KEY POINTS
  • Best Buy has adapted its stores to serve customers with curbside pickup and one-on-one consultations.
  • CEO Corie Barry said it's a safer approach and a better fit for the retailer, which sells big-ticket items like gaming consoles, kitchen appliances and home theater systems.
  • "We're going to end up applying a variety of models across our footprint for the foreseeable future," Barry said in a call Thursday.
  • This month, the company began offering store visits by appointment only and returning to customers' homes.
A customer has a new television delivered to his vehicle at a Best Buy store on March 23, 2020 in Melrose Park, Illinois. Best Buy has closed all of it retail stores to shoppers to help curtail the spread of coronavirus (COVID-19), but allows customers to place orders online or by using the Best Buy app and have the merchandise delivered to their vehicle at the front of the store.

Selling to customers in stores by appointment only. Offering virtual tech support. And serving frustrated, sometimes hostile, customers.

That's the new reality for Best Buy as it sells computer monitors, refrigerators and more during the coronavirus pandemic. The store has always been a place to touch and see the latest gadgets and electronics with its hands-on displays. But the company had to rethink that model as customers and employees worried about getting sick.