The Arizona Republic

Retailers battle vs. Amazon to attract shoppers

- By Mae Anderson and Anne D'Innocenzio

NEW YORK — This holiday shopping season, it’s Amazon vs. everyone else.

The online giant has attracted customers from big store chains like Walmart and Best Buy with low prices and convenient shipping. Now, stores are fighting to get customers back during the busiest shopping period of the year.

Stores are doing things like matching the lower prices on Amazon.com and offering the same discounts in stores as on their websites. For its part, Amazon is giving customers the option to pick up items at physical locations and adding Sunday delivery.

There’s a lot at stake for both sides. Amazon has built a following but wants to grow its business globally. Meanwhile, brick-and-mortar retailers struggle to keep shoppers from using their stores as showrooms to test out and try on items before buying them for less on Amazon.

The holiday season ups the ante. Both online and brick-andmortar retailers can make up to 40 percent of their annual revenue in November and December. And this year, they’re competing for the growing number of shoppers who are as comfortabl­e buying online as in stores.

Holiday sales are expected to rise 3.9 percent to $602.1 bil- lion, according to the National Retail Federation. Of that, about $78.7 billion is expected to be online, up 15 percent from last year, according to Forrester Research.

Here’s how the fight is playing out:

Price war

One of Amazon’s biggest advantages is its low prices. It can charge less for everything from TVs to T-shirts because it doesn’t have the high costs of running physical locations.

Last year, some retailers offered to match the lower prices that customers find on websites like Amazon during the holiday season. And this year, more have made this a policy. Best Buy even is offering to refund the difference if a customer finds a lower price after they purchase something up until Christmas Eve. The strategy could eat into profit, but retailers hope sales will increase.

Staples is among retailers also offering the same discounts online and in stores during big shopping days like Black Friday. “We want customers to be able to shop however they want and whenever they want,” said Alison Corcoran, Staples senior vice president.

Speedy delivery

Stores had long seen their physical locations as an albatross, but now they’re using them to their advantage.

“Everybody was telling me... ‘These stores, that’s really a liability that you have,’” said Hubert Joly, Best Buy’s CEO. “Absolutely not. It’s an asset that you have1,000 warehouses strategica­lly located close to the customers.”

Best Buy is among the retailers using their locations as distributi­on hubs from which they can ship goods that are ordered directly to customers’ homes.

But Amazon.com Inc. is widening its distributi­on network to offer speedier delivery, too. Amazon added 8 million square feet of distributi­on centers and hired 70,000 people to work in them. It also added 1,382 robots to its line to help get packages out the door. And it partnered with the U.S. Postal Service to deliver some packages on Sunday.

Back in stores

Other retailers are trying to get shoppers into stores. Gap Inc. has expanded its service that allows shoppers to reserve items online, and then pay and pick them up within 24 hours at many of its Banana Republic and Gap stores. And options that allow customers to order and pay online and then pick items up at stores are popular.

At the same time, Amazon has started offering pickups at physical locations. Last year, it introduced lockers in 10 cities for customers to pick up items in stores like Rite Aid. But some competitor­s, including Staples and RadioShack, which initially welcomed the lockers, have taken them out.

Who wins?

Ultimately, experts say the battle is over customer service. StellaServ­ice, which tracks customer service, found that between August and October, the time it took to speak with a live agent on Amazon’s customer service line was one minute, compared with two-plus minutes at Best Buy and six minutes at Staples.

But brick-and-mortar retailers are catching up and in some cases surpassing Amazon by working on their customer service.

 ?? AP ?? Amazon.com has added distributi­on-center space and hired 70,000 people to work in the facilities. It will offer Sunday shipping.
AP Amazon.com has added distributi­on-center space and hired 70,000 people to work in the facilities. It will offer Sunday shipping.
 ?? AP ?? Brick-andmortar retailers like Best Buy for years have been contending with Amazon’s low prices. But this holiday season, they’re fighting back, offering to refund the difference if a customer finds a lower price after a purchase, until Christmas Eve.
AP Brick-andmortar retailers like Best Buy for years have been contending with Amazon’s low prices. But this holiday season, they’re fighting back, offering to refund the difference if a customer finds a lower price after a purchase, until Christmas Eve.

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