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To:Brew Readers
Retail Brew // Morning Brew // Update
Amazon’s Buy with Prime checkout feature.

Hey there. Calling all basketball fans—Sotheby’s is putting two rare items of memorabilia up for auction: rookie jerseys worn by none other than Michael Jordan and Kobe Bryant. The collective sale of the pieces is likely to bring in a whopping $20 million. If you end up bidding, we’d like a size medium, please.

In today’s edition:

—Vidhi Choudhary, Alex Vuocolo

SUPPLY CHAIN

Buy with Prime badge

Amazon

If you’ve recently shopped at cosmetics brand Laura Mercier’s website, you may have come across a blue-colored teeth whitening strip shaped icon right below the “Add to bag” box, which offers a free and fast delivery date to shoppers. The blue box is Amazon’s Buy with Prime button plugged into Laura Mercier’s DTC site.

This year, Amazon is making a compelling play to push its Buy with Prime checkout feature first released in April 2022. This spring, sneaker brand Adidas will also carry a Buy with Prime badge on its app and website. At checkout, shoppers will get an option to log into their Amazon account and verify their Prime membership to complete the purchase. For a company that sparingly shares internal data, Amazon said in January 2023 that Buy with Prime led to a 25% increase in shopper conversions on average for merchants.

High-level buzz among Amazon experts is that the tech giant is sweetening the deal to get high-quality brands to sign up for Buy with Prime. This is because Amazon wants to expand its dominance over the supply chain. DTC shipping times tend to be much slower so brands are willing to test out this feature. Buy with Prime allows Amazon to control the online stores of thousands of brands by managing the fulfillment, delivery, and returns of items at a faster clip.

Keep reading here.—VC

Presented By Omnisend

STORES

Target storefront

Ucg/Getty Images

After posting Q4 earnings and warning investors that President Trump’s proposed tariffs could raise prices, Target outlined its plan for making a series of investments aimed at driving “billions of dollars of profitable sales growth” by 2030, according to a company release.

“Shoppers continue to seek differentiated options and distinctive shopping experiences without sacrificing value, and Target has the scale, strategy, and capabilities to support all the ways consumers shop and engage with brands,” CEO Brian Cornell said in a statement.

At a high level, the company said it plans to deliver a trendy, affordable assortment; reinforce its digital and physical channels; and invest in its supply chain to improve speed and reliability. But beneath these pillars, it outlined some concrete strategies for growing its business.

Keep reading here.—AV

E-COMMERCE

Google Shopping virtual try-on

Google

Google is rolling out new virtual try-on tools for makeup and clothing to let users in the US shop that perfect look they’ve pictured in their heads.

Google’s Vision Match feature will allow US shoppers to match fashion descriptions they’re looking for, like “colorful midi dress with big daisies,” with tangible products.

“Advanced AI is now opening doors for truly personalized, immersive shopping experiences that, in turn, tackle some of the toughest challenges—like the challenge of bridging a fashion or a beauty vision with reality,” Lilian Rincon, VP of consumer shopping product at Google, told Retail Brew.

Google is sharing new AI tools to make fashion visions—everything from trying out the latest makeup to trying on apparel—a reality, she added: “Everyone in the US can now shop for apparel that’s in their mind’s eye.”

Keep reading here.—VC

Together With Walmart Marketplace

SWAPPING SKUS

Today’s top retail reads.

Trick of the trade: Macy’s predicts troubled times ahead as consumers pull back on spending amid a trade war. (the New York Times)

Hush hush: Why retailers in the US are dropping some DEI policies in public but maintaining some behind the scenes. (Reuters)

New horizons: France has enacted a national ban on forever chemicals, but how does that impact fashion? (Vogue Business)

Who ya got: If you had to name a winner in the online shopping race, would it be Amazon or Temu? Find out who’s ahead and much more in Omnisend’s report.*

*A message from our sponsor.

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