Skip to main content

Microsoft is closing all of its physical Microsoft Stores

Technology giant Microsoft has announced it is closing all of its brick and mortar Microsoft Stores and will be focusing on selling its products online in the future.

In a LinkedIn post, the company said it is making “a strategic change in our retail operations, including closing Microsoft Store physical locations.” It made reference to the ongoing global pandemic and also stated that its “hardware and software sales have continued to shift online,” particularly in terms of digital products like Microsoft 365 and games from the Xbox Store.

The company’s statement says, “Our retail team members will continue to serve customers working from Microsoft corporate facilities or remotely and we will continue to develop our diverse team in support of the overall company mission and objectives.”

A Microsoft representative confirmed to Digital Trends that all affected employees will be offered the opportunity to stay within the company, working to support customers in sales or training-type roles. Some will work from Microsoft corporate offices while others will work from home.

In an announcement, Microsoft Corporate Vice President David Porter confirmed that the retail team will continue to serve in customer-facing-type rolls, and that the recent need to work from home had demonstrated their flexibility. “We deliberately built teams with unique backgrounds and skills that could serve customers from anywhere,” he said. “The evolution of our workforce ensured we could continue to serve customers of all sizes when they needed us most, working remotely these last months. Speaking over 120 languages, their diversity reflects the many communities we serve. Our commitment to growing and developing careers from this talent pool is stronger than ever.”

Updated 26th June: Added information about affected employees and statement from David Porter.

Editors' Recommendations

Georgina Torbet
Georgina is the Digital Trends space writer, covering human space exploration, planetary science, and cosmology. She…
Pay-with-palm coming to all of Amazon’s Whole Foods Market stores
A person using their palm to pay at a Whole Foods Market store.

Amazon is expanding its Amazon One palm-recognition payment system to all 500 of its Whole Foods Market stores in the U.S., with the rollout to be completed by the end of this year.

It means that, once signed up, shoppers at the store will no longer have to mess about with their phone or card at the checkout, instead simply waving their palms over the reader to pay for their items. Savings will automatically be applied to goods for Prime members who link their Amazon One profile with their Amazon account.

Read more
Apple’s latest store opening is one of its most significant in years
Apple opens its first retail store in India.

Previous

Next

Read more
Amazon closing 8 of its high-tech pay-and-go stores
Amazon go sign.

Amazon is closing eight of its Go stores as part of its latest effort to streamline its brick-and-mortar retail operations.

Affected stores include two in New York City, four in San Francisco, and two in Amazon’s home city of Seattle. All eight will close their doors by April 1, according to a GeekWire report.

Read more