Publications
Publications
- June 1998 (Revised January 2000)
- HBS Case Collection
Egghead.com
Abstract
Egghead Software, an entrenched traditional chain retailer specializing in computer software and peripherals, had established a nationwide chain of mall and shopping center stores and a well-organized national brand. In early 1998, management made a highly unusual, and perhaps unprecedented, decision: the company closed down all its stores in North America and moved its retail operations exclusively to the Web. This rejection of marketplace in favor of marketspace illustrated the differences in managing retail operations for "information products," such as software, and "physical products," such as home furnishings or tools. The fact that software could be examined, sampled, purchased, and even distributed on-line indicated to Egghead management the high costs in PPE and labor represented by physical retailing were no longer justified by the category. The brand promise of Egghead could be realized as effectively at lower cost of operations on the Web, and the Web could begin to provide new sources of consumer value as the Egghead site harnessed the unique attributes and advantages of the digital environment.
Keywords
Organizational Change and Adaptation; Digital Platforms; Internet and the Web; Applications and Software; Information Technology Industry; Retail Industry
Citation
Rayport, Jeffrey F., Jeremy Dann, and Robert C Schmults. "Egghead.com." Harvard Business School Case 898-283, June 1998. (Revised January 2000.)