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TigerDirect

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Consumer Electronics Retailer
TigerDirect
1996–2016 logo
FormerlyBLOC Development Corp. (1985-1987)
Company typeSubsidiary
IndustryRetail
Predecessors
Founded1985; 41 years ago (1985)
Founders
  • Gilbert Fiorentino
  • Carl Fiorentino
  • Karlton Norman
  • Orlando Ramos
DefunctMarch 31, 2023; 2 years ago (2023-03-31)
FateCeased operations
Headquarters,
United States
Areas served
United States
Key people
Frank Khulusi (CEO)
ProductsComputer hardware, software, peripherals, gaming, electronics
ParentInsight Enterprises
WebsiteArchived official website at theWayback Machine (archive index)

TigerDirect was anEl Segundo, California-basedonline retailer dealing in electronics, computers, and computer components. The company was previously owned bySystemax, which is known for its acquisitions of theintellectual property of the defunct U.S. retail chainsCircuit City andCompUSA and relaunching them as online retailers. The two brands were subsequently shuttered in late December 2012 and consolidated into the TigerDirect site.

In 2015, TigerDirect phased out all of its remaining brick-and-mortar retail operations, andPCM Inc. acquired Systemax's online North American technology retail business. In 2019, TigerDirect closed its online business servicing Canada.

TigerDirect in Canada

The bulk of the company's business was based on web and catalog computer electronics sales, where TigerDirect had carved out a niche by placing a heavy emphasis onrebate marketing as a way to offer lower prices. The company also operated retail store and business-to-business channels.[1]

History

[edit]

The company was founded as BLOC Development Corp., a publisher of utility and application software products starting with FormTool, in 1985. The original company was a pioneer in utility software with several top 10 titles. The original founders were: Frank Millman, Jorge Torres, Frank Haggar, Phil Bolin, Stephan Whitney, and Bob Horton. Frank Milman and Jorge Torres conceptualized the first product "FormTool".

In 1989, Tiger Software became a subsidiary of publicly held Bloc Development Corporation. BLOC Development was also the parent company of BLOC Publishing (a sister company of TigerSoftware), which continued the development and publishing of the company's flagship product "FormTool", and 20 other products; and SoftSync, former publisher of the "EXPERT Software" titles and the Macintosh accounting software "Accountant Inc."). BLOC Development later changed its name to TigerDirect.

TigerDirect abandoned the profitable software development in favor of the TigerSoftware catalog by 1991. Unfortunately, the new model under the leadership of Gilbert Fiorentino was unprofitable, and the company was sold in distress to Global DirectMail (now known asSystemax). In 1994 TigerDirect launched a series of profitable smaller catalogs that included GraphicsExpress, as well as CDROM and Mac catalogs. In 1996, after an aborted attempt at acquisition by Hanover House, it was acquired bySystemax (NYSE: SYX)[2]

Acquisition of CompUSA and Circuit City brands

[edit]

On January 6, 2008, Systemax announced the acquisition of theCompUSA brand, trademarks and e-commerce business, and as many as 16 CompUSA retail outlets inIllinois,Florida,Texas andPuerto Rico.[3] On May 13, 2009, Systemax similarly acquiredCircuit City's intellectual property, including its trademarks, brand name, and domain names.[4] The deal took effect six days later for a price of $14 million. The defunct CircuitCity.com website was restored after the Systemax purchase. In late-December 2012, both brands were shuttered and consolidated into TigerDirect.com.[5]

Retail closing, sale to PCM

[edit]

On March 16, 2015, TigerDirect announced that it would close all but three of its retail stores in an effort to focus exclusively on online and business-to-business sales. Canadian operations consisted of 6 stores inSouthern Ontario and all closed in 2015 (and replaced by the online distribution centre in Richmond Hill under Acrodex or PCM Canada)[6] The locations left open were located inJefferson, Georgia,Guaynabo, Puerto Rico, and its then-headquarters location atMiami, Florida. The company also closed a distribution center in Naperville, Illinois.[7]

In November 2015,PCM Inc. acquired Systemax's "North American Technology Group", including TigerDirect, for $14 million. The division had, by late 2015, incurred operating losses of $68 million (in contrast to its other businesses, which had an operating profit). The acquisition was closed on December 1, 2015 with the sale of its business-to-business customer list and intellectual property. The transfer of Systemax's web assets is to occur by February 15, 2016. The company also announced the shutdown of its remaining distribution center and retail stores.[8][9]

In late-December 2015, the site began holding a clearout sale with no returns accepted; a company spokesperson stated that the site was liquidating its current stock in preparation for its formal transfer to PCM.[10][11]

Website re-launch and closures

[edit]

