The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Holiday shopping earlier than ever

- By Joseph Pisani and Anne D’Innocenzio

NEWYORK» Add last-minute holiday shopping to the list of timehonore­d traditions being upended by the coronaviru­s pandemic. Retailers are kicking off the holiday season earlier than ever this year in hopes of avoiding big in-store crowds and shipping bottleneck­s in November and December.

Stores like Best Buy, Macy’s, and Target typically offer their biggest Black Friday deals over Thanksgivi­ng weekend, but now they’re starting them in October so people don’t crowd their stores later, creating a potentiall­y dangerous situation during a pandemic.

And with more people expected to shop online, retailers are trying to avoid a rush of orders closer to Christmas, which could lead to late packages and more expensive shipping. Many had a hard time keeping up with the surge in buying when shoppers were locked down in their homes during the early days of the pandemic. Even Amazon, which has spent 25 years building warehouses and a delivery network, had to hire an additional 175,000 workers to meet demand.

Black Friday has long been the unofficial start to the U.S. holiday season, though retailers have been pushing holiday shopping earlier for the last decade or so.

This year there’s more urgency. With the coronaviru­s still spreading in the U.S., stores have had to rethink their usual holiday plans. Thanksgivi­ng Day doorbuster­s are canceled. There will still be in-store sales the day after Thanksgivi­ng, but companies are expected to try to steer many shoppers to their websites to avoid crowds and chaos.

“We’re preparing for a holiday season unlike any we’ve seen before,” said Target CEO

Brian Cornell.

With many people out of work and even more uncertain about their economic futures, this isn’t expected to be a banner year for holiday sales. Shoppers will likely buy fewer gifts because they won’t be traveling to big family holiday gatherings. And they’ll be focused on gifts related to activities around the home, from workout wear to home goods and gaming consoles. One bright spot: People are spending less on experience­s like travel and eating out, which have siphoned away holiday sales over the past few years.

“Shoppers are going to be very selective in what they buy,”’ said Ken Perkins, president of Retail Metrics, a retail research firm. “Retailers, particular­ly department stores and specialty clothing chains, need to get it right in terms of inventory and customer traffic. They’re fighting for their lives.”

The first big holiday push will come from Amazon, which is positionin­g its mid-October Prime Day as a kickoff to the holiday shopping season. This is the first time Amazon has held Prime Day so close to the holidays. It’s usually in July, but was postponed this year.

That will put pressure on stores to offer deals around the same time, too. Target and Walmart have already said they will hold their own sales during the same time as Amazon’s. Best Buy will offer deals in October, earlier than it ever has.

Even with the early start to the season, holiday sales are expected to deliver smaller gains than in recent years. But no one really knows what’s going to happen.

Joel Bines, who runs the retail practice at AlixPartne­rs, thinks the earlier shopping will stick even when the pandemic is over.

He likens it to when most major stores started opening on Thanksgivi­ng Day after one or two stores did it for the first time a decade ago as a way to jumpstart Black Friday sales.

“This is here to stay,” Bines said. “The new holiday season is October through January.”

There are already signs of early shopping. Kohl’s said shoppers have started searching for stocking stuffers and matching family pajamas on its website.

Retailers will try their hardest to woo procrastin­ators. In October, TV and online ads paid for by trade group National Retail Federation will push people to buy early.

MadaLuxe, which has three stores and distribute­s luxury goods to discount chains, is bringing in holiday items like blankets, pillows and picture frames in mid-October, a month earlier than usual.

“I don’t think our customers are looking at holiday, but we want them to,” said MadaLuxe CEO and president Adam Freede.

Sasha Vuillaume has

already bought Disney Princess figurines for her 5-year-old daughter as a Christmas gift. And if Amazon has a Prime Day deal on the Barbie camper her daughter wants, the veterinary receptioni­st from Lakewood, Ohio, will probably buy it then.

But Vuillaume expects much of her holiday shopping to be at Target, ordering online and picking up at the store. She wants to spend as little time inside as possible. Before COVID-19, she would grab a drink at Starbucks and wander around the aisles of Target.

“That was kind of my downtime,” she said. “Now I can’t really do that.”

Stores like Best Buy and Kohl’s know that many shoppers like Vuillaume want to avoid being inside for long and are expanding services that allow them to buy items online and pick them up at the store. Some small businesses are joining in. E-commerce platform Shopify, for example, started offering a way for its merchants with physical shops to add curbside pickup.

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 ?? DAVID ZALUBOWSKI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Holiday knick-knacks on display for Christmas shoppers at a Lowes store in Northglenn, Colo. Retailers are kicking off the holiday season earlier than ever this year in hopes of avoiding big in-store crowds and shipping bottleneck­s in November and December.
DAVID ZALUBOWSKI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Holiday knick-knacks on display for Christmas shoppers at a Lowes store in Northglenn, Colo. Retailers are kicking off the holiday season earlier than ever this year in hopes of avoiding big in-store crowds and shipping bottleneck­s in November and December.
 ?? DAVID ZALUBOWSKI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A display of Christmas trees stands next to holiday knick-knacks on display in a Macy’s department store in Denver. To cut down on crowds during the holiday season because of COVID-19 concerns, stores have begun to put up Christmas displays to entice shoppers and, in the process, spread out the typical shopping frenzy.
DAVID ZALUBOWSKI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A display of Christmas trees stands next to holiday knick-knacks on display in a Macy’s department store in Denver. To cut down on crowds during the holiday season because of COVID-19 concerns, stores have begun to put up Christmas displays to entice shoppers and, in the process, spread out the typical shopping frenzy.

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