopez plan to make RadioShack competitiv­e again, this time online. However, unlike RadioShack’s glory years, it’s Amazon’s world now.

The big question is: How much value does the RadioShack brand have when the prized target audience of younger consumers may have never owned a radio, let alone stepped inside a RadioShack store?

“It’s a very thin line between being iconic and being dead,” said Robert Passikoff, founder and president of Brand Keys Inc., a marketing and research consultanc­y. “Being iconic a lot of the time just means people have a memory of it. I’m not sure that just rememberin­g something is leverageab­le enough to be able to convert something into success.”

Success is something that’s been in RadioShack’s rearview mirror for quite some time. The company, which would celebrate its 100th birthday in 2021, appeared to be on top of the tech world in the pre-personal computer days of the late 1970s and early 1980s, the place kids and hobbyists would go to buy radios, walkie-talkies and all the parts to fix them, or even build them.

Somewhere along the way, “The Shack” got lost. Unable to capitalize on the PC boom that began in the mid-1980s, it also found itself largely on the outside of the portable device revolution

of the aughts and drifting toward irrelevanc­y. It booked its last profit in 2011. After store redesigns and other changes failed to draw customers, the FortWorth, Texas, company filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in 2015 and again two years later.

Mehr and Lopez have no designs on rebuilding the brickand-mortar RadioShack empire. But they say there is a path back to profitabil­ity, and it starts with the name.

“We bought the raw material to build a big business,” Mehr said. “Brand means trust. And the brand is very, very strong.”

The plan, in short, is to build a vast online marketplac­e on top of the RadioShack brand. Trust in that name will get consumers to the site, where the quality and variety of merchandis­e will dictate whether or not shoppers click the “Buy” button, they say.

Since it was founded in 2019, REV has been in the hunt for other names that could once be described as “household.” It’s turned Pier1, Dressbarn and Modell’s into online-first businesses.

Other bankrupt retailers have found a second life online. The overhead is low and there are people who remain loyal to the

brand. But they are typically much reduced affairs. American Apparel, which went bankrupt a few years ago, now sells hoodies and sweatpants online. Toys R Us, which closed its doors two years ago, opened a couple of small stores and it has a website. However, the Toys R Us site redirects those who want toys to Amazon.com.

REV says that its much leaner RadioShack will sell from its own website and an Amazon storefront. RadioShack was the place to go for batteries, phone chargers and headphones. Those are products that Amazon sells under its own name in vast quantities.

And therein lies REV’s challenge. Megachains like Walmart and Target have been able to slow Amazon’s encroachme­nt, but Amazon is the ultimate disruptor. It has upended industries from tech and grocery to global shipping.

Yet Mehr doesn’t look at Amazon as a competitor. Rather, he said, it’s another channel where RadioShack can sell its products when RadioShack.com opens by the end of the month.

“It’s like a big mall with a lot of traffic,” Mehr said. “So I think of Amazon as a partner, and I’ve done that in other brands, too.”

 ?? TONY GUTIERREZ/AP 2015 ?? RadioShack, which celebrates its 100th birthday in 2021, is trying to carve out a niche as an online-only retailer.
TONY GUTIERREZ/AP 2015 RadioShack, which celebrates its 100th birthday in 2021, is trying to carve out a niche as an online-only retailer.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States