TigerDirect re-launched its electronics e-commerce website on February 15, 2016 underPCM Inc. ownership. The new TigerDirect.com was a technology store offering a wide variety of technology products. Tiger Direct maintained a substantial B2B customer base and restructured its marketing engine to serve newer customers under the parent company of PCM. PCM also operated TigerDirect.ca for their Canadian operations. Its Canadian website closed in November 2019,[12] and in the end of March 2023 the company ceased all retail operations.[13]

Legal and other issues

[edit]

Federal Trade Commission ruling

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On November 4, 1999, case C3903, theFederal Trade Commission issued a decision and order against TigerDirect for violations of the Pre-sale Availability Rule, the Disclosure Rule and the Warranty Act.[14] Without admitting any wrongdoing, TigerDirect agreed to "not represent that it provides On-Site Service unless all limitations and conditions that apply are disclosed", "fulfill obligations under the warranty within a reasonable period of time after receiving notice from the consumer", and "cease and desist from failing to make warranty text available for examination prior to sale, failing to disclose what is not covered under any given warranty or the procedures needed to have warranty work accomplished and failing to disclose that certain states may give the consumer legal rights in addition to those provided by the warranty."[14]

Apple Computer lawsuit

[edit]

In early 2005, the company filed a lawsuit against Apple Computer Inc. (nowApple Inc.), alleging trademark infringement, dilution and false designation of origin with Apple's introduction ofMac OS X v10.4, marketed with its codename "Tiger". Although TigerDirect had registered several tiger-related names with theUnited States Patent and Trademark Office, Apple received trademark approval for version 10.4 (Tiger) of its OS X operating system in 2003. TigerDirect registered opposition against Apple's filing with theTrademark Trial and Appeal Board, and on May 13, 2005, Apple won an emergency hearing. The judge ruled in favor of Apple, considering the marks to be distinct.[15]

InfoWorld report

[edit]

InfoWorld'sRobert X. Cringely reported in 2006 that "Tiger's sister company OnRebate.com, which handles payouts for the discount dealer, appears to specialize in the 'insufficient documentation' gambit,"[16][17] Consumer-reported difficulties obtaining the rebates led to an investigation by the FloridaAttorney General[18][19] and a failure to maintain a satisfactory BBB rating.[20] According to a formercontroller at TigerDirect, improperly unpaid rebates were intentional: "...the concept was that if the customer complains, you send them out the check to make them happy. But if they don't complain, they totally forget about it. That is the concept of these rebates. People forget that they sent them out."[21]

Dell lawsuit

[edit]

On April 17, 2009,Dell filed a lawsuit against TigerDirect.[22][23] Dell alleged that TigerDirect, a former authorized reseller of Dell products, sold discontinued and outdated Dell products as new and under a Dell warranty. Dell also alleged that the products were from a third-party and advertised with an unauthorized, modified version of the Dell logo. Dell became aware of this when TigerDirect customers contacted Dell to demand price matches.[22]

State of Florida lawsuit

[edit]

On September 4, 2009,Florida Attorney GeneralBill McCollum filed suit against TigerDirect, OnRebate, and their parent company Systemax, charging the companies with failing to provide rebates to customers.[21] Systemax responded that a separateclass action lawsuit making similar allegations had been filed in federal court in 2007 and was dismissed on August 31, 2009. The company denied the allegations in the Florida Attorney General complaint; the suit was eventually settled for $300,000.[24]

CBC investigation

[edit]

In 2014,Marketplace, a Canadianconsumer advocacynewsmagazine show onCBC Television, TigerDirect was featured inSeason 42, Episode 4, 'Faking It,' "Online reviews: When companies edit your review". The show featured a consumer who had purchased several computers from the retailer and subsequently gave a poor review for service. The review was edited by TigerDirect prior to the review being placed on the firm's website.[25] The consumer contacted TigerDirect several times to have the edited review removed but failed until Marketplace contacted TigerDirect, on his behalf.[26]

Founders convicted of fraud

[edit]

