-text c-gray-1" >Bankrupt retailer Sears announced that it's seeking permission to sell its home improvement division to a key rival partly responsible for its downfall. Pending trustee approval, it will sell the business to Service.com, an Airbnb-like service that helps home owners find contractors, for $60 million. Sears Home Services is considered to be one of the retailer's more valuable assets, so the asking price shows how far the company -- which employed 302,000 people just a decade ago -- has fallen.
Earlier this year Sears still had big plans for the division, which offers cleaning and handyman services. Unlike its retail division, Home Services doesn't have to compete with Amazon and other retailers. Sears believed it could make a go of it by leveraging its name and helping customers set up smart home devices. In other words, it would send technicians out to help tech-illiterate folks set up an August lock, security cameras and smart lights.
"In the smart home space there is not one provider that has everything," the Sears Home Services CEO Mitch Bowling told CNBC in February. "It's usually a collection of items from different providers and jual besi beton semarang we want to be a trusted advisor of all that space."
Alas, it seems like those grand plans will be lost, as Sears badly needs to raise capital just to survive. The company is seeking court approval for a "stalking horse" sale, in which a bankrupt debtor essentially tests the market for assets prior to an auction. If it has no other takers, Service.com will likely acquire the division by the end of the year.
Source: Sears In this article: Auction, Bankruptcy, gear, Sale, Sears, Service.com, services, StalkingHorse All products recommended by Engadget are selected by our editorial team, independent of our parent company. Some of our stories include affiliate links. If you buy something through one of these links, we may earn an affiliate commission. Comments 244 Shares Share Tweet Share Save Popular on Engadget
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Earlier this year Sears still had big plans for the division, which offers cleaning and handyman services. Unlike its retail division, Home Services doesn't have to compete with Amazon and other retailers. Sears believed it could make a go of it by leveraging its name and helping customers set up smart home devices. In other words, it would send technicians out to help tech-illiterate folks set up an August lock, security cameras and smart lights.
"In the smart home space there is not one provider that has everything," the Sears Home Services CEO Mitch Bowling told CNBC in February. "It's usually a collection of items from different providers and jual besi beton semarang we want to be a trusted advisor of all that space."
Alas, it seems like those grand plans will be lost, as Sears badly needs to raise capital just to survive. The company is seeking court approval for a "stalking horse" sale, in which a bankrupt debtor essentially tests the market for assets prior to an auction. If it has no other takers, Service.com will likely acquire the division by the end of the year.
Source: Sears In this article: Auction, Bankruptcy, gear, Sale, Sears, Service.com, services, StalkingHorse All products recommended by Engadget are selected by our editorial team, independent of our parent company. Some of our stories include affiliate links. If you buy something through one of these links, we may earn an affiliate commission. Comments 244 Shares Share Tweet Share Save Popular on Engadget
Nest Hello's holiday and winter ringtones are live
View 'Call of Duty: Modern Warfare' prepares for its first battle pass
View Netflix won't back a new season of 'Mystery Science Theater 3000'
View Sony's best noise-cancelling headphones are on sale at Amazon
View Twitter will start deleting inactive accounts in December (updated)
View From around the web