Skip to main content

How convenient! Amazon is reportedly planning physical stores for food and daily essentials

Not content with building additional brick-and-mortar bookstores, Amazon is reportedly keen to get into the convenience store game, too.

The e-commerce company, which for so many years has been the bane of those running physical stores, looks set to give those competing businesses an even bigger headache. Why? Because according to the Wall Street Journal, Amazon now has plans to build “small brick-and-mortar stores that would sell produce, milk, meats and other perishable items that customers can take home.”

Recommended Videos

To make the store truly convenient, it may also include touchscreens so you can place orders for items you don’t necessarily need right away. These would be delivered to your door later, freeing up space in your shopping cart and giving you less to carry between your store, car, and home.

According to people claiming to know Amazon’s plans, the stores will initially only be open to Prime members who subscribe to its Fresh grocery delivery service. The company recently slashed the Fresh membership fee in a bid to get more Prime members to sign up. AmazonFresh operates in a number of city locations across the U.S., delivering groceries and a range of everyday essentials to customers ordering items using their PC or mobile device.

Amazon is yet to confirm whether it has plans to open convenience stores.

The Journal’s sources suggested the Seattle-based company may also be just weeks from opening its first “click and collect” drive-up store along the lines of a service we first heard about last year. With the debut store reportedly being prepped in Seattle, The service will allow shoppers to order products online before picking them up from the facility at a suitable time.

Related:

Amazon’s apparent plan to open brick-and-mortar convenience stores come as the company preps the opening of more bookstores after opening its first outlet in its home city last year.

Shoppers can browse a selection of curated titles based on Amazon.com customer ratings, pre-orders, sales, and curators’ assessments. Reviews taken from its online store are also put alongside some of the books on offer.

Titles are usually displayed showing the front cover, as you would also see them online. This is partly an attempt to bring the familiar online experience to the physical store, though it means fewer titles can be presented to visiting shoppers compared to most other bookstores.

In addition, people can try out Amazon’s various hardware items, including its newest Kindle, Echo speaker, and range of Fire tablets.

Continuing its exploration into the viability of physical stores as part of its business, Amazon has also been opening a string of pop-up stores in malls across the country, with as many as 100 expected to open by the end of 2017.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
PayPal vs. Venmo vs. Cash App vs. Apple Cash: which app should you use?
PayPal, Venmo, Cash App, and Apple Wallet apps on an iPhone.

We’re getting closer every day to an entirely cashless society. While some folks may still carry around a few bucks for emergencies, electronic payments are accepted nearly everywhere, and as mobile wallets expand, even traditional credit and debit cards are starting to fall by the wayside.

That means many of us are past the days of tossing a few bills onto the table to pay our share of a restaurant tab or slipping our pal a couple of bucks to help them out. Now, even those things are more easily doable from our smartphones than our physical wallets.

Read more
How to change margins in Google Docs
Laptop Working from Home

When you create a document in Google Docs, you may need to adjust the space between the edge of the page and the content -- the margins. For instance, many professors have requirements for the margin sizes you must use for college papers.

You can easily change the left, right, top, and bottom margins in Google Docs and have a few different ways to do it.

Read more
What is Microsoft Teams? How to use the collaboration app
A close-up of someone using Microsoft Teams on a laptop for a videoconference.

Online team collaboration is the new norm as companies spread their workforce across the globe. Gone are the days of primarily relying on group emails, as teams can now work together in real time using an instant chat-style interface, no matter where they are.

Using Microsoft Teams affords video conferencing, real-time discussions, document sharing and editing, and more for companies and corporations. It's one of many collaboration tools designed to bring company workers together in an online space. It’s not designed for communicating with family and friends, but for colleagues and clients.

Read more