Here's how Amazon could change your shopping experience with its own retail stores
Aly Weisman/Business InsiderAmazon's first physical store in Seattle.
Amazon changed the way we shop online. Now it wants to reinvent the way we shop at brick-and-mortar stores.
Amazon opened its first physical bookstore in Seattle in the fall, but recent reports suggest its retail ambitions could be much bigger, including stores in other product categories.
Why would Amazon want to get into the space it has been trying to destroy for years?
For one, there's still a huge audience that prefers to shop at retail stores.
But perhaps more important, it's because the retail shopping experience hasn't changed for decades. Amazon is known for trying new things, and it could use its technology and massive amount of user data to come up with a new way of shopping in-store.
Here are a few things that need to be fixed at traditional retail stores and how Amazon could possibly change them.
Discount offers: Same goes for discounts. Sometimes it's hard to find what products are on promotion, so Amazon could send individual discount alerts through an app, based on the customer's purchase history.
Digital assistant: It's often hard to find sales associates at regular retailers when you have questions. Amazon could solve this by making Echo, its voice-activated digital assistant, available throughout its retail stores so customers could quickly get answers to any questions they might have.
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