A year after an unruly crowd trampled a worker to death at a Wal-Mart store, the nation’s retailers are preparing for another Black Friday, the blockbuster shopping day after Thanksgiving. Along with offering $300 laptops and $99 navigation devices, stores are planning new safety measures to make sure the festive day does not take another deadly turn.
Last year, frenzied shoppers at a Wal-Mart in Valley Stream, N.Y., trampled Jdimytai Damour, a temporary store worker who died soon afterward. To prevent any repeat, Wal-Mart has sharply changed how it intends to manage the crowds.
That new plan, developed by experts who have wrangled throngs at events like the Super Bowl and the Olympics, will affect how customers approach and enter the stores, shop, check out and exit. Each store will have its own customized plan. The hope is for an orderly Black Friday, a seemingly incongruous notion.
The most significant change at Wal-Mart is that the majority of its discount stores (as opposed to its Supercenters) will open Thanksgiving morning at 6 a.m. and stay open through Friday evening. Last year, those stores closed Thanksgiving evening and reopened early Friday morning. By keeping the stores open for 24 hours, Wal-Mart is hoping for a steady flow of shoppers instead of mammoth crowds swelling outside its stores in the wee hours of Friday.
In another new twist this year, shoppers at Wal-Mart will not have to sprint toward a pile of flat-screen televisions and scuffle with one another to get one. Rather, customers will be able to enter the store at any time and line up at merchandise displays for the must-have items on their lists. When the products go on sale Friday at 5 a.m., workers will supervise the lines, giving shoppers the merchandise in the order in which they joined the line — until the goods are out of stock.
(Only a small percentage of stores will not be open 24 hours; most Wal-Mart Supercenters are already open 24 hours.)
Another problem in the past was the bottleneck at store entrances. Like many big-box retailers, Wal-Mart does not have multiple entrances and exits to spread around customer traffic. So this year the chain will put workers in front of its stores to direct customers and keep them moving.
"We are committed to looking for ways to make our stores even safer for our customers and associates this holiday season,” said David Tovar, a spokesman for Wal-Mart, adding that the retailer was “confident our customers can look forward to a safe and enjoyable shopping experience at Wal-Mart.”
Aggressive shoppers are common the day after Thanksgiving. So crowd control plans, which vary by retailer, are critical. And they are especially important now, given the economy. Newly frugal consumers want more for less, and stores plan to drum up sales with stunning deals.
This year, for the first time, the National Retail Federation created a comprehensive set of guidelines for crowd control at stores. The guidelines note that special markdowns and historically low discounts have led to larger crowds.
“Retailers are very much trying to make themselves stand out in an environment like this,” Ellen Davis, a spokeswoman for the industry group, said in a conference call this week. But she added that “retailers need to understand that many of these sales and promotional periods might draw customers who are more insistent about getting a good deal.”
The federation said retailers were performing dress rehearsals with their employees. Some stores plan to serve drinks to shoppers, or offer entertainment while they are in line, to maintain calm. Also, the stores say that creating a rapport with customers makes news of sellouts and long lines more palatable.
Indeed, Peter Conway, general manager of a Best Buy in Westbury, N.Y., has made a habit of arriving at his store at 7 p.m. Thanksgiving night to chat with shoppers lined up outside.
“I’m outside talking with my customers, just getting to know them, seeing what they’re there for,” he said. “I’m very clear with them: ‘There’s not going to be any running.’ ”
For years, Best Buy has controlled crowds by sending teams of workers into the parking lots to dole out tickets for its so-called door-busters — hot items like digital cameras and laptops at exceedingly low prices. Tickets are given out about 3 a.m. and each customer is allowed one ticket for each door-buster item they intend to buy.
“They know if they have a ticket, they’re guaranteed they have that product,” Mr. Conway said. “It creates ease of mind.”
To keep shoppers from running aimlessly around its stores, Best Buy employees hand out maps, and they mark popular items with colored balloons that can be seen from anywhere in the store.
Many retailers, including Kohl’s and Toys “R” Us, said they were not changing their crowd management plans because they had not had problems.
After the death of Mr. Damour, Wal-Mart settled a case with the district attorney of Nassau County in New York. Wal-Mart agreed to create a $400,000 compensation fund, give $1.5 million to social service programs, and offer 50 jobs to area high school students each year for three years.
Rhett Asher, the National Retail Federation’s senior asset protection adviser, said during a conference call that big box stores and mall stores had different security issues. Malls are more bustling, public places with multiple entrances — so there tend to be fewer problems. Indeed, crowd control is not as much of an issue for Macy’s as it is for big-box stores, a spokesman said, because multiple entrances serve to disperse crowds.
Still, retailers of all sorts are making preparations. In just the last month, crowds of deal-hungry shoppers have created problems. In one instance, Dwight Howard of the Orlando Magic said on Twitter that he would give away copies of his NBA Live 2010 basketball video game to the first five people who showed up at a particular GameStop store. Chaos ensued. Also last month, a woman at a Burlington Coat Factory store in Ohio said she had won the lottery and would treat her fellow shoppers to new clothes. When it turned out she was lying, a riot broke out.
