90% of purchases in US
are done in stores. 10% are done on line. Consumers are buying groceries, cars
and houses, but not on line. They go on line to research products on the
internet and then to a retailer to buy the product. Big box stores with groceries
like Walmart and Costco took market share away from Kroger, Publics and other
grocers. Malls failed because they charged too much rent and businesses left to
get lower rental cost. Also, Malls were built when gridlock was minimal and now
it’s permanent. Goodwill grew because their prices were lower than
Bloomingdales. Consignment stores sell furniture to consumers who don’t like
the new furniture being offered.
The internet has
solved the problem of replacing broken parts for our gadgets. Retailers can’t
afford to carry parts to everything that was ever made. E-books were made
available with Kindle and that took business away from the Libraries and book
stores.
The following article
shows how out of touch the retail “consultants” are as they continue to claim
that shoppers want an “in-store experience” as if they don’t go for low prices.
I suspect these “marketers” were hired by commercial real estate developers.
Why 90 percent of sales still
happen in brick and mortar stores, By Gary Lee, Chief Solutions
Officer, Stratix Corporation. 10/17/17
What shoppers are saying now is evident - The in-store experience offers a level of personal service that simply can't be matched by the web, and this in-store experience is driving shoppers to stores. If you think that in-store shopping only appeals to middle agers and the elderly, think again. Today's in-store shoppers include 98 percent of Gen Z, young digital citizens born after 1994, according to research conducted by the National Retail Federation and IBM.
Mobile technology is critical for brick-and-mortar success
Pausing for re-invention: Investment in retail and mobile to drive sales - Even store closings can be a good thing for savvy retailers. With a chance to reset the bar on the in-store experience, retailers now have time to rethink how stores operate and why brick-and-mortar environments matter alongside online experiences. Current trends among retailers include moving toward smaller footprint spaces, focusing on unique customer experiences and optimizing inventory management and distribution to deliver products in an "omni-channel" model to meet customers' "whenever and wherever" demands.
Listen
closely – those gasps you hear coming from the retail industry are not the end.
They're the sound of pure delight streaming from brick-and-mortar stores. Why?
Despite widespread media coverage declaring brick-and-mortar stores as dying,
the latest research shows the opposite is true.
First,
despite the meteoric rise in online shopping, the majority of retail purchases
made in America still happen in brick-and-mortar stores. According to the
latest U.S. Census data released in August 2017, 90 percent of all retail
purchases in America were made in brick-and-mortar locations during the last
quarter.
Secondly,
despite the headlines on store closings, U.S. retailers are actually opening
more new stores in 2017 than they are closing, with more on the way in 2017,
according to IHL Group.
Even
traditional online-only retailers, such as Warby Parker, Blue Nile and Amazon,
are embracing the brick-and-mortar approach. Each of these leading online-only
retailers has announced the opening of physical locations to meet their
customers' demands for in-store shopping.
Despite
the dominance of the in-store channel, however, retailers of all sizes
recognize the need to reinvent the in-store experience to drive customer
loyalty and market share. Optimizing their store portfolios, leveraging
customer data to improve planning and introducing personalized services to
engage customers are all part of the next-generation experience – and retailers
are turning to mobile technology to power these business-critical initiatives.
Before
they visit a retail store, many shoppers review trends and pricing online with
their mobile devices, which continue to be shoppers' "go-to" source
for product information. In fact, 90 percent of in-store shoppers use their
mobile devices to search for coupons and check product descriptions and
specifications, reviews and pricing.
With
so much pre-purchase research now taking place online, shoppers often arrive at
brick-and-mortar stores ready to buy. However, being ready to buy is not a
"one-size-fits-all" experience. Savvy retail associates, formerly
functioning as order takers, now carefully guide customers along their
individualized paths to purchase. According to Grant Thornton, the way
consumers shop and the options they choose on that journey create 800 different
paths to purchase. By leveraging mobile capabilities in their own
brick-and-mortar locations, leading retailers are taking back some control of
the path to purchase by creating highly personalized in-store experiences led
by store associates.
Consider
these seven ways retail associates' use of mobile can positively influence
shoppers' buying decisions:
·
Personalizing
the shopping experience by greeting customers as they enter the store and
starting a conversation about potential new sales
·
Guiding
shoppers to products available in-store and online via an "endless
aisle"
·
Sending
relevant push notifications to shoppers' mobile devices while they are
in-store, which will encourage 57 percent of them to shop in the sender's
stores, according to Retail Touchpoints
·
Recommending
products based on items the customer has already purchased
·
Completing
transactions on the retail floor, without requiring the customer to wait in a
traditional check-out line
·
Directing
shoppers to relevant in-store special events
·
Meeting
customers with a return at the store's entrance to expedite the return and
leave more time for shopping
In
addition, mobile-based beacon technology can alert retail associates to
specific individuals who are currently in-store, giving associates an
opportunity to deliver highly personalized shopping experiences.
IT
is having a major impact on retail sales growth. According to research from IHL
Group and NCR, leaders across all retail segments have spent 69 percent more as
a percentage of revenue on IT than laggards in the retail segment so far in
2017. Looking to 2018, winners across all retail segments are increasing their
IT spend at a rate 87 percent faster than laggards, with in-store IT spend
increasing at 133 percent, according to a NCR/IHL Unified Commerce Study.
Investment
in mobile is a key part of this IT spend to ensure that retail associates have
the mobile devices, applications and services required to deliver a unique
experience with shoppers in stores. This same study found that retailers
investing in mobile for associates' use are seeing an average 77 percent higher
increase in sales than retailers who are not.
And
retailers who successfully have associates use mobile point of sale (POS) with
inventory lookup and sales assist for shoppers are seeing a 92 percent higher
sales growth rate than their non-mobile POS competitors.
Rethinking
the future of retail - Brick-and-mortar retail is far from dead. Online
shopping isn't killing traditional retail, but it is causing retailers to
abandon the 'one size fits all' thinking of the past and rethink the in-store
experience. Mobile continues to be shoppers' platform of choice for sorting out
their purchase options and retail's technology of choice for crafting a
personalized in-store experience for each shopper led by retail associates.
Smaller stores with curated products capable of generating a higher profit per
square foot, ongoing events that consistently change the shopping experience
and highly personalized services are making in-store shopping more dynamic. All
of these changes are designed to change location-based shopping into an
adventure so desirable, customers can't get enough.
NCR
/ IHL Unified Commerce Study
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody
GA Tea Party Leader
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