US Shoppers Grab Last-Minute Holiday Gifts, Pick Up Online Orders In-Store

US Shoppers Grab Last-Minute Holiday Gifts, Pick Up Online Orders In-Store
Shoppers wait in line outside a Bath and Body Works retail store in Brooklyn, N.Y., on Dec. 8, 2020. Brendan McDermid/Reuters
Reuters
Updated:

NEW YORK—Many U.S. holiday shoppers, wary of spending time in stores during the latest surge of COVID-19 cases and nervous about packages not arriving before Christmas, were on a mission on Dec. 19: snatch up last-minute gifts fast or pick up online purchases in-store.

The “Super Saturday” before Christmas is traditionally the busiest day of the year for holiday purchases, and this year, online retail has been extra busy. But news reports about high-priority vaccine shipments have many Americans fretting that gift deliveries could be delayed this week.

“If you haven’t ventured out and you haven’t gotten your gifts, you almost have to,” said Marshal Cohen, chief retail industry adviser at NPD Group. “Online orders aren’t going to get delivered on time, and nobody wants to risk showing up empty-handed.”

U.S. retailers were expected to ring in record sales, with over 150 million American shoppers slated to buy holiday gifts on Dec. 19 online or in-store, up by more than 2 million from last year, the National Retail Federation had said on Dec. 17.

Many last-minute holiday shoppers were picking up orders in-store that they had placed online, four retail experts making checks in a total of six states said.

As states enforce stricter mandates and consumers, by and large, continue to avoid strolling through the local mall, those who had not already ordered for pickup were mercenary in their approach and would “pop in and out, grabbing the one or two gifts they already knew they wanted,” Bill Park, a partner at Deloitte & Touche LP, said of shoppers at the King of Prussia mall near Philadelphia.

Craig Johnson, president of retail consultancy Customer Growth Partners, said the same was true of customers at malls in Massachusetts and Rhode Island.

“This is mission shopping. That’s what this is,” he said.

Johnson expects people to spend $36.1 billion this Super Saturday, up from $34.4 billion last year. That includes in-store and online purchases but excludes sales at gas stations, restaurants and automobile dealers.

Record Sales

Curbside business contributed greatly to the traffic at big retail chains including Walmart and Target on Dec. 19, according to retail analysts in Miami, New York City, and Chicago.

Many retailers have clocked record digital sales during the pandemic, overwhelming traditional shipping companies including FedEx, UPS, and the U.S. Postal Service. Vaccine shipments are a priority now, and last week, delivery drivers in the Northeast had to contend with a major snowstorm.

In turn, department stores such as Nordstrom and J.C. Penney are dangling perks such as free gift wrapping and extra discounts for those who “click and collect” online orders.

“It wasn’t going to arrive in time,” Elyse R., 31, said standing at the curbside counter at Nordstrom’s flagship store in New York City. She was referring to the facial massage tool she ordered online for her sister for curbside pickup.

“I popped into another store and now I’m going to go home.”

While Elyse waited for her order, she played a contact-free trivia game at a booth next to the counter that could win her a $25 gift card. Such tactics have helped lure people in to shop on the spot or return later, a store associate said.

“The goal, even with pickup, is to get you in the store,” NPD’s Cohen said.

By Melissa Fares