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Target, Best Buy to offer free shipping this holiday season
Bloomberg News
Nov. 6, 2017 7:26 pm
With Target and Best Buy both to roll out aggressive free-shipping deals this holiday season, Wal-Mart Stores might need to unveil some Black Friday goodies of its own to maintain its torrid online growth.
Target is waiving home-delivery fees for all holiday orders, the industry's latest shipping promotion.
Electronics seller Best Buy has done the same, proving that the most contested battleground for retailers this holiday season is the so-called last mile - getting products to customers' door.
'Retailers are competing for share and if they are not competitive in the holiday season, consumers won't choose them next year,” said Erik Morton, vice president of strategy and corporate development at e-commerce software provider CommerceHub.
The moves put the spotlight on Wal-Mart, which has yet to disclose its strategy for the critical Black Friday promotional period.
The world's biggest retailer rolled out free two-day shipping on more than two million items in January, and U.S. online chief Marc Lore has credited the offer with helping the company post web sales growth of at least 60 percent in recent quarters - about double the pace of Target and Best Buy.
'Wal-Mart has them in the rearview mirror right now,” said Sucharita Mulpuru, an analyst at Forrester Research.
Free-shipping deals have become increasingly essential for online sellers, even though they take a toll on the bottom line. Target has trotted out similar promotions every year since 2014. More than half of shoppers who abandon their online shopping carts do so because the delivery options were too expensive, according to a survey conducted last year by Research Now on behalf of e-commerce software provider MetaPack.
For the first time ever, more shoppers will look for gifts online than in stores this holiday season, according to a survey from the National Retail Federation. The industry association projects that total holiday retail sales will rise as much as four percent this year, to about $680 billion.
Target also is offering more than 100 Black Friday deals on Nov. 22 for holders of its proprietary 'Red” card. The retailer's 1,828 stores will open at 6 p.m. on Thanksgiving, just as they did last year, and close at midnight. That's a change from previous years, when stores stayed open throughout the night and into Friday. This year, stores will reopen at 6 a.m. on Black Friday.
Employees work at a Target store at St. Albert, Alberta, January 15, 2015. REUTERS/Dan Riedlhuber/Files

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