Business Fry’s Electronics permanently closing all stores nationwide

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SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. (KRON) – Fry’s Electronics is going out of business.

KRON4 has confirmed that the iconic Bay Area retailer is permanently closing the doors of all stores nationwide.

The company is expected to post closure information on its website early Wednesday.

Fry’s has more than two dozen stores mainly across California and Texas.

There are 6 stores in Northern California, 8 in Southern California, 8 in Texas, 2 in Arizona, and one store each in Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Nevada, Oregon, and Washington.

There is a unique theme to each store. The Bay Area locations are:
  • Fremont: 1893 World’s Fair
  • San Jose: First astronomers, the Mayans, with settings from Chichenitza
  • Sunnyvale: History of Silicon Valley
The Concord location was still a “work in progress” and was not yet given a theme.

According to the company website, Fry’s was founded in Sunnyvale in 1985 by the three Fry brothers – John, Randy, and Dave – and Kathy Kolder.

The company aimed to “provide a one-stop-shopping environment for the Hi-Tech Professional,” selling over 50,000 electronic items in each store, which ranged anywhere between 50,000 to 180,000 square feet.

It is unclear at this time why the company is closing.
 
Going to Fry's always got me hyped as a kid, so it's sad to see it go, but from what I read it was expected, and I haven't been to one in years. Always loved how those stores were decorated and themed.
 
I’m surprised they lasted this long. I went there a bunch as a kid building my first computers before Newegg took over, and last year I went back for the first time in like 10+ to get the new Ryzen and it was barren.
 
A more detailed report about Fry's imminent closure from Ars Technica (archive):

Report: Fry’s Electronics going out of business, shutting down all stores

Former king of build-your-own-PC retailers couldn't survive COVID, consignment shift.
Sam Machkovech - 2/24/2021, 4:22 PM

Fry's Electronics, the decades-old superstore chain with locations in nine American states, appears to have gone defunct. Bay Area TV station KRON-4 was the first press outlet to confirm the news late Tuesday, saying that Fry's will shut down all 30 of its American locations. The retailer will reportedly make an announcement at some time on Wednesday via the Fry's website.

Rumors began flying on Tuesday in the form of anecdotes from alleged Fry's employees, who all reported that they'd been summarily fired earlier in the day with zero notice. One anonymous report posted at The Layoff alleged that every remaining Fry's store in the US was "permanently closing tomorrow," and that sentiment was echoed hours later at a Fry's-related Reddit community. The Reddit post included the allegation that one store's staffers were tasked with shipping any remaining merchandise back to suppliers during their final day at work.

Sacramento freelance journalist Matthew Keys followed these posts by citing an unnamed source—someone who had worked at Fry's up until "this week"—who claimed that the electronics chain would make a formal announcement "this week" about closing all of its stores and liquidating any remaining assets. As the wave of rumors exploded, the official Fry's website began serving failure notices—yet some of its subsite content, particularly years-old press releases, remained active through Frys.com subdomains. As Tuesday wore on, the Fry's retail site flickered into and out of normal service, even letting customers buy products after KRON-4's report went live.

Spindles of savings​

For years, Fry's Electronics was the United States' largest physical retailer dedicated to just about every computing and electronic device you could think of, particularly individual computer components. As the chain expanded to more stores throughout the US, particularly in taking over multiple defunct Incredible Universe locations, Fry's rode the build-your-own boom of personal computing. If you built your own PC in the past two decades and lived within driving distance of a Fry's, that store was likely where you began looking for motherboards, optical disc drives, RAM of all speeds and slots, and spindles of no less than 200 CD-Rs.

Additionally, the retailer was known for being the exclusive retail partner for some odd merchandise, particularly the ill-fated Pono Player from famed musician Neil Young.

Through the '00s, cashflow across the privately held Fry's chain was apparently solid enough to survive a devastating internal meltdown: theft of over $65 million from the company's coffers by its then-vice president.

But big-box retailers have long struggled in an Internet-shopping era, and the California-centric Fry's hadn't looked particularly strong as the pandemic wore down what appetite remained for in-person shopping. Shortly before the pandemic gripped the world, the chain shut down its Anaheim, CA location, which was followed by the November closure of its Campbell, CA store.

By 2020, the chain had already established a transition to consignment-style selling, which meant not paying manufacturers up-front for merchandise before putting it on store shelves. That practice has worked for some chains with a decades-long head start on the practice, particularly Wal-Mart. But in the case of Fry's, this transition was met by electronics manufacturers who, in the Internet-rich era of 2019, had far less incentive to put their wares unpaid onto store shelves. (This will also reduce the defunct company's potential to liquidate, as the consignment-based merchandise must simply be returned to original manufacturers—which may have been the final duty for remaining employees this week.)

Hence, Fry's locations began earning a notorious reputation for barren store shelves. Now, apparently, their floors will be barren, as well. The company has yet to formally acknowledge layoffs or store closures at any of its social media channels—going so far as to delete its Facebook account and "lock" its Twitter profile—and as of press time, its website has yet to offer announcements about the company's future.
 
