Posted on 10/29/2019 8:28:31 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
In an interview given roughly twenty years ago when Amazon was largely a peddler of books, CDs, and DVDs, founder Jeff Bezos observed to a reporter that his nascent company would never replace the shopping center experience. Bezos plainly saw how shopping centers and malls gave people a happy feeling of community, of a physical place to go, and he knew Amazon couldnt recreate it.
Bezoss acknowledgement of Amazons limits proved a window into the companys future. Amid rising pessimism about the future of bricks & mortar retail, Bezos is an optimist. He is investing many billions in the physical shopping locations that hes long stressed Amazon cant recreate. Market statistics support what Bezos is doing. Popular as online shopping is, it still accounts for well under 10% of total retail sales.
Plainly eager for Amazon to be a player in the portion of retail that is largest, by far, Bezos is investing many billions as previously mentioned. There are Amazon bookstores, Amazon Go stores that will free the rushed buyer from checkout lines, theres Amazons acquisition of grocery chain Whole Foods, and there will surely be many more endeavors. Irony of ironies, one of the few public business figures who openly expresses his belief that bricks & mortar retailing has a brilliant future is the man largely credited with destroying this allegedly old economy way of catering to acquisitive customers. Happily Bezos isnt the only believer.
Indeed, to walk into a Lowes, or a Home Depot, or a Target, Walmart, or Costco location, is to be reminded that media members have a tendency to warp perception. Traditional retail, and big shopping centers are dead unless we remember the myriad big store businesses that continue to thrive. Its not that old retail is dying as much as its rapidly changing, and in the process leaving those stuck in the past behind. This is the stuff of economic dynamism. The future rarely resembles the past in places where theres growth.
Figure that the malls of the past included video rental stores, Orange Julius fast food outlets, and Radio Shacks. The previous truth requires consideration as some in our midst parrot the popular view that retail is over with, that shopping malls will never again be relevant again, that Toys R Us, Circuit City and Sears failed not because they were no longer meeting the needs of their customers, but because of the internet. Conventional wisdom is yet again unacceptable. In a dynamic economy that which is stationary is a sitting duck, just waiting to be put out of business. Its a reminder that investment is the driver of economic growth, not consumption. Investment is the process whereby the future is rushed into the present. Happily its happening with shopping malls.
As the Wall Street Journal reported over the weekend about American Dream, the most expensive U.S. mall ever built, the shopping center is being re-imagined in exciting ways. Investors are still willing to back what aims to be different with enormous sums of money. American Dream will surely be different. Consider the Journals description of this new kind of shopping center:
On one end, you can glimpse multiple ski lifts for a 16-story indoor ski hill, the largest in the Western Hemisphere. Across a professional size ice rink is the hemispheres biggest enclosed amusement park, the 8-acre Nickelodeon Universe a colorful jumble of roller coaster tracks and rides. Next to that is the DreamWorks Waterpark, the largest indoor water park in North America, with a wave pool and 40 slides.
So this is the new shopping center; one bereft of shopping? No doubt the pessimists in our midst might assume just that since, you know, Amazon is putting retailers out of business, but reality is something else entirely. Though American Dream will be the first consumer shopping concept to devote more space to entertainment, restaurants and theme-park rides than to traditional retail, there will be copious amounts of the latter in what will, if successful, lure more than 40 million visitors per year to the historically unattractive Meadowlands area of New Jersey. According to the Journal, there will be more than 450 retail outlets that customers will be able to shop in when theyre not availing themselves of the endless entertainment options situated on the 90 acre site. Readers can rest assured these retailers arent taking space at the American Dream to lose money.
When you walk through, we want you to be awed, jawdropped, inspired. Those are the words of Don Ghermezian, creator of the American Dream, as told to the Journal. One imagines that it would be a joy to witness Ghermezian and Bezos talking retail. What amazing ideas must rush through their minds! Many of Ghermezians will be bad ones, Bezos has had a few, but the greatest entrepreneurs who really improve the world and our living standards fail with great regularity. We need people like Bezos and Ghermezian who, eager to try new things, reveal to us wants we never knew we had.
