https://www.recode.net/2017/6/12/15771838/best-buy-drone-camera-rental-trial-try-before-buy-lumoid?utm_campaign=recode.net&utm_content=chorus&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter

Over the last few years, the idea of short-term rentals has taken off in 
industries from lodging to fashion. Now Best Buy is trying to push that same 
trend into the mainstream for consumer electronics.

Later this month, the big-box retailer will start advertising 
try-before-you-buy rentals on its website for cameras, drones, audio equipment 
and fitness trackers, the company recently told Recode. Best Buy is working 
with a San Francisco-based startup called Lumoid on the partnership.

Best Buy will feature the try-before-you-buy option on BestBuy.com and then 
send interested customers to Lumoid’s website to make the rental. Customers 
earn about 20 percentage of the rental price back in Lumoid credits and can use 
them if they go on to buy the item outright.

For Best Buy, the partnership could evolve into a way to wring more dollars out 
of so-called “open box” items — these are goods that a Best Buy customer has 
bought but then returned so they can’t be resold at full price. Best Buy is 
providing these goods to Lumoid to rent out.

Perhaps more importantly, the offering could also help the $39 billion retailer 
develop a connection with customers earlier in the buying process — perhaps 
increasing the odds that they will turn to Best Buy over a competitor like 
Amazon when they are ready to buy.

“Customers are not walking into physical stores for discovery,” said Aarthi 
Ramamurthy, Lumoid’s founder and CEO. “They already know what they want and 
they just go in to get it.”

Best Buy has battled through the rise of Amazon better than many industry 
insiders expected over the last couple of years. A price-matching policy along 
with the bankruptcy of some competitors — coupled with above-average e-commerce 
growth — have contributed to a stock price increase of 67 percent since this 
time two years ago.

The partnership seems like a smart test to see if it can carve out a new 
advantage. Amazon does not offer a similar service, but I’d be surprised if 
they have not taken a close look at it.

Both Best Buy and Lumoid seem to recognize that some customers will continue to 
use their own makeshift rental method: Buying an item knowing there is a good 
chance they will end up returning it.

But for higher-priced items — like the $999 DJI Phantom 4 drone — a $50-a-day 
rental may win some of these people over, especially those who don’t have that 
kind of cash to lay out. Shoppers can also get a week-long try-out with an 
Apple Watch, for example, for $50 through Lumoid.

So how good is Lumoid at turning triers into buyers? The startup does best in 
the wearable category, where around one in three renters go on to purchase the 
item, Ramamurthy said. (It’s worth noting that some Lumoid customers rent 
cameras and drones for a specific occasion and are not looking to buy it from 
the start.)

Customers can buy the item they rented for a discounted price, since it’s an 
“open box” item and may have been rented out to others. They can also choose to 
purchase a brand-new one through Lumoid.

Best Buy declined to comment on the financial terms of the partnership, but 
most deals of this nature include a revenue-sharing component.

The company also declined to say whether it is taking an equity stake in Lumoid 
as part of the deal.


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