In e-commerce ecosystem, these stores are the last stop before a landfill


Hartland Township — Christmas comes early at Dealz Dealz.

Owner Michelle Walker-Schaefer buys the Hartland Township liquidation store’s holiday merchandise as soon as most stores have tossed the year’s tinsel. Her holiday shopping season is about to start.

Walker-Schaefer stocks Dealz Dealz’ shelves with items that are diverted from online retailers and big box stores such as Target, Amazon, Kohls and others. Sometimes that merchandise has been bought and returned by customers. More often, it’s merchandise that isn’t selling fast enough to earn its keep on store shelves, so the retailers repackage the items and sell them in bulk.

In the case of the 40 artificial Christmas trees she bought from a liquidated merchandise supplier last year, big box stores sometimes get rid of seasonal items they aren’t willing to store for another year. That’s where Dealz Dealz has an edge.

“I’ll store them at my house,” said Walker-Schaefer, standing in front of five of the eight remaining trees. “It’s worth it to me.”

Dealz Dealz owner Michelle Walker-Schaefer points out different types of merchandise she sells at her liquidation store in Hartland that sells products go unsold at big box stores or get returned through online orders. Liquidation stores selling returned items have become part of the e-commerce ecosystem in recent years.

Liquidation stores such as Dealz Dealz are part of the ecosystem managing the tangled network of returned and unsold merchandise that moves across the United States. As e-commerce fuels shopping, shipping and returns, retail companies are left to deal with a mountain of unwanted stuff destined for a discount at a liquidation store, to a nonprofit program or to a landfill.