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Best Buy makes online price-match policy permanent

Best Buy plans to end showrooming as consumers know it.

Published: Feb. 23, 2013 at 12:05 a.m. PST
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Wayne Thompson looks over the selection of televisions at Best Buy last month in Atlanta. The company is going head-to-head with Amazon and Target with its new online price-match policy, but is shortening the time allowed for returns from 30 to 15 days. (BRANT SANDERLIN/ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTION/MCT)

Best Buy plans to end showrooming as consumers know it.

The Richfield, Minn.-based electronics retailer is joining Target in making its online price-match policy effective year-round, instead of just during the holidays. It’s an attempt by major retailers to convince consumers that they can find prices in stores that are as low as online.

“Best Buy had to stop the hemorrhaging from Amazon and Walmart and solve the price issue in consumers’ minds,” said Dan de Grandpre, CEO at Dealnews.com, a deal-tracking website. “They have to be seen as price competitive with online.”

Best Buy declined to say how many price matches it did during the holiday season, but most experts estimate that fewer than 5 percent of customers ask for a price match.

Still, knowing that it’s available is important for consumers, said Dave Brennan, a University of St. Thomas marketing professor. “It’s more about perception than reality, but it’s a strong goodwill gesture.”

And consumers do benefit by asking. According to a survey by William Blair & Co. in Chicago, Best Buy’s prices are about 16 percent higher than Amazon’s.

The new policy, which goes into effect March 3, will replace the existing, temporary policy initiated for the holiday season. The company will match 19 online retailers such as Amazon, Target, Walmart and Frys.

Unlike the original price match during the holidays, the new policy covers nearly everything in the store, including accessories, said Jeff Shelman, a Best Buy spokesman.

An absence of sales tax and free shipping can still give online retailers an advantage. But Brennan said Best Buy’s positioning itself as a worthy online competitor now could become a significant advantage as more states start collecting sales tax on mail order and online purchases via the Marketplace Fairness Act, a pending federal bill. “It’s going to happen, and when it does, it will level the playing field even more,” said Brennan.

Besides price matching, Best Buy also has been proactively cutting prices. “We’ve seen a significant uptick in the number of high-quality deals from Best Buy,” de Grandpre said.

Recent Best Buy bargains cited by Dealnews included Blu-ray movies for $10 with a $5 gift card, a 22-inch LED Hewlett-Packard Elite computer monitor for $100, and a 50-inch Toshiba LED 1080p flat screen for $450.

Some analysts are concerned that the goodwill created by Best Buy’s price matching is somewhat negated by a new, tighter return policy. The company will shorten its return policy from 30 to 15 days to sync it to the price match.

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