Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Over the Tip is Like "Showrooming;" Best Buy and Target Responses are Like "Retail" and "Wholesale" in Telecom

Target is not happy about "showrooming," the practice whereby many consumers take a look at products, but then wind up buying that same merchandise online. Target now appears to be concerned enough about lost sales to Amazon that it will stop selling Kindles in May 2012.

Every firm has to decide what to do about competition, and Target seems to have no similar qualms about selling Apple tablets. In fact, Target is preparing to launch Apple Stores inside Target locations.

Since Target stores began selling Amazon's Kindle line back in 2010, and the Kindle Fire was even the retailer's best-selling tablet during Black Friday 2011.

The new deal with Apple is said to represent a "conflict of interest."  Target's move, in one sense, isn't unusual. Lots of distributors have special deals with certain suppliers, and Target might be betting it will make more money selling Apple tablets than Kindles. There might be clauses in the deal that require Target to remove Kindles. It just isn't clear.

But Target and Best Buy might be heading in opposite directions in dealing with "showrooming." Target has asked its suppliers for special "Target only" merchandise, for example, to limit "showrooming" impact. That might be likened to mobile phone "exclusives" offered by mobile service providers.

Best Buy, on the other hand, is mulling a shift in the opposite direction. Best Buy has, like Target expects to do, supported Apple mini-stores inside Best Buy locations for quite some time. But Best Buy might consider shifting even more fundamentally in that location, essentially allowing many other suppliers to rent space inside Best Buy as a primary revenue model.

In telecom terms, Target wants to remain a retail supplier, where Best Buy could move in the direction of a major reliance on a wholesale role in the value chain. Target's strategy is the more common approach in the communications business, where nearly all the money is made selling products directly to retail end users.

Best Buy might be considering a shift to a "Clearwire" style, wholesale-only strategy that is relatively uncommon in the communications business. Where the retail Target strategy rests on revenues created by end users, the wholesale strategy rests on sales of products to business partners.

Where Target is a business-to-consumer model, Best Buy might be contemplating a shift to a business-to-business model.

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