This Chart Shows Just How Dominant Amazon Is

It’s not even close.
Earlier this year, the stock market value of Amazon.com AMZN 0.30% surpassed that of Walmart WMT 0.26% , a turn of events that many saw as indicative of how badly brick-and-mortar big box retailers have lagged behind in building up their e-commerce.Walmart is now hustling to bridge the gap, pouring billions into its tech to claw back some market share. Target TGT -1.82% , also a laggard, is similarly spending as much on tech as on its 1,800 stores. Both those companies, though, generate digital sales that are still only a small percentage of total sales, and a fraction of Amazon’s.
Yet other retailers, particularly Macy’s M -2.54% and Nordstrom JWN -0.94% among the department stores have much better numbers to show for it. Those two retailers have become e-commerce powerhouses thanks to early investments in turning many stores into distribution centers that help speed up e-commerce delivery. Williams-Sonoma WSM -0.97% , which does a brisk wedding registry business, gets half its sales online, making it the best retailer by that measure.
“They’re investing a ton into e-commerce and looking it at the right way. It’s not isolated from in-store operations. It’s much more integrated now,” says eMarketer analyst Yoram Wurmser, of the bricks and mortar stores succeeding in e-commerce.
Brick and mortar retailers way behind Amazon
Despite big e--commerce investments, traditional retailers still lag Amazon by a wide margin
eMarketer compiled a ranking of top retailers by e-commerce revenue for the last 12 months and as a percentage of total sales. The graphics below show clearly that for all their progress, traditional retailers still have a lot of work to do. (The data excludes business-to-business revenue, and for Apple includes on iTunes.)
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