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"I was surprised. Twenty-five dollars off is huge," said Lee, who paid $124.95 for the printer. "I would have gone home and ordered on Amazon." Sears Holdings Inc. is going one step further by giving customers an additional 10 percent off the difference between its price and a competitor's online price. So, if a shopper finds a TV that's $30 cheaper at Best Buy Co., they would get the lower price and an additional $3 off. The catch? The retailer will only match online prices of retailers that have physical locations, not online-only merchants. "We're not focusing on short-term profits," said Tom Aiello, a Sears spokesman, about why the retailer is offering the deal. "We believe that if customers know they're going to get the product at the price they want, they will come to us more and more." Some retailers, meanwhile, are sweetening incentives they already offer to the point that it could erode profits. Raymour & Flanigan, for instance, is beefing up the terms of its no-interest loans, which have become popular among retailers of big-ticket items like furniture and TVs. The loans typically enable customers to forgo paying any interest on purchases for one to three years provided they make the monthly payments on time. Retailers must help pay some of customers' interest charges
-- about 12 percent for three-year terms -- to the financing companies that provide the loans. But the companies hope to make up for those costs in sales volume. This holiday season, Raymour & Flanigan is offering the loans on sofas and dining room sets until Jan. 1, 2016. Lisa King, the chain's senior vice president of marketing, declined to say how much Raymour & Flanigan will have to pay its financing company, but analysts estimate that it could wind up shelling out up to 16 percent on each purchase. "These programs do come at a cost to all retailers that offer them," King said. "This reduces the profit in a sale to the retailer." Likewise, luxury retailer Nordstrom Inc. used to require that customers spend at least $200 in order to qualify for free shipping because bulk orders make up for the merchant's cost to ship items. Now, Nordstrom will ship most items for free, which means it could wind up losing money: it could pay up to $3 to ship a $7 pair of socks, for example. Nordstrom is following a similar move by catalog retailer L.L. Bean, which got rid of its minimum-order requirement for free shipping in March. "This is increasingly becoming an expectation of customers," said Colin Johnson, a spokesman for Nordstrom, which also is offering free returns instead of a $6 flat rate.
[Associated
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