Ghermezian wants to awe us with an entirely new shopping experience, Bezos did with online shopping, continues to do so, plus with the Go stores he plainly aims to awe us in new ways. Bricks & mortar retail is dead is such a lazy, economically illiterate comment. Its lazy because it presumes that businesses can remain vibrant by offering customers the same as ever. Sorry, but thats never been true. Lest readers forget, few were demanding the worlds plenty with a click of a mouse before Bezos, and few were demanding a smaller amount of plenty through the then highly advanced catalogue before Sears made it possible. Its economically illiterate because it presumes that consumption powers growth, as opposed to investment that enhances our consumptive ability all the while transforming how we consume. Economists are illiterate about the economy. Think about it.
Looking ahead, its exciting to imagine whats next. Economically dynamic economies are defined by relentless replacement of the past, which means that Bezos and Ghermezian will eventually be replaced by the dreamers of tomorrow; that, or the businesses they created will be. Were awestruck now, so imagine what the future holds if the economy remains free such that Amazon and American Dream are rendered yesterdays news. Retail isnt dead, rather what used to entertain us is. And thats a beautiful thing.
Sure. They’re most useful for early morning walkers and after-dark wildings.
In case you just had to watch the fashion show:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yQ-ZOVJXMes
It’s quite bizarre.
That isn’t shopping, it is an amusement park.
If you go to one during the “wrong” hours, you may end up dead
I’m certain the local mall is not basing their business planning on how many times I plan to darken their doors in the future. I might make it 5 times in a big year.
Step 2) Look, touch, taste, test, and compare the items you are interested in purchasing.
Step 3) Choose the make/model/options that exactly fit your wants and needs.
Step 4) Whip out your phone and look up the chosen item on Amazon, compare pricing to the in-store item, then hit 'Buy Now.'
The mall is for women and cloths shopping..they should have gotten Base Provshops in there failing department stores and maybe Homedopt or Loews with just tools and paint...men will not go there..
They may not be dead, but I know my patronage is about 1% of what is was 20 years ago.
Correct. And Jeff Bezo's knows this. My belief is that malls that fail are either in areas that are stagnating economically and demographically, or they just don't take the time to invest in making the place attractive to customers.
Yup. The mall closest to where I live is relatively healthy (though the Sears closing has left a huge gaping hole in the middle of it).
Each time I walk through there I come to realize more and more that the target audience for malls is NOT men over 50!
Go online. All sorts of people express nostalgia for malls that are no longer around.
If I were in the mall business I’d sell the nostalgia. Make them sort of a 1980’s theme park where you can actually buy stuff.
I stated it before: malls wont die, especially if the mall has a movie complex. Just like taxis were thought to be extinct, you still see them with Uber.
Big malls are finished....only people pushing them are construction companies and leasers....
I will not set foot into the local “Mall”. It is infested with out of control punks and overpriced junk.
Ignore the Lazy Pessimists, Despite Online Shopping, Shopping Malls Are Far From Dead;
I don´t know. The one near me, except for seniors doing their daily power walk, is empty enough to emulate a democrat brain. Reports of deer roaming some of the halls have surfaced lately.
Malls will turn into recreation centers...women shop and dad and the kids go do something...climbing walls...ice skating.. what ever
It does seem headed that way. I am told that the local mall’s food court thrives. I think “everyone gets to eat what they want” is the secret to that.
WOW you have me beat by about 4 times/year.
I HATE shopping malls. They tend to have such an artificial hyped feeling. To make you feel like you MUST buy some stuff or you are a loser. Then they have rack after rack of the SAME overpriced merchandise, no one around to help you, NOT the item you are looking for.... Then if you do find something to buy, have to go through some third degree at the checkout to be sure they know how to hassle you in the future by phone/text/and/or email.
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