The writing has been on the wall for the last couple of years (at least).

What was once a destination store for nerds of all stripes became a sad, vacant warehouse with shrinking stock and an ominous echo. It sincerely felt awkward to shop there as it spiraled down, like visiting a mall with 80% of the store fronts vacant.

RIP Fry's, you were a favorite of mine back in the day.
 
For years, Fry's Electronics was the United States' largest physical retailer dedicated to just about every computing and electronic device you could think of, particularly individual computer components.
Oh, so it's basically what MicroCenter is now.

Speaking of which, guess what's also in California and Texas?
Screenshot_2021-02-24_08-03-49.png
 
I'm surprised they held on as long as they did. I used to live within walking distance of a Frys and would regularly go there to pick up electronics etc. Then about a year ago, they had moved their entire stock to about three aisles at the front of the store, and everything else was just bare shelves.
 
I haven’t been to a Frys since about 2001, but I remember always getting excited to go. Shame to hear they’ve fallen on hard times
 
As much as I want to wax nostalgic about my childhood, you couldn't find jack shit there for years. Despite it being as straight a shot it gets in SoCal everyone I know just ended up buying stuff on Newegg due to their complete lack of selection for anything. Its hard to Press F when your childhood nostalgia has run smack into modern reality.
 
Throw anothee hat in the pile for "used to love going there back in the day." Used to be part of my weekend shopping ritual, even if I was just looking. The one in San Diego would often have a console or two setup showcasing something; would get some free DDR in without having to drop money in the arcade.

And not worried about Micro Center; JaysTwoCents does enough to keep them alive.
 
Never saw one of these, never even knew what they were, but I looked at some pics of the stores and some of them had cool references to classic movies built into the store.

1614196628563.png


RIP
 
I had a feeling this was coming. It's a shame. Fry's Electronics was one of the only retail stores I would go out of my way to shop from because they always have a little bit of everything and the design of each store is always interesting-looking, albeit a bit dated.
 
I'm MATI in the literal sense. Fuck Amazon, and with all due respect fuck Newegg. The Fry's Electronics shops were cool in design and the radio commercials were even better. Now they're going to be bulldozed and likely made into housing. What a fucking waste.

I'm sure Best Buy is absolutely shitting itself at this news.
 
RIP Fry's, you had a good run. Time to finally pass the torch to Micro Center.
I'm MATI in the literal sense. Fuck Amazon, and with all due respect fuck Newegg. The Fry's Electronics shops were cool in design and the radio commercials were even better. Now they're going to be bulldozed and likely made into housing. What a fucking waste.

I'm sure Best Buy is absolutely shitting itself at this news.
Best Buy is mostly secure in their position. One of the few things you can't really buy online is appliances and it just so happens to make up a good 1/3 of floor space in every Best Buy; and is probably how they're holding up relatively well during the pandemic. Best Buy also sells "tech help" with Geek Squad which gives them an advantage even with stuff you buy online from them, something Amazon or Newegg can't exactly do with crap they deliver at your doorstep.
 
shango066 just dropped a video where he visited Fry's in 2019. It was looking pretty grim even back then. For added irony, this store had an Amazon theme.

 
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Fry's used to be my go-to place for getting DVD's, particularly for Anime. I stopped going when their offerings on all media started to get a bit bare bones.

It's a shame, I still think there's a place for brick and mortar retail - if for no other reason than to not give Jeff Bezos and Amazon an absolute monopoly.
 
It's a shame, I still think there's a place for brick and mortar retail - if for no other reason than to not give Jeff Bezos and Amazon an absolute monopoly.
The most frustrating part is that, if shango066's video is representative of all Fry's stores, there were some really obvious ways that management could have adapted to and thrived under current year trading conditions. The video comments pretty much nailed all these issues: poor management, dilapidated stores, too much floor space, product range lacking focus etc etc.

It's as if senior management (which includes at least one of the founders) was stuck in 1990 and didn't want to leave. Whilst I kinda don't blame him for wanting to stay in 1990, you can't run a pure 1990's retail business model in current year and expect it to be anything but a disaster.
 
Growing up I remember hearing and reading about people popping into Fry's to get an electronic component or some computer gadget. So I knew it had the reputation of "like RadioShack and best buy had a giant baby". I never lived near one to experience it myself. By the time I was in a city that had one and went out of my way to visit all I saw were the same empty shelves everyone else are mentioning . It was a giant warehouse full of nothing. It was really depressing.

I've gone out of my way to go to microcenter a few times. They have all kinds of neat stuff and pretty good prices. At least they seem to be doing well, I was just hoping for frys to give the same feeling as microcenter but bigger.

I did manage to buy a nice electronic item I was looking for from the frys website for like a hundred bucks less than the used price at B&H. So I guess their dying did me some good because apparently nobody was paying attention to the pricing.
 
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