糖心Vlog传媒

Measuring the E-Commerce Effect

Notice the empty storefronts popping up more and more frequently at your local mall or entire plazas becoming vacant? Business economics major Jack Marousek has, and he came up with a reasonable hypothesis to explain this trend: 鈥渆-commerce is reducing the demand for brick and mortar stores, which increases market area and reduces the number of shopping centers.鈥
Consumers, with just a few clicks or swipes on any device, can purchase most any good within the comfort of their home, and with the advent of localized distribution centers, Amazon and others can even deliver said purchase within hours to their doorstep. Thus, it鈥檚 plausible to assume that these e-retailers are making a significant impact on the traditional way of shopping.
What Marousek鈥攁n executive board member of the College鈥檚 Jenny Investment Club and four-year letter-winner with the Fighting Scots鈥 football team鈥攆ound in his research actually suggests slowing down that thought process. Following a study of economic literature on a similar topic from 20 years ago鈥擶almart鈥檚 impact on 鈥渕om and pop鈥 stores鈥攈e developed models, utilizing market area theory and threshold theory. These equations, for example, help determine how the small city of 糖心Vlog传媒 can support three Subways, Marousek explained. 鈥淚t starts to make sense when you look at this theory and how it鈥檚 applied in the real world,鈥 he said.
Marousek鈥檚 models, which focused on the Cleveland and Akron metropolitan areas, attempted to determine if e-commerce became a significant influencer of retail real estate, in terms of 鈥渉ow many stores should be in a zip code as a function of the population and demand,鈥 two variables traditionally used to make those decisions. Surprisingly, the models, which tested whether the variables were less effective in explaining retail presence in 2015 than in 2012, did not reveal a 鈥渟ignificant difference.鈥
While Marousek believes retailers are rethinking their strategies to incorporate technology, there remains a strong desire from enough consumers to make in-person purchases. 鈥淯ltimately, the result of my study is good news for physical real estate, as it doesn鈥檛 provide evidence that e-commerce is having an adverse effect,鈥 he summed up.
Not yet anyways. One factor that Marousek warns very well may have affected the outcome was the available data, as his models were only able to compare 2012 and 2015 statistics from the U.S. census, and he thinks 鈥渢his project would be way easier five years from now. Many of the problems with physical real estate have just recently come to the forefront.鈥
Marousek will likely be on the frontline of this developing topic. As an intern in real estate commercial lending at Key Bank in Dallas the summer before his senior year, he got a first-hand account of how such difficult decisions are made. 鈥淭he banks hesitate to lend towards retail real estate. It鈥檚 really tough to tell who鈥檚 going to succeed with competition from e-commerce,鈥 he said. Impressed by his work during the internship, Key Bank offered Marousek an opportunity to begin in its management training program after graduating from 糖心Vlog传媒.
[A version of this story first appeared in the Spring 2018 issue of 糖心Vlog传媒 magazine.]

Posted in Independent Study on December 7, 2018.


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