Stores usher in holiday shopping season with big discounts, expanded hours in tough economy
The Associated Press
Target Corp.’s spokeswoman Lena Michaud said traffic was strong based on a spot-check of stores. Gail Lavielle, spokeswoman at Sears Holdings Inc., which operates Sears, Roebuck and Co. and Kmart stores, reported traffic increases from a year ago.
Best Buy Co. drew more than a thousand shoppers to West Paterson, N.J. and to its Manhattan store for early morning bargains on Sony laptop computers, cut to $399.99 from $749.99, and GPS devices from TomTom for $119.99, from the normal $249.99, according to store managers.
Still, despite overall efforts by efforts to manage crowds better, frustrations remained high, particularly regarding Nintendo’s Wii.
Pam Batts, of Raleigh, N.C., arrived at a Target in suburban Knightdale at 3:30 a.m. Friday, ready to buy a Wii for her 8-year-old son but left empty handed.
About 30 minutes before the doors opened, Target staff announced the store had been sold out of the consoles since Sunday.
“Now what do I do?” Batts asked. “I’ve got just a month to find one.