Will stores forgo the most profitable 鈥 and crowded 鈥 holidays?
To curb crowds, Target and Walmart have decided to close stores on Thanksgiving day, ending the early-bird door buster tradition. Black Friday sales are still in limbo.
To curb crowds, Target and Walmart have decided to close stores on Thanksgiving day, ending the early-bird door buster tradition. Black Friday sales are still in limbo.
Target is joining Walmart in closing its stores on Thanksgiving Day, ending a decade-long tradition of jump-starting Black Friday door buster sales.
The move, announced Monday, comes as stores are rethinking this year鈥檚 Black Friday shopping bonanza weekend 鈥 along with other key retail days during the holiday season 鈥 as the country battles the coronavirus pandemic.
Stores always depended on big holiday crowds and work as much as a year in advance with manufacturers on securing exclusive items. Now, the virus has turned the holiday shopping model upside down. Stores have slashed orders and crowds are an anathema. With fears of a wave of virus cases in the fall, the biggest nightmare would be if retailers had to reclose during the most critical time of the year, analysts said.
鈥淗istorically, deal hunting and holiday shopping can mean crowded events, and this isn鈥檛 a year for crowds,鈥 Minneapolis-based Target said in a corporate blog posted. It said its holiday deals would come earlier than ever 鈥 starting in October.
Walmart, the nation鈥檚 largest retailer, announced its move last week.
Target opened for the first time on Thanksgiving in 2011, joining other stores in starting Black Friday sales a day early and creating a new tradition of shoppers heading out to the stores after their turkey feast. Many retailers did so because they were trying to better compete with Amazon and other online players.
But sales ended up eating into Black Friday and many critics lambasted stores for not honoring the holiday and allowing their workers to spend it with family. In response to the backlash and also poor sales, some stores and malls like Bloomington, Minnesota-based Mall of America, reversed course and have not opened on Thanksgiving in recent years. Costco and Nordstrom among others have always remained closed on Thanksgiving, noting they want to respect the holiday.
The bigger question still looms on how to handle Black Friday itself, which also draws huge crowds 鈥 and sales. Despite competition from Thanksgiving shopping, Black Friday ranks as either the top or No. 2 sales day of the year.
Thanksgiving is not even in the top 10 because sales start around 5 p.m. But the day ranked third in online shopping behind Cyber Monday and Black Friday respectively last year, according to Adobe Analytics, which tracks online sales for 80 of the top 100 retailers.
Walmart and Target declined to comment on their plans for Black Friday, but analysts say they believe that the retailers will pivot their business more online and focus on limiting the number of shoppers in stores. Like Target, other retailers will also likely start holiday sales even earlier to stretch out crowds.
Macy鈥檚 CEO Jeff Gennette said earlier this month that the department store will be pivoting its Black Friday business more toward online and will likely be going 鈥渇ull force鈥 with holiday marketing right after Halloween. It also will be staggering events to reduce customer traffic in the store.
Still, pushing sales further online will likely be more costly for retailers because of shipping expenses. And while many stores like Macy鈥檚 will ramp up curbside pickup for the first time this holiday season, that strategy will create logistical challenges to meet shoppers鈥 holiday demands.
Sucharita Kodali, an e-commerce analyst at Forrester Research Inc., said that the profit margins retailers get on their online sales are anywhere from 50% to 80% of what they get when the same item is bought in the store.
鈥淭his is going to be a very tough holiday season in terms of where sales are going to come from,鈥 said Joel Rampoldt, a managing director in the retail practice at AlixPartners.
This story was reported by The Associated Press.
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