Cyber Monday Sale! 50% Off All Access

Is Amazon Making Peace With Its Retail Frenemies? Retailers that have historically eschewed the online ecommerce behemoth may be coming round the mountain yet.

By Catherine Clifford

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

That old cliché, "never say never" is a cliché for a reason. Whoever you think is your worst enemy now may end up being your knight in shining armor down the road. And so it is with Amazon and Abercrombie.

Major fashion retailers, including Abercrombie and Fitch, JCrew, Neiman Marcus and a half dozen or so others are in talks with Amazon, sources tell The Wall Street Journal. This is a major about-face given that many traditional retailers have adamantly rejected working with the great white whale of e-commerce. These fashion retailers haven't wanted to let go of any control over their brand, in particular over how items would appear on Amazon's website.

Related: Amazon Wants a Hit Series of Its Own

As part of the deal, Amazon wouldn't actually sell goods from these retailers directly to consumers, the Journal reported. Rather, consumers might see a JCrew shirt on Amazon, and would then be directed from Amazon to JCrew's website, where they would complete the purchase.

What the retailers would ostensibly get is traffic. After all, Amazon is the great super-highway of e-commerce, so anything that appears there would provide retailers more eyeballs -- and, in theory, revenue.

Related: Amazon Just Bought a Video-Game Company

For Amazon, the deal would offer two major bonuses: expanded product offerings and data. Amazon said a couple of weeks back that it may have to raise the price of its popular Amazon Prime subscription by between $20 or $40. The service, which is now $79, provides free shipping on most items and streaming of movies and television shows. Partnering with the likes of Abercrombie would give Amazon an extra selling point to win over consumers as the company mulls raising the price of Amazon Prime.

Also, Seattle-based Amazon gets access to a whole new swath of data about consumers. In a world where marketing is increasingly becoming targeted specifically to the tastes and preferences of each individual, more data is more power is more money.

Amazon would neither confirm nor deny the reports. "We do not comment on rumors and speculations," an Amazon spokesperson told Entrepreneur.com.

Related: Your Amazon Prime Subscription May Get More Expensive

Catherine Clifford

Senior Entrepreneurship Writer at CNBC

Catherine Clifford is senior entrepreneurship writer at CNBC. She was formerly a senior writer at Entrepreneur.com, the small business reporter at CNNMoney and an assistant in the New York bureau for CNN. Clifford attended Columbia University where she earned a bachelor's degree. She lives in Brooklyn, N.Y. You can follow her on Twitter at @CatClifford.

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Real Estate

Why Real Estate Should Be a Key Part of Your Wealth-Building Strategy in 2025 and Beyond

Real estate remains a strong choice for building wealth in 2025 and beyond, from its ability to generate passive income to offering long-term appreciation and acting as a hedge against inflation.

Business News

'I Stand By My Decisions': A CEO Is Going Viral For Firing Almost All of the Company's Employees — Here's Why

The Musicians Club CEO Baldvin Oddsson fired 99 workers at once over Slack for missing a morning meeting. But there's a catch.

Marketing

How to Beat the Post-Holiday Sales Slump and Crush Your Q1 Goals

Overcome the post-holiday sales slump and keep the momentum strong with these key tips.

Franchise

Subway's CEO Steps Down Amid a Major Transition for the Sandwich Giant

John Chidsey will step down at the end of 2024, marking the close of a transformative five-year tenure.

Business News

'This Company Has Been My Life': Intel CEO Retires, Reportedly Forced Out

Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger has led the company since February 2021 and said his departure is "bittersweet."

Fundraising

They Turned Down an Early Pay Day to Maintain Control of Their Business. And Then Went on to Raise $190 Million.

Jason Yeh, co-founder and General Partner of Patron, explains the early-stage venture firm's creation and future outlook.