The Emporium Strikes Back
Every
year, news stories about online Christmas shopping become more pervasive and
effusive: It's fast, it's cheap, it's sweeping the country. This year, Internet
companies have taken their campaign into enemy territory. They have sent
emissaries to shopping malls with signs advising customers to flee the chaos of
the malls for the sanctuary of their PCs. Now the malls are fighting back.
They're colonizing cyberspace with Web sites that invite surfers to log off and
hit the stores. Here's their pitch:
1. We're fun. Many people prefer in-store shopping because
they want to see and feel what they're buying. But while the malls do advertise
sensory advantages, they talk less about merchandise than about entertainment:
live music, fashion shows, baby pageants, carousels, and miniature golf. The
malls are maestros of counterspin. Whereas online sellers promise to liberate
you from the congestion of shopping centers, malls invite you to "people-watch " in their food courtyards. And while e-shopping
spares you the trouble of dragging your kids around, the malls promise to
entertain and "educate" children through activities healthier than sitting at a
computer, such as art projects and puppet shows. Minnesota's Mall of America
has Pokémon "trainers" and a "Lego
Imagination Center ." Carolina Place Mall offers a "Science Show" and
"Story Time for kids with cookies and milk ."
To
lure Christmas shoppers, the malls promise tree lightings and other "sights and
sounds of the holidays." The big draw is Santa. The malls play it both ways:
They use Santa's physical presence to lure parents ("kids of all ages can have
their photos taken with Jolly Old St. Nick") and then offer, for an additional
fee, to put the pictures on Web sites or CD-ROMs so that kids "can send [the images] to their loved ones over the
Internet ." Tysons Corner Center, a mall near Washington, D.C., brags
about its "real-bearded Santa" and "his authentic Santa autograph." Tysons
Corner then spills the beans to any child capable of reading the
rest of the page: Santa is really Mike Graham, a former chef and construction
company boss from Tennessee.
2. We're hassle-free. Internet merchants point out that you
don't have to drive, walk, or lug packages and babies around when you shop
online. The malls try to neutralize these annoyances. They offer valet parking,
baby strollers, and free checking services for coats and packages. Chicago's
Gurnee Mills Mall boasts of its "baby changing
tables and nursing rooms ." For shoppers who think of the Internet as
a labor-saving device, Tysons Corner promotes an even simpler option: "Our
Personal Shoppers will, for an hourly fee, take your requests
and return with terrific gifts."
3. We're good exercise. The malls can't dispute that you'll
have to walk a lot, so they spin it as a virtue. "Lace up your walking shoes,
stride out to Carolina Place and join us in a form of exercise everyone can
enjoy … Mall Walking," says shopcarolinaplace.com (which points out that its concourses
are "climate controlled and barrier free"). Mallofamerica.com advertises a
"Frequent Walker Rewards Program " featuring an "introductory
walking for fitness session" with a "professional walker." Ontario Mills, a
California mall, promises that your "mall-mileage" will earn prizes--as long as
you "record your walk " during each visit.
Ontario Mills is particularly duplicitous. On a page for shoppers, the mall
says it plays "motivational music on Mills TV, so you can treat your mind
and body to an enjoyable, healthy and rewarding exercise program." But a page
for advertisers reveals the truth: "Mills TV is a state-of-the-art,
closed-circuit television network that saturates the common areas of Ontario
Mills with commercial messages. … With a series of over 600 speakers and 40
overhead 80" large screen televisions spread throughout Ontario Mills,
there is
no escaping the Mills TV message. … Mills TV keeps shoppers longer,
creates a lasting impression of your business, and most importantly, activates
the consumer's impulse to buy."
4. We're good citizens. Online merchants advertise the
capitalist advantages of not being anchored: easy access, low overhead, and
minimal transaction costs. Malls advertise the civic virtue of being anchored:
community service. They invite shoppers to participate in food drives,
scholarship programs, and other mall-sponsored aid to "our neighbors" in "the
community." They also boast of providing venues for church and school choral
groups. This month, for example, Tysons Corner is hosting the Holy Child
Chorus, the Annandale United Methodist Church Choir, and the Fairfax Baptist
Temple Academy.
5. We save you money. Before the Internet, you went to the
mall because it was cheaper than mom-and-pop stores, and you went from one mall
store to the next because you were already there. The mall offered a volume
discount on your money and, in effect, on your time. Now that the Internet
saves you more money and time than the mall does, malls have invented new
volume discounts. Gurnee Mills offers a mall-wide coupon
book . Mall of America advertises a frequent
buyer program. There's also a "Mall V.I.P." Visa card " that earns discounts at "hundreds of
participating malls."
6. We offer more choices. Web vendors promise a bigger
selection of merchandise than you can find in any store. Malls are outflanking
this pitch by pushing mall-wide gift certificates. The rationale for buying a
mall gift certificate instead of a gift certificate at an online store is
complex in theory but simple in practice. Yes, each online vendor has a wider
selection of goods than each mall retailer does. And yes, cyberspace has a
wider selection of goods than any mall does. But nobody has the time or mental
bandwidth to search all of cyberspace, and given a choice between a single
online store and a mall, you can probably find a wider selection at the mall.
Some mall certificates, such as those advertised by New York's Roosevelt Field
mall , are good at hundreds of shopping centers.
7. We're user-friendly. Rather than ignore or disparage the
Internet, the malls exploit it. Gurnee Mills instructs visitors to fill out an
online
form to get coupon-book vouchers via e-mail. Tysons Corner touts the
advantages of buying gift certificates online--you can "save time" and purchase
them "from the comfort of your PC"--and it even advertises "special
benefits that can only be received with online orders," such as
"special shipping rates." Far from suggesting that e-commerce is a security
hazard for credit card users--a common reason why many people refuse to shop
online--malls go out of their way to dispel such concerns. In Massachusetts,
Holyoke Mall
encourages shoppers to buy "gift certificates online with our secure ordering
service." Tysons Corner assures users that it "employs
sophisticated technology to safeguard online transactions . ... The
credit card and personal data you transmit is encrypted (scrambled) and sent to
a secure server."
8. We're still your portal. Malls conquered the retail economy
by providing a selection of goods broad enough and cheap enough to gain
consumers' trust and thereby control their options. When you wanted to shop,
you went to the mall and confined your search to the stores you found there.
The Internet has simply transferred this principle to cyberspace. Consumers who
used to look for malls now look for portals, and malls intend to become those
portals. "RooseveltField.com brings the mall to you, at any time day or night,
when YOU have the time to shop," says that mall's Web site. "Here you can
browse upcoming events, locate your favorite stores in our store directory,
shop online or find products before coming to the mall."
By consolidating options
and information on their Web sites, the malls command your attention and direct
you to their stores. Need a gift idea? Tysons
Corner has all the answers . Wondering what's on sale? Scouring each
company's Web site could take forever, but Gurnee Mills puts
all the information on one page . And while most malls let you click
on links to their retailers, the links usually take you not to the national Web
sites of those retailers but to dummy pages on the mall's site that tell you
only about that retailer's store in the mall. In the new mall, like the old
one, there is no escape.