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<h1>Amazon ranks first for back-to-school shoppers</h1>
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<h4 class="hide-small show-large">AUTHOR</h4>
<div class="article-byline-name"><a href="http://www.retaildive.com/editors/csalpini/" rel="author">Cara Salpini</a><a class="article-byline-twitter hide-small show-large" href="http://www.twitter.com/CaraSalpini">@CaraSalpini</a></div>
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<h4 class="hide-small show-large">PUBLISHED</h4>
<p>Aug. 14, 2017</p></div>
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<h3>Dive Brief:</h3>
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<li>Amazon ranked first for back-to-school consumers shopping both early and late in the season — the only retailer to make both lists in a back-to-school survey that brand loyalty research consultancy firm Brand Keys emailed to Retail Dive. That being said, Walmart and Best Buy both appeared on the early shopping list, while their e-commerce sites appeared on the late back-to-school list.</li>
<li>For early shoppers, Amazon and Walmart were followed by Staples, Target and Apple/Best Buy respectively. Late back-to-school shoppers, on the other hand, focused almost exclusively on e-commerce sites, selecting BestBuy.com, Nike and TJ Maxx/Macy.com after Amazon and Walmart.com.</li>
<li>The survey, which assessed more than 8,000 households with school-age children (pre-K to 12th grade), also found that retailers could expect a 6% increase in back-to-school spending, from an average spend of $675 in 2016 to an anticipated $716 this year.</li>
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<h3>Dive Insight:</h3>
<p>As e-commerce sites become go-to platforms for pretty much every type of shopping, back-to-school appears to be trending in the same direction.</p>
<p>Brand Keys’ survey found that late back-to-school shoppers used e-commerce sites to purchase primarily apparel, books and study aids, which accounted for 59% of 2017’s anticipated average spend.</p>
<p>&#8220;While the past few years have proved this finding, this year’s back-to-school marketplace further confirms that Amazon.com has become consumers’ default shopping platform — early or late in the season,&#8221; said Robert Passikoff, founder and president of Brand Keys.</p>
<p>Despite Amazon’s dominance in yet another category, it seems that many consumers still prefer to do their early back-to-school shopping in stores. To that point, Amazon was the only e-commerce site on Brand Keys’ top five list of early back-to-school retailers, which could be due to the fact that early spending (which accounts for 41% of the average anticipated spend) is focused on supplies like printer cartridges, notebooks, pens and pencils, calculators and electronics.</p>
<p>That’s not to discount the push to digital, though. With mobile an increasingly <a href="http://www.retaildive.com/news/how-mobile-is-changing-back-to-school/448267/">important part of back-to-school</a> and Gen Z becoming the <a href="http://www.retaildive.com/news/gen-z-goes-to-college-how-to-win-this-back-to-school-shopper/448489/">prime target for back-to-college shopping</a>, digital will only continue to grow. Even in this year’s study, 99% of Brand Keys’ respondents said that they plan on shopping online during both the early and late back-to-school season.</p>
<p>&#8220;Consumer purchases have shifted from print to digital and online has been growing every year. It’s the consumers’ shopping default mode,&#8221; Passikoff said.</p>
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