For Black Friday deals 2009, can Amazon.com, the Web's leading retailer, compete with Wal-Mart, the brick-and-mortar titan? (Newscom)
Photos (1 of 1)
On Black Friday sales 2009, can Amazon compete with Wal-Mart?
By David Grant | 11.19.09
Until Wednesday, Wal-Mart was siccing its legal team on websites of all types to keep its Black Friday 2009 deals from lighting up cyberspace. At the same time, Radio Shack was e-mailing scanned copies of its “Shack Friday” circular to the news media.
The lesson? Wal-Mart runs the Black Friday show. All others need to hustle to keep up.
But can they?
Many Black Friday watchers are skeptical. Because Wal-Mart maintains lower prices with similar profit margins, the initiative belongs to the Bentonville, Ark.,-based corporation.
“It all depends on how deeply Wal-Mart wants to cut prices. It’s kinda throwing the ball up in the air in terms of Wal-Mart and seeing how it trickles down to the other retailers,” says Steven Rogé, portfolio manager at R.W. Rogé & Co., a financial-management firm in Bohemia, N.Y.
There is one retailer that might (at least eventually) take a bite out of Wal-Mart: Amazon.com.
“Black Friday has traditionally been an in-store shopping holiday, but it has also creeped online in a big way as well and merchants have incredible deals online for those people who don’t want to fight the crowds in the stores. This has made a way for Amazon to get into the game,” says Luke Knowles, co-founder of Internet coupon distributor Coupon Sherpa.
Amazon’s power derives from the migration of consumers to online shopping combined with advances in mobile technology that makes comparison shopping more comprehensive and immediate than ever.
“You’re in Wal-Mart. You see the product you’re looking at cheaper on Amazon,” via a smartphone, Mr. Knowles explains, “and you can be physically standing in Wal-Mart and buy something on Amazon.com.”
It’s not as if brick-and-mortar stores are eschewing online sales. Far to the contrary, they are pushing hard into mobile and online retail.
Traditional retail outlets “are trying to find ways to engage that social media a little bit more than they have in the past,” says Brent Conver, director of DVDTalk.com. “Before, if anything breaks on the Internet, [retailers think] ‘We’re going to lose our in-store purchases.’ Now, they are saying, ‘We want more Internet activity anyway, so we’re going to make sure that we lead with a few important deals and they’ll pick their spots to drop an important coupon online.’ ”
But Amazon isn’t developing online strategy. It’s perfecting it.
Over the last three years, Amazon’s revenue has grown an average 31 percent per year compared with 9.1 percent for Wal-Mart. While Wal-Mart’s $400 billion-plus revenue last year dwarfed Amazon’s $19.2 billion, Mr. Rogé says, “those are quite substantial revenue numbers for Amazon, and those are sustainable probably for the next decade. Ten years from now we’re going to be talking about Wal-Mart in bricks and mortar as a clear winner and online, possibly even competing in the same breath as Wal-Mart, Amazon is going to be right there.”
For brick-and-mortar outfits, the key is to compete on adding customer-service value to every product. By offering free installation, warranties, and friendly, hassle-free service, retailers without Wal-Mart’s huge purchasing power could compete on consumer experience once the product is off the shelf.
“If you think back, and if you think Sears, you think, ‘I can buy my product here and not worry about anything going wrong. I can buy a Craftsman lawn-blower and I can take it back and they are as friendly as anything and I’ll get a new one. To some extent, that changed over the past couple of years,” Rogé says. “To some extent, that’s why a lot of us go to Costco to buy stuff, because we know that pretty much they’ll take anything back. So you can feel safe.”
Still, while companies like Target, Sears, or Amazon might be able to match or beat Wal-Mart on a particular product, on balance, Wal-Mart stands alone.
For a particular model TV, for example, “Wal-Mart might not beat that price but Target, that’s their one-trick pony,” says Michael Brim, founder of BFads.net. “Wal-Mart is the three-headed monster of Voltron. They’re big.”
See also:
The story behind the leak of Wal-Mart’s Black Friday deals
Are Black Friday’s years numbered?
Black Friday 2009 Wal-Mart ad: Some people know what’s in it
On Black Friday 2009, Will Best Buy or online stores win?
Wal-Mart’s 2009 Black Friday Flier
_____
— David Grant is a Monitor contributor. What are the best Black Friday deals on the market right now? Let us know on Twitter.
Comments
2. zman75943 | 11.20.09
I’ve heard that Wal Mart is selling appliances as low as $3.99. I’m excited for this Monday as some of the best deals are going to be rolled out. Check out http://www.2009blackfridayads.com I found this site last year and know they are a great source for the best deal on the web.
3. Robert Farago | 11.20.09
I’m not sure that customer service is the key to Wal-Mart kicking Amazon’s butt—especially if the emphasis is on Wal-Mart’s returns policy.
I reckon the experiential aspect of bricks and mortar is the key to its survival. For one thing, shopping is a social event. Get out of the house. See and be seen. Humans needs social interaction. Stores provide it. For another, real world retailers can provide “touch and feel” product demonstrations. They can sell stuff; people like that.
It’s strange that stores aren’t playing-up their inherent advantages. Why are retail outlets still arranged like factories, with goods stocked like cord-wood on repetitive aisles? Fluorescent lights? Whatever happened to the Bloomingdale’s boutique approach?
And where are the killer sales people or exciting demos? Didn’t Billy Mays die for the sins of all those ignorant, bland salesfolk? Hang on; where are the salespeople generally? I couldn’t find a sales assistant for love nor money on a recent trip to Target. Home Depot. Wal-Mart. Etc. And when Black Friday arrives, it all gets a lot worse.
When a new medium appears, it frees the old one to reinvent itself (look what happened to radio when TV arrived). Retailers need to get on with it, already.
Trackbacks/Pingbacks
1. Twitter Trackbacks for On Black Friday sales 2009, can Amazon compete with Wal-Mart? | csmonitor.com [csmonitor.com] on Topsy.com | 11.19.09
3. Black Friday Sales | 11.21.09
Leave a Comment
We do not publish all comments, and we do not publish comments immediately. The comments feature is a forum to discuss the ideas in our stories. Constructive debate - even pointed disagreement - is welcome, but personal attacks on other commenters are not, and will not be published.
Tip: Do not write a novel. Keep it short. We will not publish lengthy comments. Come up with your own statements. This is not a place to cut and paste an email you received. If we recognize it as such, we won't post it.
Please do not post any comments that are commercial in nature or that violate copyrights.
Finally, we will not publish any comments that we regard as obscene, defamatory, or intended to incite violence.









1. Josh | 11.19.09
Online shopping is my go to for the holidays for sure. I just can’t stand the craziness of the stores and how it can cloud your thinking. Plus, I like using sites like Etsy.com that help small business and individuals.