Was Best Buy Diabolical or Doddering?
Opinion: With more than 90,000 employees, what was Best Buy thinking when it created two employee-accessible versions of its Web site that look exactly the same, except that each had different prices?
In any dramatic storyand this Best Buy dual-Web-site story is starting to become deliciously dramaticthere are good characters and bad characters. In a really good dramatic story, those good/bad distinctions are much more complex, and they invariably are dependent on perspective, the readers point of view. With the Best Buy saga, the facts are starting to become clear. There is little dispute that there are plenty of consumers across the country who have been tricked into thinking they were looking at the live Best Buy Web site when they were actually looking at a site showing only in-store pricing. Its also clear that Best Buy created two identically appearing sites, both of which were intended to be used by employees to show to customers. To use the common vernacular, consumers were ripped off. Lots of consumers. But was it fraud? And if so, by whom?Did some or most of those employeesand/or their store managersdeliberately show the customers the wrong site, in an attempt to cheat them out of the price-guarantee lower cost? Or were they honestly confusedor ill-informedand they were making honest mistakes?
Read more here about Connecticuts investigation into Best Buys intrastore Web site.
But Best Buy officials initially denied the intrastore site existed, Gombossy said, and it took law enforcement to get Best Buys attention. Even when I spoke with Achen on March 5, he was hesitant to pledge the sites appearance would change, only saying that one idea would be to add a new opening page that made the sites purpose more clear.
The problem with that is that if an employee wanted to be deceitful, he/she could simply not show the screen to the customer until that display went away. To make this work, the appearance of every page must be different (at-a-glance obvious differences) so that no consumer could be fooled, deliberately or inadvertently.
Beneath the surface of this tale are two smaller fires, which could easily become the biggest issue in a little while. First, Achen spoke of differential pricing on the Web site. Web customization is nothing new, but it must be handled very delicately. The idea that some customersbased on their history or profilewill be charged more for identical purchases has huge powder keg potential.
Read more here about Achens response to the dual-site system.
The second issue involves Best Buys practicebeing used, in varying ways, by several large retail chainsof setting up an IE browser, but limiting it to only Best Buy-controlled sites.
The goal of preventing consumers from surfing to child pornography sites is certainly laudable. But forgive me if I am inclined to think that Best Buy is much more concerned about consumers surfing to Google or a price-comparison site or a rival retailer. Efforts to limit that are simply going to fail. Smartphoneswith their own Web accesswill seal that fate. Trying to make sales by limiting the information available to consumers in the Web age is simply a suicidal strategy.
But getting back to the dual Web site problem, I like to think of myself as substance-oriented. (I also like to think of myself as rich and handsome, and those arent true, either.) In this instance, though, a surfacey appearance-only change is whats needed.
A new site design to make the intrastore program look like anything other than the corporate Web site should do the trick. To make this program go away, Best Buy, you just need to apply a good dose of new paint. Just make sure its not whitewash.
Retail Center Editor Evan Schuman has tracked high-tech issues since 1987, has been opinionated long before that and doesnt plan to stop any time soon. He can be reached at Evan_Schuman@ziffdavis.com.
To read earlier retail technology opinion columns from Evan Schuman, please click here.
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