NEW YORK — Microsoft has unveiled plans for "store-within-a-store" sections in Best Buy stores, becoming the latest major consumer electronics maker to acknowledge advantages of the brick-and-mortar format.
The sections will begin opening this month and offer Windows-based PCs, tablets, Xbox and accessories, as well as trained staff to explain Windows 8 to customers.
All of the Microsoft mini-stores are expected to be set up in about 600 Best Buy locations in the U.S. and Canada by early September, around the same time analysts expect a free update to Windows 8 to be released.
The update, called Windows 8.1, is meant to reduce some of the confusion caused by a dramatic overhaul of the operating system that debuted amid much fanfare last October, only to get off to a tepid sales start.
The alliance with Microsoft comes as Minneapolis-based Best Buy continues to battle the "showrooming" effect, the term for shoppers who browse in stores buy then buy items cheaper online. This has led to fears that the big-box store format is growing obsolete.
But major electronics retailers are finding advantage in having a destination where trained sales staff can explain its products to shoppers. Best Buy Co. Inc. has similar store-within-stores for Apple, Samsung and Magnolia products.
None of the previous mini-stores have been as ambitious as the Microsoft format, said Jason Bonfig, Best Buy's vice president of merchant computing. The Microsoft stores will span an average of 1,900 square feet, nearly five times larger than Best Buy's most recent alliance with Samsung, Bonfig said in a Thursday interview.
Belus Capital Markets analyst Brian Sozzi said the move "absolutely makes sense," and he expects more store-within-store formats at Best Buy.