
In the ever-evolving world of retail, giants don’t fall overnight, but they are falling. While shifting consumer preferences and economic pressures play their role, two online juggernauts, Shein and Temu, are accelerating the collapse of traditional retailers at a startling pace.
With their ultra-low prices, lightning-fast trend cycles, and frictionless mobile shopping experiences, Shein and Temu have captured the wallets and attention spans of younger consumers in particular. As their influence grows, legacy brands that once dominated malls and main streets are struggling to stay alive.
Many of these brick-and-mortar retailers failed to adapt quickly enough. Some relied too heavily on foot traffic. Others couldn’t compete with the relentless affordability of their online-only rivals. But the common denominator is clear: Shein and Temu are reshaping the retail economy, and not everyone is surviving the shakeup.
The Rise of Ultra-Fast, Ultra-Cheap Shopping
Shein and Temu have revolutionized the retail model by slashing prices and accelerating product cycles beyond anything traditional stores can match. Shein, with its on-demand manufacturing and social media-driven marketing, releases thousands of new items daily, often at prices cheaper than a morning coffee. Temu, backed by Chinese tech conglomerate PDD Holdings, uses aggressive discounts and gamified shopping tactics to draw in deal-hungry consumers.
Both platforms operate with low overhead and high-volume sales strategies. By skipping storefronts, slashing advertising costs through user-generated content, and relying on overseas manufacturing, they can offer prices that big-box and mall brands simply can’t match. As a result, companies that once thrived on loyalty and name recognition are now seeing traffic dwindle and profits vanish.
Bed Bath & Beyond
Once a go-to for college dorms, weddings, and home makeovers, Bed Bath & Beyond filed for bankruptcy in 2023. Years of declining sales, supply chain issues, and mismanaged leadership set the stage, but the final blows came from digital competitors offering cheaper alternatives delivered faster. Platforms like Temu and Shein, although not initially known for home goods, have aggressively expanded their categories, luring customers away from stores that can no longer offer the best prices or convenience.
Forever 21
Forever 21 practically invented the American fast fashion mall experience. But in recent years, it has struggled to keep up with newer, nimbler competitors. Shein’s lightning-quick ability to mirror influencer trends, and sell them for even less, has outpaced Forever 21’s supply chain entirely. As Shein continues to dominate the Gen Z market, Forever 21’s relevance continues to fade, with store closures and restructuring efforts unable to keep pace with consumer flight.
Express
Express was once a staple for affordable workwear and semi-professional fashion. But as hybrid work models took over and consumer tastes shifted toward casual and ultra-affordable style, Express couldn’t pivot quickly enough. Shein’s endless scroll of stylish, low-cost alternatives makes Express seem both overpriced and outdated, especially for younger buyers hunting for convenience and price over brand legacy.
The Children’s Place
The Children’s Place has been a household name for kids’ apparel for a long time. But with Temu offering extreme discounts on children’s clothing, and Shein rapidly expanding its kids’ line, the competition has grown fierce. Parents now compare a $12 shirt from a legacy retailer to a nearly identical $3 version online, and increasingly, the choice is clear. Even long-standing trust in quality can falter when budgets are tight and alternatives are just a tap away.
Rue21
Rue21’s niche was always fashion-forward styles at teen-friendly prices. But Shein has pulled that demographic firmly into its ecosystem, delivering the same vibe with more variety, deeper discounts, and round-the-clock new arrivals. Rue21 filed for bankruptcy again in 2024, a clear sign that even affordable legacy brands aren’t safe when up against Shein’s algorithm-driven dominance.
JCPenney
While JCPenney’s decline began long before Shein or Temu entered the U.S. market, their rise has quickened the fall. Where JCPenney once offered variety, affordability, and convenience under one roof, Shein and Temu now offer all three, plus free shipping, daily deals, and a digital experience optimized for short attention spans. Younger consumers no longer see the value in spending time in sprawling department stores when their phones offer endless, cheaper alternatives.
What the Future Holds
The success of Shein and Temu reveals not just a shift in how people shop, but in what they value: speed, price, and access. These platforms cater directly to the algorithm-driven, impulse-buying culture of today’s consumers. For traditional retailers to survive, they’ll need more than just an online storefront. They’ll need a complete reinvention.
The collapse of once-dominant chains may seem tragic, but it’s also a warning. The retail landscape has changed forever, and only the most adaptable brands will be left standing.
Do you think ultra-cheap platforms are empowering consumers or just racing us toward a more disposable economy? What do traditional retailers need to do to compete?
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Riley is an Arizona native with over nine years of writing experience. From personal finance to travel to digital marketing to pop culture, she’s written about everything under the sun. When she’s not writing, she’s spending her time outside, reading, or cuddling with her two corgis.