CHICAGO—About 500 real estate professionals attended BMO Capital Markets' 10th Annual North American Real Estate Conference, held yesterday and today in Chicago, and many of them were asking the panelists and keynote speakers how they thought e-commerce would impact the retail world. Richard Baker, governor and executive chairman of Toronto-based Hudson's Bay Co., one of the most successful retailers in Canada, Germany and the US, gave a clear answer, one echoed by several experts at the gathering.

“It's the best thing to happen to the department store business,” he said yesterday during a lunchtime question-and-answer session. Although many once thought that an online behemoth like Amazon threatened other retailers, it “still can't be as competitive as a well-run department store.”

That's largely because even though consumers want the convenience of shopping online, most also want a more personal touch that only a bricks-and-mortar store can provide. “They want to be able to shop on their mobile device,” Baker says, perhaps in the morning, and have the option to pick-up their items in-store at lunchtime and have it “all bagged and ready to go.” And if products need to be returned, that can also be done in-store, where they have customer service professionals ready to provide assistance.

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Brian J. Rogal

Brian J. Rogal is a Chicago-based freelance writer with years of experience as an investigative reporter and editor, most notably at The Chicago Reporter, where he concentrated on housing issues. He also has written extensively on alternative energy and the payments card industry for national trade publications.