The following text is copyright 2000 by Network World, permission is hearby given for reproduction, as long as attribution is given and this notice is included.
Too dumb or too smart?
By Scott Bradner
A week before Christmas
Toys R Us announced that they were not going to be able to deliver all of the
toys that had been ordered over the web in time for Christmas morning. The TV
news shows played the story for all it was worth (and quite a bit more) giving
Toys R Us quite a black eye. But if I put on my conspiracy theory hat this
sequence of events makes a lot of sense.
The way the story was
painted, Toys R Us was so dumb, or had such a bad software system that they
kept accepting orders long after it should have been clear that they were not
going to be able to deliver what had been ordered. This was the lead story on
most of the local and national news shows and a front page story in many
newspapers on the day of the announcement, and popped up from time to time over
the next few days. It would have been hard for anyone to avoid hearing about
this failure of e-commerce. As penitence, Toys R Us offered $100 coupons,
redeemable in Toys R Us stores, to those who got caught up in the mess.
Toys R Us was not alone
in accepting orders in excess of their ability to deliver the goods but it was
the company that made the biggest splash when they had to admit their inability
to produce. The image of Santa not showing up for some little kid is a strong
one.
So let's look at this
situation through Machiavellian-colored glasses. Toys R Us has a lot of
brick-and-mortar stores. These stores pay rent and lots of people work at them.
Sales over the net can cannibalize these physical stores. Toys R Us may feel
that they can not ignore the 'Net but they must feel in quite a quandary, a
sale over the net may just cost them more when the whole corporation is
considered than they make in profit off of the sale.
So what better way to
slow down the explosive growth in 'Net sales than to make potential users of
e-stores nervous that they will not get their goods? What better way to do that
then to have a very high profile failure of e-commerce? And, just to complete
the conspiracy scenario, what better way to ensure that those nervous customers
know where the local Toys R Us store is than to bribe them with a coupon that
can only be redeemed in a physical store.
Maybe Toys R Us is not
smart enough to do this, but if I were them I'm not sure I would want to admit
to the alternative to myself.
disclaimer: I do not
know that the Harvard Business School teaches Machiavellian principals so the
above scenario is my own.