Original URL: http://www.theregister.co.uk/2005/04/20/amazon_marks_sparks/
Book outfit Amazon is to help Marks & Spencer flog its gear online because the UK retailer's previous stab at ecommerce hasn't been up to scratch.
Amazon will host and provide all the techie stuff behind Marks & Sparks' website including in-store and telephone ordering, and customer services systems.
M&S will continue to manage its website, customer service operations, warehousing and distribution.
Said Steven Sharp, M&S's top man for ecommerce: "Marks & Spencer already has a successful website with over 24 million visits every year, but our ecommerce and customer ordering capabilities have yet to reach their full potential. A partnership with Amazon will help us achieve this, while allowing us to concentrate on our core business of retailing."
Speculation that M&S planned to hook up with Amazon surfaced in September last year. At the time M&S was busy trying to rebuild its status as the UK's top clothes retailer after surviving a damaging takeover bid from retailing tycoon Philip Green during this summer. Although some M&S execs were concerned that handing over the retailer's ecommerce operation to Amazon would be an admission of failure, it seems the giant retailer decided that such a move was essential to its future.
Last December, M&S's site went titsup after being crushed by a huge number of eager shoppers keen to cash in on a pre-Christmas sale. ®
Amazon and M&S keep schtum on ecommerce deal (http://www.theregister.co.uk/2004/09/10/amazon_marks_spencer/)
M&S site falls over (http://www.theregister.co.uk/2004/12/03/marks_and_spencer_website_failure/)
Amazon wins reprieve against Toysrus.com (http://www.theregister.co.uk/2005/04/14/amazon_wins_reprieve_against_toysrus_com/)
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