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Amazon Will Open 100 Retail Stores (businessinsider.com)

An anonymous Slashdot reader writes: Amazon plans to open "as many as 100" retail stores in shopping malls by the end of next year, according to Business Insider. The 300- to 500-square-foot stores will sell familiar Amazon hardware products like Kindles and Fire TV, "but the broader goal is to drive more traffic to Amazon's online store, as these devices make it easier to purchase items there" -- and to promote Amazon's Echo personal assistant.

Amazon stores have already quietly opened in 12 states, including six stores in California and more stores in New York, Texas, Virginia, and Massachusetts. But now the brick-and-mortar stores "have emerged from the test phase with a goal to expand and grow," according to one Amazon job posting, and Business Insider reports that new Amazon stores "are popping up almost every week in shopping malls across the country."

The article has pictures of the new Amazon stores, and points out that the company also experienced disappointing results from an earlier experiment with Amazon trucks.

10 of 167 comments (clear)

  1. Biggest effect will be on nearby Best Buys by AuMatar · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Best Buy is already the place you go to before you buy it cheaper on Amazon. This will kill nearby ones.

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    I still have more fans than freaks. WTF is wrong with you people?
    1. Re:Biggest effect will be on nearby Best Buys by Desler · · Score: 4, Insightful

      This just in: Retail stores like Best Buy do this thing called "price matching". Film at 11!

    2. Re:Biggest effect will be on nearby Best Buys by Desler · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Sometimes.

      Nope, all the time. I've never once had a price match not accepted from online stores like Amazon, Newegg, etc. by Best Buy, Frys, etc.

      And then I have to find a salesman, show them the price, argue them into it (as they try to claim they only price match brick and mortar), and deal with their hard sales and trying to talk me into buying a warranty. I'd rather just buy it on Amazon and not deal with their salesmen. Unless I absolutely want it today I'm not even going to ask them to match.

      Nope, you simply walk up to the cashier, show them the price on Amazon and they price match. Every time I've done it it takes less than a minute at Best Buy. And I've done this at multiple locations.

    3. Re:Biggest effect will be on nearby Best Buys by amxcoder · · Score: 5, Informative

      This only works with items that don't have retailer specific model numbers... (I'm looking at you TV's!!). The common ploy for a long time with the big retail chains is to make deals with the manufacturers to basically sell them the items under custom model #'s that are specific to their store. So you'll see the same exact TV at BestBuy will be a XYZ-65-01, and at WalMart it will be a XYZ-65-02, and at Amazon.com it will be an XYZ-65-03. Therefore, even though it's the same device, the model numbers don't match exactly, giving the retailer an excuse to not price match. This has been a standard ploy for a very long time, going all the way back to when GoodGuys and Circuit City were still in business. Not all electronics manufacturers participate in this practice, for instance a Sony PS4 is a Sony PS4 everywhere, but my point is, it doesn't always work.

    4. Re:Biggest effect will be on nearby Best Buys by David_Hart · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Sometimes. And then I have to find a salesman, show them the price, argue them into it (as they try to claim they only price match brick and mortar), and deal with their hard sales and trying to talk me into buying a warranty. I'd rather just buy it on Amazon and not deal with their salesmen. Unless I absolutely want it today I'm not even going to ask them to match.

      In regards to Best Buy, I've had no problem price matching to major online stores (i.e. Amazon, Newegg, etc.) and I've had no problems with someone trying to talk me into a warranty (They ask at the register if I want the warranty, I say No, they complete my transaction). Of course, when I buy from Best Buy, I usually buy it online from BestBuy.com for pickup and then just go and pick it up. Why spend time in the store "browsing" if you don't have to?

      The one reason why I still buy some electronics from the Best Buy retail store is for returns. It's a lot easier to return a 65" TV or an A/V AMP to a retail outlet than it is to ship it back to Amazon, etc. Yes, the online outlets have services that do pickup/delivery but I prefer to deal with retail outlet for these items.

    5. Re:Biggest effect will be on nearby Best Buys by TheRaven64 · · Score: 4, Informative

      Seriously? Do you live in the middle of nowhere? Amazon here gives free delivery on every purchase over about £20 (maybe £25?). Delivery on cheaper things is typically about £1. I've never had to pay anything like that for Amazon delivery, even when ordering from Amazon France for delivery to the UK. I don't think I've ever paid close to $75 for delivery of anything I've ever bought online from anywhere.

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      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    6. Re: Biggest effect will be on nearby Best Buys by Type44Q · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The worst walmart does is try to sell you an air filter or some kind of engine cleaning fluid when you don't need either,

      Incorrect. The worst they will do is hire someone who either fails to make sure your oil drain plug is screwed-in all the way or else strips the threads.

  2. Just as I predicted. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    I told you the internet was a fad.

  3. Bad Idea, Really Bad Idea by WindowsStar · · Score: 5, Informative

    Anyone Remember CompuAdd?? or Gateway??, not many do, but after being giants in computer sales on line they opened retail stores and it crippled them and cost them going out of business. Amazon needs to be extremely careful, what is that quote, "those who don't remember the past are doomed to repeat it".

  4. Returns! by crow · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What I really hope this means is that if I need to return something that I bought on Amazon (if it was fulfilled by Amazon), and I need to return it, that I can do so by driving it to the Amazon store instead of dealing with packing it back up and shipping it back to them. That's the one part of online shopping that I hate dealing with, and this would give me another option.