Finance

ACE HARDWARE CEO: I’d never say we’re Amazon proof, but here are 3 ways we can survive the retail apocalypse (AMZN)

john venhuizenACE Hardware CEO John VenhuizenYouTube

Retail is in peril, and Amazon is a big reason why.

But home improvement stores have enjoyed some protection from Amazon’s encroachment into virtually every sector. They’re sometimes described as being Amazon-proof in the media.

“I would never use the word ‘proof,'” said John Venhuizen, the CEO of Ace Hardware.

Amazon is “quite arguably the most disruptive company in the history of business and they impact everybody without question,” Venhuizen told Business Insider.

That Amazon can lose money to help its customers and still hold Wall Street’s support is “terrifying,” he said. Amazon last month forecast its first quarterly loss in two years.

Investors have sent Amazon’s stock up 31% this year, compared to a 10% gain for the S&P 500. The US iShares home construction exchange-traded fund, which includes major players like Home Depot and Lowe’s, is also surging, up 26% year-to-date.

But home-improvement retailers won’t enjoy endless favor from Wall Street. Take Home Depot, for example, which fell 3% on Tuesday even after smashing analysts’ expectations and raising its guidance for the second time this year. Ace Hardware is privately held and run as thousands of independent stores.

Home Depot shares also fell after Sears announced it planned to start selling its Kenmore-branded appliances on Amazon, and was launching a line of appliances that can be voice controlled with Amazon Alexa.

Longer-term, however, stores like Home Depot and Ace Hardware have three key attributes that can protect their market share from e-commerce giants: what they sell, service, and location.

The nature of the products they sell lends itself to human interaction. Buyers still want to ask a person how things work, or how to mix paint, or which colors to select in the first place.

And the more exceptional the service, the better. “When a local business provides an irrational level of service to their local neighbors, that’s hard to compete with on a big-box or a dotcom national scale,” Venhuizen said. “Every small business can do that.”

Although free shipping is convenient, having thousands of stores near the neighborhoods that customers live in is also a big advantage, Venhuizen said.

Ace Hardware, like other hardware retailers, has billions of dollars worth of inventory sitting in its stores across the country. One way to exploit that is by promoting online pick-ups (online orders that are picked up at a store), essentially blending online and offline strategies.

Venhuizen said Ace Hardware’s online sales grew 61% in the second quarter. 93% of those transactions were picked up in the store. The company is starting to experiment with home delivery, he added.

“Many people like to still physically see and touch and have the five senses,” Venhuizen said. “We had a big 5,000-store celebration [this weekend]. Many of them were out there smoking meat on a grill. You can’t smell that on Amazon.”

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