Best Buy closing 250 small-format mobile phone stores

The small-format specialty outlets have become less profitable and will all be closed by this summer.

March 1, 2018 at 1:29PM
DAVID JOLES • djoles@startribune.com -April 14, 2011- White Bear Lake, MN- : Best Buy has announced they plan to reduce their total retail stores space by 10%, which is a lot. Also, as they go forward, the smaller footprint BestBuy Mobile stores will be a focus of their growth. In this photo:] Best Buy sales lead Kelsee Grillo, helps customers Thao Xiong, center, and Amy Lee, right, of St. Paul, with an exchange on a cell phone at the Best Buy Mobile store in the Maplewood Mal
April 14, 2011- White Bear Lake, MN- : Best Buy has announced they plan to reduce their total retail stores space by 10%, which is a lot. Also, as they go forward, the smaller footprint BestBuy Mobile stores will be a focus of their growth. In this photo:] Best Buy sales lead Kelsee Grillo, helps customers Thao Xiong, center, and Amy Lee, right, of St. Paul, with an exchange on a cell phone at the Best Buy Mobile store in the Maplewood Mall. (The Minnesota Star Tribune)

Best Buy plans to close all of its 250 small-format mobile phone stores in the U.S. by the end of May.

The stores — most of which are in shopping malls, and at 1,400 square feet are much smaller than Best Buy's 40,000-square-foot big-box stores — have become less profitable for the Richfield-based electronics chain.

Best Buy CEO Hubert Joly notified employees Wednesday of the closings, saying it is part of a strategy of "continuous optimization." Best Buy first began operating the mobile phone stores in 2006, a year before the iPhone launched, he said.

"The mobile phone business was in a period of high growth and margins were high," he wrote in a letter to employees that the company provided to the Star Tribune. "Fast-forward to 2018 and the mobile phone business has matured, margins have compressed and the cost of operations in our mobile stand-alone stores is higher than in our big box stores."

Joly said sales from the mobile phone stores represent about 1 percent of Best Buy's overall revenue as well as 1 percent of its total square footage.

The retailer hopes to transfer the business to its 1,000 U.S. big-box stores and website, where it has been working to improve the experience and ease of the often-confusing process of buying a new phone.

"We feel good about the opportunity to retain customers and transition them to another one of our sales channels," Joly wrote in the letter, adding that 85 percent of Best Buy's mobile stores are within 3 miles of one of its big-box stores. "We are very excited by our mobile business and its prospects for growth."

While small in their physical footprints, the store closings will be another setback for shopping malls that have been grappling with declining traffic and a rash of store closures in the last year as a number of chains have gone bankrupt or pared back their stores amid the rise in online shopping.

Best Buy's mobile phone sales dropped slightly in 2016, but grew in its most recent quarters with new phone launches from Apple and Samsung. It will report its fourth-quarter results on Thursday.

Last year, after emerging from a multiyear turnaround and surviving the existential threat brought on by Amazon, Best Buy posted strong sales growth amid a favorable product cycle and the improving economy. Its shares are up more than 60 percent in the last year and are now trading at near-record levels in the low $70s.

When Best Buy first started the mobile phone stores, it aimed to attract women, teens and seniors who were more likely to visit the mall than one of its large-format electronics stores.

At their peak several years ago, Best Buy operated a little more than 400 of the mobile phone stores. But in recent years, it's been closing dozens of them every year. It's been shuttering fewer big-box stores, roughly 10 a year over the past few years.

Today, mobile phone stores from carriers such as AT&T, Verizon and Sprint have become ubiquitous in shopping malls and strip centers.

Still, Best Buy executives have been telling investors they see a big potential for growth in the category. While Best Buy has a 33 percent market share in TVs, its share of the mobile phone market is only 6 percent.

Executives laid out to investors last fall how they are working to streamline and simplify the process of comparing phone plans and promotions as well as phone models both online and in stores.

Last year, Best Buy began remodeling some of the mobile phone departments in its big-box stores in an effort referred to internally as "Mobile 2020." The spiffed up section of the store, which includes menu boards similar to a fast-food restaurants featuring current plans and promotions, rolled out to several hundred stores with plans for about 200 more to get them this year.

Many of Best Buy's big-box stores also feature in-store shops from some of the biggest mobile phone carriers and manufacturers in the industry including Apple, AT&T, Samsung, Sprint and Verizon.

Employees who work at the mobile stores will be offered severance, but Joly said Best Buy will work to transfer as many as possible to nearby stores or to other roles such as its growing ranks of in-home advisers.

Best Buy's mobile phone stores in Canada will remain intact.

Kavita Kumar • 612-673-4113

Best Buy. CEO Hubert Joly spent the opening hours hanging at the Best Buy store in Eden Prairie. ) Star Tribune photo by Tom Wallace ASSIGNMENT: SAXO: 1002535373 Shopping112516
Best Buy CEO Hubert Joly said in a letter to employees that changes in the mobile phone business led to the closing of the company’s Best Buy Mobile stores. “Margins have compressed and the cost of operations in our mobile stand-alone stores is higher than in our big box stores,” he wrote. (The Minnesota Star Tribune)
Best Buy is closing its small-format mobile stores. (Provided photo)
Best Buy is closing its small-format mobile stores. (The Minnesota Star Tribune)
about the writer

about the writer

Kavita Kumar

Community Engagement Director

Kavita Kumar is the community engagement director for the Opinion section of the Star Tribune. She was previously a reporter on the business desk.

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