“No matter how seamless and airtight you think this is,” Ms. Davis said of retailers’ plans, “the unexpected can happen.”
Source: Yahoo! Finance/NYT
Pearce ll Fionda
I'm glad Wal-Mart is doing something different this year and not just brushing what happened last year off.
1I wonder what Good Vibrations has planned?
I never understood the whole shopping hysteria. I also hate the fact that more stores stay open Thanksgiving evening, let the folks go spend some time with family and or friends. I don't mind them opening at midnight Friday though that's fine with me.
2I hope they're not being over-optimistic in their crowd expectations for this year.
3I hope it works out a lot better this year.
4steph - that was my thought too... i wonder how the economy will effect the frenzy.
5I always do about 95% of my Christmas shopping online.
6i love black friday!!!! it's a family tradition for all the ladies to get up early and hit the mall. funny thing is, we usually don't buy anything, but it always gets me in the holiday spirit, and burns off some of those extra calories from the day before.
7My sis and my wife do about 80% of their shopping before 9am that day. It's just crazy. I'm just thankful they let me sleep in.
8I don't typically do black Friday. A couple of years ago I went out and bought a great washer/dryer combo at like 7 am at a steal though. I do hit the day after xmas sales religiously every year.
9I do a lot of my shopping on xmas eve for some reason. For some reason I'd rather deal with those crowds than deal with the Black Friday crowds.
10Ugh. for some reason I didn't see I said for some reason twice for some reason.
11I guess it depends on where you work but when I was in retail I loved black Friday because it made the time fly by.
12Yeah I definitely didn't mind working those big shopping days. Before you knew it, time to go home!
13In France, we don't have Black Fridays. But maybe it's because we don't have Thanksgivings... These two days kind of go hand in hand, don't they ?
14I agree hypno! I loved working black friday... the shoppers were generally in a more festive mood as well.
I'm an accidental black friday shopper, i had to drop off fam at the airport at like 6am one year and i thought, Well since I'm up... and yeah, never again. I went to Target at like 7am and it was mobbed! No thanks. I'll stick will night shopping during the holidays or online!
15My sisters and I have a tradition of shopping ever Black Friday. In the past few years though I have walked out of stores because the lines were too crazy. Long I can handle, but not well managed I can't. And we DO NOT set foot in a Walmart! They could be giving away free stuff and we wouldn't go. That place is chaos. It sounds like they are trying to fix it, but I don't know if they are going to be successful. I seriously doubt it.
16i agree mrsld, NEVER go to wal mart on black friday. scary. never been, but you couldn't pay me enough to attempt it!
17My policy is never go to Wal-Mart period.
18haha mine too, but growing up, it was the only place to shop, so i understand those who have to.
19I love Black Friday! It's all about strategy, which stores to hit first and which to wait on, etc. I've found that if you go back to a store later in the day, they usually put out more stock (this obviously doesn't apply to electronics, since they only sell a limited number at the sale price). But, it's great for toys and DVDs.
20I shopped on Black Friday once. Never, ever again.
I also shopped last year on the day after Christmas. I was up at 5 AM and it really wasn't that bad. I might to that again this year, but Black Friday? No way.
21I wouldn't try Wal-Mart or Target on Black Friday. Way too much of a coward for that. Although considering people actually have died, I guess I am right in being ascared.
I would love to go to somewhere like Macy's though. Not to do Christmas shopping, but to shop for me.
I already have most of my shopping done. I did it online. I just need to get a Disney store gift card for my brother-in-law and pick things up for my little cousins.
I actually have to work on Black Friday in the retail part of town. I am a little frightened of the traffic but I can't imagine anybody will come to the library.
22I don't hold it against people who shop at Wal Mart. Its just my personal policy. Luckily, I have other options in my area.
23Blech! I stay as far away as possible from any place where you can buy things on Black Friday. That is a sure way to make me the crankiest person ever!
That being said, good luck to Walmart. I hope they can get their sh*t together.
24Kast- I just said my sisters and I shop on black friday. I didn't say who I bought for! I get around the guilt by giving things to my sisters to buy for me. I know it's cheating but I always get what I like!
25I love to go shopping on Black Friday. It gets me in the spirit for Christmas. But I also am one of the crazy ones who go out very early with a specific list of things and places to hit. Once the list is done, I head home to start wrapping.
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27My policy is never go to Wal-Mart period.
I second that policy.
28Oh, and for the first time ever, I went to a shopping center that was having an early Black Friday (so Thursday night) sale going on from Midnight to like 3am. It was super packed and hectic. But I'm just not in Christmas mode at that point. It takes me a week or so after Turkey Day to really get into the spirit of things. So I just wandered around aimlessly.
29I've been to a Wal-Mart here once, and one in Kansas City once, and I'll be happy if I never have to set foot in one again. Especially not on a Black Friday. I'm more than happy to sit on the couch in a tryptophan-induced haze and sleep off the food I cooked the night before.
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