Google and Barnes & Noble Unite to
Take On Amazon
By ALEXANDRA ALTERAUG. 7, 2014
Photo
Google Shopping Express in New York. By adding Barnes &
Noble to its list of 19 retail partners, Google is making a more explicit grab
for Amazon’s turf. CreditPhilip Montgomery/Google
Google and Barnes
& Noble are joining forces to tackle their mutual rival
Amazon, zeroing in on a service that Amazon has long dominated: the fast, cheap
delivery of books.
Starting
on Thursday, book buyers in Manhattan, West Los Angeles and the San Francisco
Bay Area will be able to get same-day deliveries from local Barnes & Noble
stores through Google Shopping Express, Google’s fledgling online shopping and
delivery service.
Google
Shopping, which began operations about a year ago, allows online shoppers to
order products from stores like Costco, Walgreens, Staples and Target, and have
them delivered to their doors within hours.
The
partnership could help Barnes & Noble make inroads into online sales when
its brick-and-mortar business remains stagnant. The company has closed 63
stores in the last five years, including some in bustling areas of Manhattan and
Washington, leaving it with a base of about 660 retail stores and 700 college
campus stores. Its Nook business fell 22 percent in the fourth quarter compared
with the period a year earlier, according its most recent earnings report.
Photo
Book buyers in some areas can get
same-day delivery from Barnes & Noble via the Google Shopping Express
mobile app. CreditGoogle, via Associated Press
Michael
P. Huseby, Barnes & Noble’s chief executive, called the arrangement with
Google “a test” and said that he viewed it as a way to increase the
bookseller’s online reach and improve sales from its physical stores.
“It’s
our attempt to link the digital and physical,” Mr. Huseby said.
Amazon
poses a persistent and growing threat to Google and Barnes & Noble. Its
rise has contributed to lagging sales and diminished foot traffic in Barnes
& Noble’s physical stores, and it dominates the online market for print
books.
Amazon’s
popularity as an online shopping destination has the potential to undercut
Google’s lucrative search engine advertising business. By adding Barnes &
Noble to its list of 19 retail partners, Google is making a more explicit grab
for Amazon’s turf. The partnership also comes at a moment when many authors and
book buyers are frustrated with Amazon because of what they say are its
punitive negotiating tactics in its standoff with the publisher Hachette over
e-book pricing.
“Many
of our shoppers have told us that when they read a review of a book or get a
recommendation from a friend, they want a really easy way to buy that book and
start reading it tonight,” Tom Fallows, director of product for Google Shopping
Express, said by email. “We think it’s a natural fit to create a great
experience connecting shoppers with their town’s Barnes & Noble.”
The
competition to provide faster shipping has been increasing in recent years as
retailers have scrambled to claim a piece of the growing e-commerce market.
Amazon
has already taken the lead in same-day delivery, and on Wednesday the company
announced that it had expanded its same-day delivery service to 10 cities from
four. Amazon’s same-day service costs $5.99 for members of its Prime program,
and $9.98 for others. Walmart and eBay have also introduced same-day
deliveries.
Google’s
approach differs from that of Amazon and other big retailers. Instead of
relying on warehouses full of merchandise, Google is using a fleet of couriers
who collect products from local stores, sort and bundle them and deliver them
within a three- to four-hour window selected by the customer. Delivery is free
for subscribers to Google Shopping Express, and costs $4.99 per delivery, per
store for others. Membership is free for the first six months. Google has not
announced what the subscription fee will be.
Google
has said it plans to expand its delivery service to Brooklyn and Queens.
Barnes
& Noble stores participating in the partnership with Google, which include
the Union Square store in Manhattan, the Marina del Rey store near Los Angeles
and a store on Stevens Creek Boulevard in San Jose, will have someone on site
to take online orders for books, toys, games, magazines and other items. Google
will collect the orders and hand them to a courier. Barnes & Noble stores
have 22,000 to 163,000 titles, depending on the store size.
Barnes
& Noble is not processing Google Shopping orders on its own website, which
also offers free express shipping to its members, and free shipping for orders
that are $25 and up to everyone. (In New York City, Barnes & Noble.com
customers can get same-day shipping). Instead, it expects to pick up
incremental sales from Google Shopping’s customers, said Jaime Carey, chief
merchandising officer at Barnes & Noble.
“Google
has their own vast customer base,” Mr. Carey said. “They’re going to be
reaching a new customer for us.”
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