The rollout will begin in the coming weeks for those customers who live within range of 47 Sears Auto Centers in eight metropolitan areas: Atlanta, Chicago, Dallas, Los Angeles, Miami, New York, San Francisco and Washington, D.C. The service will eventually go live at Sears’ more than 400 Auto Centers across the U.S., to reach more of Amazon’s customers.
The checkout process will look something like this, a Sears spokesman explained to CNBC:
- A customer selects the tires he or she wants, from any brand, on Amazon.
- He or she selects “Yes, I want these tires shipped to and installed at Sears Auto Center.” (The shipment of the tires to the Sears Auto Center would be handled by Amazon, not Sears.)
- The customer then provides three appointment times that are convenient for the installation.
- The chosen Sears Auto Center will then match the customer’s schedule preferences with its appointment openings.
- Sears Auto Center then emails a confirmation through Amazon to the customer ahead of the appointment, which can still be altered.
With any appointment, there will be a “standard installation fee” paid to Sears that covers installation, balancing, under hood/under car evaluation, a road safety test and other precautionary steps, the spokesman said.
Sears kicked off its relationship with Amazon last summer when it announced it would begin selling Kenmore-branded appliances on Amazon, some of which are integrated with Amazon’s Alexa platform. Shares of the department store chain had surged more than 25 percent on the news.
Then, in December, Sears said it would begin selling merchandise from its DieHard brand on Amazon, including car batteries and now tires.
“Kenmore is now distributed nationally on Amazon with over 250 products and we are exceeding customer service level expectations,” Tom Park, president of Kenmore, Craftsman and DieHard brands at Sears Holdings, said in a statement.
The company said it has about 2,100 technicians at its Auto Centers across the country to perform tire installations.
Sears is meanwhile looking for ways to monetize other assets, as its sales are in a steep decline overall and the company has more than $1 billion of debt coming due within the year, according to financial statements.
Sears CEO Eddie Lampert‘s hedge fund, ESL Investments, has made a proposal to buy Kenmore, Sears’ home improvement business, its PartsDirect division and some of the chain’s real estate. Lampert has said he’s been shopping some of those assets for years, but hasn’t been able to find a serious buyer.
In a blog post Wednesday, prior to Sears’ shareholders meeting, Lampert said: “We’re still not where we need to be, and Sears continues to face significant challenges in a tough retail environment. … The reality is transformation is an ongoing process and we are not done. I still firmly believe that, together, we can transform this company.”
Sears Holdings shares are down nearly 70 percent from a year ago.
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