In 2014, brothers Carl and Gilbert Fiorentino were arrested and charged in federal court with scheming to obtain $9 million in kickbacks and other benefits and to hide their gains from the Internal Revenue Service while working as senior executives at Systemax Inc. and its TigerDirect Inc. unit. The government alleged the brothers schemed to obtain kickbacks for steering company business to certain contractors between 2002 and 2011. In one case, the brothers received more than $9 million in cash and other payments for steering more than $230 million in business to an Asian supplier of computer parts and accessories.[27] In 2015 Gilbert Fiorentino pleaded guilty to a conspiracy charge, while Carl Fiorentino pleaded guilty to both fraud conspiracy and tax evasion. Carl Fiorentino had faced significantly more time than Gilbert Fiorentino, but U.S. District Judge Jose E. Martinez decided to sentence them to similar prison terms. Gilbert received 5 years in prison while Carl received6+12 years.[28] In March 2016, the Fiorentino brothers were ordered to pay a total of $35 million in restitution to Systemax.[29]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Systemax Q4 2007 Earnings Call Transcript – Seeking Alpha". Seekingalpha.com. 2008-03-10. Retrieved2014-01-27.
  2. ^"Systemax.com". Systemax.com. Retrieved2014-01-27.
  3. ^Savage, Sam (2008-01-06)."Systemax Announces Definitive Agreement to Acquire Selected Assets and Retail Stores From CompUSA".RedOrbit. Retrieved2008-01-06.
  4. ^"Firm buys defunct Circuit City's brand, domain names". Syx.client.shareholder.com. 2009-04-13. Archived fromthe original on 2017-12-05. Retrieved2014-01-27.
  5. ^Smith, Steve (2012-11-02)."Systemax To Cut Circuit City, CompUSA Brands, Exit PC Manufacturing".Twice.com. Archived fromthe original on 2013-11-05. Retrieved2014-01-27.
  6. ^Hucker, Wally (2015-03-16)."TigerDirect to Close All But Three Stores, Focus on B2B Sales".Wifi Hifi Magazine. Archived fromthe original on 2017-01-26. Retrieved2019-10-16.
  7. ^"Systemax Reports Fourth Quarter And Full Year 2014 Financial Results".MarketWatch. 2015-03-10. Archived fromthe original on 2019-10-16. Retrieved2019-10-16.
  8. ^Burke, Steven (2015-11-18)."Blockbuster Deal: PCM Buys North America Systemax B2B Business, TigerDirect Brand".CRN. Retrieved2015-12-29.
  9. ^Novinson, Michael (2015-11-23)."Systemax To Lay Off 500 As It Shuts North American Technology Business".CRN. Retrieved2015-12-29.
  10. ^Northrup, Laura (2015-12-28)."TigerDirect Has New Owner, Changes Return Policy On Christmas".The Consumerist. Retrieved2015-12-29.
  11. ^"TigerDirect Clearing Out Inventory with Sitewide Sale, Future Uncertain".MaximumPC. Retrieved3 February 2016.
  12. ^"TigerDirect Canada is closed".TigerDirect. 2019-11-25. Archived fromthe original on 2020-05-26. Retrieved2019-11-25.
  13. ^"TigerDirect.com will be retired on March 31, 2023". 2023-03-14. Archived fromthe original on 2023-03-14. Retrieved2023-03-14.
  14. ^abCase C3903 at FTC website
  15. ^Jade, Kasper (2005-05-13)."Court sides with Apple over "Tiger" trademark dispute".AppleInsider. Retrieved2019-10-16.
  16. ^Cringely, Robert X. (December 29, 2006)."Microsoft tech support swoons, Google promises the moon: When 21st century software meets 12th century bureaucracy".InfoWorld. InfoWorld Media Group, Inc. RetrievedNovember 28, 2009.
  17. ^Cringely, Robert X. (December 1, 2006)."Microsoft and Novell go kablooey, Second Life gets gooey: Sometimes even $440 million can't buy you happiness".InfoWorld. InfoWorld Media Group, Inc. RetrievedNovember 28, 2009.
  18. ^Weirick, Chad (2008-01-29)."Florida Attorney General To Investigate TigerDirect".HotHardware. Retrieved2014-01-27.
  19. ^Albright, Mark (2008-02-12)."TigerDirect Snags Three CompUSA Outlets".St. Petersburg Times. Archived fromthe original on 2008-12-05.
  20. ^"TigerDirect BBB Report".BBB of Southeast Florida. Archived from the original on 2007-08-07. Retrieved20 December 2006.
  21. ^ab"State sues TigerDirect, OnRebate".South Florida Business Journal. 2009-09-04.Archived from the original on 2010-03-03. Retrieved2014-01-27.(subscription required)
  22. ^abDell, Inc. v. TigerDirect, Inc., Case No. 09-CV-3879, S.D.N.Y., 17 April 2009.
  23. ^Kovar, Joseph F. (2009-04-27)."Dell Sues Tiger Direct, Alleges Old Computers Sold As New".CRN. Retrieved2014-02-12.
  24. ^"Attorney General Reaches Settlement With Systemax". Office of the Attorney General of Florida. Archived fromthe original on 2010-11-02. Retrieved2011-06-15.
  25. ^"Jeff's reviews before and after, and TigerDirect's response".CBC News. CBC. 2014-11-14. Retrieved2014-12-24.
  26. ^"Online reviews: When companies edit your review". CBC. Retrieved2014-12-24.
  27. ^Brannigan, Martha (2011-11-20)."Coral Gables brothers charged in TigerDirect kickback scheme".Miami Herald. Retrieved2019-10-16.
  28. ^"Brothers guilty of fraud at Systemax computer company sent to federal prison by Miami judge".Fox Business. Associated Press. 2015-05-26. Retrieved2019-10-16.
  29. ^Kunert, Paul (2016-03-02)."Former Systemax execs ordered to repay $35m to the biz".The Register. Retrieved2019-10-16.

External links

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