Skip to main content

Bose to close all of its U.S. retail stores in pivot to online shopping

Bose is set to close all 119 of its brick-and-mortar stores in the U.S., Canada, Europe, Japan, and Australia “over the next several months,” the company revealed on Wednesday, January 15.

Recommended Videos

The Massachusetts-based audio equipment maker said the decision was prompted by what it described as “a dramatic shift” to online shopping. Pressure from e-commerce in recent years has seen retailers shuttering numerous store locations across the country, with some falling by the wayside altogether.

Job losses at Bose are inevitable, though it said in a statement that it won’t be revealing how many positions are going as a result of the closures. To support those affected, Bose is intending to make severance payments and also offer help to find new work.

“Originally, our retail stores gave people a way to experience, test, and talk to us about multi-component, CD, and DVD-based home entertainment systems,” Colette Burke, Bose’s vice president of global sales, said in a release. “At the time, it was a radical idea, but we focused on what our customers needed, and where they needed it — and we’re doing the same thing now.”

Burke described the decision to close so many stores in key markets as “difficult” because the move “impacts some of our amazing store teams who make us proud every day … Over the years, they’ve set the standard for customer service. And everyone at Bose is grateful.”

But not all of its stores are closing down. In China, India, South Korea, Southeast Asia, and the United Arab Emirates, all of Bose’s 130 physical stores will remain open, at least for now.

Bose opened its very first U.S. store in 1993 to offer personal demonstrations for Wave music systems and Lifestyle home theater systems. As smartphones changed the industry, the company’s focus turned to mobile, Bluetooth, and Wi-Fi solutions.

“Today, Bose noise-canceling headphones, truly wireless sport earbuds, portable speakers, and smart speakers are increasingly purchased through e-commerce, including Bose.com; and Bose is a larger multi-national company, with a localized mix of channels tailored for a country or region,” the company said.

While it’s always sad to see a big name exit the retail market, and awful news for those who work at Bose, audiophiles who like to try before they buy will still be able to find Bose gear at big-box stores and other retail locations in the countries that the company is exiting.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
HMD Global shows its serious about U.S. expansion with 5 new Nokia phones
HMD Global's range of new Nokia phones at CES 2022.

HMD Global has big plans for the U.S. market, and at CES 2022 it has revealed a new range of devices that cost less than $250, all coming out over the next months. Buoyed by LG and ZTE both leaving the U.S., it has struck lucrative deals with T-Mobile, Tracfone, Verizon, and other carriers to supply Nokia phones on pre-paid contracts, including low-cost feature phones.

To help achieve its ambitious targets in the U.S. for the coming year -- it's targeting number one in feature phones, and number three in pre-paid smartphones -- it has announced five new U.S. exclusive phones that will arrive during the first six months of the year. Top of the list is an affordable 5G phone, followed by three 4G phones, and a new feature phone with Kai OS software onboard.

Read more
Watch Spotify’s tour of its plush U.S. headquarters
watch spotifys tour of its plush us headquarters spotify manhattan refurb

Spotify has offered curious folks a look inside its newly refurbished -- and very plush -- U.S. headquarters at 4 World Trade Center in New York City.

“Featuring two new floors with areas dedicated to different types of working and the different needs of our people, there's plenty of space to work and play as we shape the future of audio,” Spotify said in comments accompanying the video. “The views are pretty spectacular, too.”

Read more
Toyota announces site for its first U.S. battery plant
2019 Toyota Corolla hatchback

Toyota is doubling down on its electric vehicle ambitions with the building of a $1.3 billion battery production plant in North Carolina, its first such facility in the U.S.

The Japanese automaker announced the plan on Monday, December 6, revealing that it will build the plant in the Greensboro-Randolph area about 80 miles northeast of Charlotte.

Read more