Tag Archives: Geek Squad

Best Buy's Latest Grasp at Survival

By Doug Ehrman, The Motley Fool

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Best Buy has been struggling for some time to revitalize its business and return to relevance as it fights the increasing shift toward online retailers. To this end, the company has looked at various strategic partnerships as a creative way to drive business — not long ago, Best Buy piloted offering Geek Squad services inside other retailers. With the increasing importance of personal electronics, Best Buy is now looking to Samsung.

In the video below, Fool.com contributor Doug Ehrman discusses an important new alliance that Best Buy hopes will allow it to fight another day. Find out his views on how successful this move might be for the retailer and its new partner.

The brick-and-mortar versus e-commerce battle wages on, with Best Buy caught in the middle. After what might have been its most tumultuous year in history, there are now even more unanswered questions about the future for the big-box electronics retailer. To help answer them, The Motley Fool has released a premium research report detailing the opportunities — and the risks — in store for Best Buy. Simply click here now to claim your comprehensive report today.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Target's Latest Electronics Disaster: Best Buy and RadioShack

By Rich Duprey, The Motley Fool

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One of the things electronics retailer Best Buy had hoped to use to set itself off from the competition and thwart the effects of “showrooming” from online rival Amazon.com , was its tech support staff that could set up, install, and repair the electronic gadgets and products it sold. Providing service through its Geek Squad instead of just offering product and price would be a key differentiator for it.

It hasn’t quite worked out that way, but seeking out opportunities to expand the brand has led it to partnerships in some unlikely places, like at eBay, where it offers tech support on gadgets won at auction or bought at the site, but also at more traditional retailers such as Target .

In search of pocket protectors
Yet much like its homegrown efforts, the branding opportunities seem to be hit or miss. Earlier this week, Target announced it was severing its relationship with the tech guys in the black-and-white Volkswagen Beetles, saying the six-month experiment had run its course and it was not renewing the partnership.

The discount retailer has been in sort of an identity crisis of its own lately, throwing a lot of options at the wall to see what sticks in an effort to jump-start sales. When it comes to electronics, however, not much has clung as it also recently ended its failed store-within-a-store kiosk concept it had with Radio Shack .

Unlike the Radio Shack pairing, where there were some 1,400 kiosks set up in its stores, Target’s foray into tech support was much more limited — just 29 stores in Denver and Minneapolis. In both cases, though, the problem doesn’t seem to exist within the electronics retailers, but rather that Target isn’t exactly a destination spot for gadgetry. Its lineup of products may be solid, but analysts have noted they haven’t been as aggressive as their peers in cutting prices.

Shades of Circuit City
Target’s hardlines division includes electronics (as well as video game hardware and software), but also music, movies, books, computer software, sporting goods, and toys. Even so, it represented only 18% of the retailer’s revenues in 2012, down from 20% two years ago. In the fourth quarter, the segment suffered a drop in sales in the mid-single digits, with electronics themselves experiencing the worst falloff.

That’s probably what led Target to agree to a year-round price-matching scheme, as Best Buy did, to meet the threat that Amazon poses. That still might not be enough to fend off its middle-of-the-road strategy, straddling the deep discount world of Wal-Mart on one side and mid-tier retailers such as Kohl’s, Macy’s, and J.C. Penney on the other. 

After all, the only thing usually found in the middle of the road are dead opossums and flattened squirrels. And if it wants to avoid that fate, Target’s going to need more than cute tricks like wireless kiosks and tech geeks to revive its electronic sales strategy.

Circuit overload
The battle between bricks-and-mortar stores and e-commerce …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Is the Future of Best Buy a New Generation of Electronics?

By Travis Hoium, The Motley Fool

BBY Net Income TTM Chart

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Best Buy has been in financial trouble for the past few years. Sales have been declining and the company is now losing billions of dollars.

BBY Net Income TTM data by YCharts.

New competitors to the electronics business, both online and at bricks-and-mortar locations, are taking sales that Best Buy could once count on. As a result, Best Buy has been on a mission to find ways to rejuvinate sales. Small-format stores that sell mobile products are popping up around the country and some of the larger versions are starting to disappear.

But what if what Best Buy really needs is a shift in the electronics it’s trying to sell us? Moving into (gasp) electric vehicles and solar is a move the company should seriously consider.

Do something we can’t
Best Buy has gradually been moving into the service business for years. Go to the company’s website and you can see services for home theaters, computers, car GPS, gaming, and many others. Geek Squad has become a do-it-all electronics arm for the company to sell electronics to consumers.

If you’re buying a large home theater system or need some computer help, this is a valuable servicem and it’s one of the reasons Best Buy can compete with Amazon.com, Target, and Wal-Mart. But this may just be the start for Best Buy.

The company recently announced a deal with Ford to provide electric charging station sales, installation, and support. Ford’s dealers don’t want to become on-call electricians who go to your home and install a car charger, so Best Buy does it. The service side of the business is already there, so it’s a natural fit for Best Buy.  

This isn’t the first step into electric vehicles by Best Buy, so thinking it will play a role in the EV future isn’t a stretch. The company used to sell the Brammo Enertia electric bike and currently offers a number of electric car chargers. General Electric is one of the brands Best Buy offers, and when you think about it, this is probably the best retail avenue for the electric equipment giant. GE is building public charging stations, but where else does it get into the home? Home Depot? Independent dealers? Best Buy has the showroom to make it a less intimidating purchase for consumers and the electronics expertise to get it installed.  

Solar is the next step
Speaking of intimidating purchases, how intimidating is it to spend $20,000-plus on a solar system for your roof? Wouldn’t you rather go into a showroom to compare panels and installation designs and even get a price quote than having to call someone to show up at your house?

Best Buy could offer a full-service solar product with all of these features, just as Home Depot does with kitchens.

Independent installers and solar manufacturers would love it if Best Buy got into solar, and …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance