social marketing and digital agency.

Social Shopping

Posted by Helen Moore On July - 4 - 2011 1 COMMENT

How social shopping is affecting the High StreetAs a follow on to our blog last week about how online shopping is beginning to pose a real threat to the High Street , today we are looking at rash of new data generated by the new shopping trends and habits that have emerged over the first six months of 2011.  As with all areas of digital, the pace of change is rapid and fierce and those that don’t take notice of the stats will undoubtedly get their fingers burned.

One of the interesting new surveys is from econsultancy who last month surveyed 2000 shoppers in both the UK and the US to compare how the approaches to multi-channel shopping varied between the two countries.

Although there are differences (hardly surprising) there are a number of similarities in how the sophisticated consumer is playing the ‘multi-channel’ game to ensure that they optimise their shopping experience in terms of value-for-money, convenience and just being able to buy the best product that meets their needs.

People are using general information online to make informed choices about shopping, whether it’s online or in a store.  And they expect to be able to interchange the two experiences, by for example, returning a product bought online to a physical shop.

As mentioned before retailers, must integrate their online and offline promotions to get optimal effect from the customers.

And all this is before taking into account the effect of ‘social shopping’: Groupon and LivingSocial are the big boys, but coupon and ‘daily deals’ sites are popping up all over the place.  According to BIA/Kelsey research, the estimate is that what was an $873 million market in deal-a-day e-commerce in 2010 will rise to $1.24 billion in 2011 and increase to $3.9 billion in 2015.  However, the market is a very new niche, and although Groupon has attracted some eye-wateringly high valuations pre-IPO, many analysts think that these are way too high.

What is clear though is that the canny consumer is playing the game to maximum advantage, which has shifted the balance and caused many retailers to lose out.

More research finds that “the relatively low percentages of deal users spending beyond the deal value (35.9 percent) and returning for a full-price purchase (19.9 percent)”, which  means that the long-term market isn’t quite as peachy for the deals market as some would like to think.

So while the consumer is playing clever, so must the retailer. As closures on the High Street become a regular fixture in the headlines, retailers must become more and more sensitive to the needs of their customers. And we haven’t even got onto the effect of mobile shopping on all this yet….another blog coming soon for that one!

Online Killing The High Street?

Posted by Claire Burdett On June - 28 - 2011 1 COMMENT

Is Online Shopping Killing the High Street?Today we heard that Thorntons are thinking of closing a high proportion of their High Street stores. This has come hard on the heels of Habitat’s sell off and the closure of fashion chain, Jane Norman, which has gone into receivership with debts of £120m. Jane Normans’ clothes were aimed at 16-25 years, a demographic that has suffered most during the recession, so perhaps it is, after all, not surprising, but Thorntons…?

Online versus High Street
There has been a growing trend through the past few years High Street shops closing down while their online counterparts thrive, and when we checked rival online fashion store ASOS (As Seen On Screen), we found they had just posted a 41%  rise in profits, making a pre-tax profit of £28.6m in the year to 31 March 2011…

Alison Wetton, CEO of LBD (Little Black Dress), which offers posh-frocks for up to a size 32 and is featured on ASOS , says their customers “can’t get enough of online shopping” and that for Plus Sizes, it’s all about convenience and not having to try clothes on in a High Street changing room. Which is a fair point, given how small and awful most High Street changing rooms are, how badly lit, how unflattering the mirrors, and how often they are manned by vacant stick insects chewing gum.

Shopping experience also seems to be key in other High Street closures. For Habitat, who appointed administrators for 30 of its 33 outlets this week, it was down to location. Habitat said that, “trading conditions have remained challenging for retailers of big ticket items such as furniture” and that a return to profitability for the business in the UK appeared unlikely as many of the stores were expensive and poorly located.

And where High Street fails, online can succeed – Woolworths caused a storm when it shut down in 2008, yet has since reopened successfully online. Presumably its virtual staff are nowhere near as rude and unhelpful as its flesh and blood staff were when it was on the High Street.

Coupons and Vouchers
However, other factors may also be at play. Coupon and loyalty cards usage have both increased in recent years (see our post on social shopping), and while newspaper inserts are still the primary method of coupon distribution (89%) and redemption (53%), internet redemption has skyrocketed, rising 263% in 2009. In people terms, this means that 13.1 million Americans redeemed internet coupons in 2009, approximately 88 million will do so in 2011 and it is predicted that this will increase to 96 million by 2015. Which is a lot of people using the internet to reduce their outgoings.

Stats on the usage of discount coupons and vouchers

Recently I researched a new vacuum cleaner online. I found the one I wanted to buy at the cheapest price at Curry’s, and then up popped the Nectar Card information bar saying I could collect Nectar points on the purchase. Excellent, I thought, that’s a bonus. However, when I went to place the order the shop couldn’t deliver for 10 days, so they said, ‘come and pick it up in store as we have one at your local branch’. Which I duly did and the staff were helpful and pleasant, carried it to my car, took the old one away for recycling, everybody happy… except apparently I had unwittingly forfeited my Nectar points.

“Sorry’” said Nectar customer services, when I contacted them, “we can’t help, we only give Nectar points via online purchases, not in store…”

Retailers At Fault – Or Is It Their Marketers?
So it does rather seem that the retailers themselves may be at least partly to blame for this shift towards online buying and away from the High Street. Interestingly most people prefer to touch, smell and see the things they want to buy, especially clothes and furniture, even if they go online to actually buy it because they get extra bonuses or deals, or because they are busy and online is perceived as being faster (even when it isn’t).

Many of the High Street shops also appear to have stopped trying with their windows and displays and in-store experience, and many are allowing their business to be driven online by clever coupons deals and rewards. Or perhaps that’s really just a case of letting their marketing department jump on the ‘newest’ band wagon (ie Digital) at the expense of traditional marketing? In which case, why does it have to be one thing and not the other?

So if High Street brands are really serious about not going to the wall and we as a nation are serious about not losing our High Streets, there’s our advice for retailers – and their marketing departments:

Online stores should be BEAUTIFUL and a fabulous experience, and reflect the customer experience of the real shop, which should also be BEAUTIFUL and a fabulous experience. Hire a decent shop fitter and be creative. Hire a decent digital team and let them be creative. Make sure they are joined at the hip and communicate. Ensure the brand experience is seamless.

Invest in your staff – good staff are crucial and whether in the real shop or online, they should add value and offer excellent customer service and should be as unfailingly polite and helpful as the staff in my local Curry’s and nothing like the old Woolworth’s staff. Nor like the dismissive Nectar employee.

Cater for the senses – people like to touch and hold, taste and smell and try on. They like moving images, they like nice sounds, they are tactile. The High Street is also a social experience, so shops shouldn’t be hidden away or located out of town – they should be at the heart of a community. Online stores should be –and are fast becoming – part of the social media landscape. So integrate them properly and invest in finding out about your customers as the fully rounded people that they are, not just numbers in one channel or the other.

Bully councils to lower costs – The FSB and local markets have been campaigning for years against short-sighted councils. Get together and add your weight to the argument.

Rewards should be given, and given across the board – don’t try to divide online and offline and pitch them against each other. Don’t drive people online at the expensive of offline. And if you are focusing on analytics and tracking, marketers, then get clever and use the vouchers, codes, coupons to track when people browse online but purchase in store – and vice versa – because here’s the final point:

• People don’t follow the rules – they don’t just shop online. They don’t just go to the High Street. They might be looking for a sofa, for example, and look online and in store, in magazines and on television. When you are looking, you look everywhere, which is why the brand, the design and the overall level of customer satisfaction across ALL channels is so very important.

In addition retailers and their marketing departments should stop treating online as somehow separate, but rather treat it as it is – a research centre, a sounding board, a launch pad, a social activity and an outreach of the physical store.

In summary, make shopping INTEGRATED.

Independent News & Media has partnered with iome to launch the first white-labelled social event planning tool on The Independent newspaper’s website. The service creates new web and mobile revenues for the publisher, as part of its 2010 digital media strategy.

The free-to-access service provides the 10 million* monthly visitors to the
Independent’s website with a useful tool that helps them plan their social
lives and make savings via discount vouchers.  In this socially-connected
world, with demands on people’s time and money, consumers want to easily
discover new things to do and places to go, find offers and share that
information with friends; until now, no one service has been able to
provide consumers with an easy way to do so.  The iome white-label service
fills this gap.

The Independent will generate new revenues through the service, on
purchases made through the portal (such as theatre tickets and restaurant
bookings) in addition to advertising and sponsorship.  And, by partnering
with iome, the Independent has been able to go to market with its new
branded service in less than three weeks from inception of the project,
enabling readers to start using the service in time to organise their
Christmas events.

Bill Swanson, managing director (Digital), Independent News and Media (UK)
said: “We are very excited to be the first business to launch this service
in the UK.  It not only enables us to extend our reach to readers, but also
to create new revenues via web and mobile.  We recognise that consumers are
hungry for new ways to organise their social lives through the web – this
service is the first of its kind to enable people to organise themselves,
make savings and interact with friends in a single location.  Plus, the
service has the ability to learn behaviour including likes and dislikes,
giving us the opportunity to deliver highly targeted services and offers.
This is a significant step forward with our digital media strategy for
2010.”

Added Phil Eames, CEO, iome: “People like to share information online and
there are a plethora of sites out there that help with individual elements.
The iome service lets people not only identify what’s going on near them,
but also access discounts, make bookings, create plans and share them with
friends via Facebook and other such sites.  It gives businesses the
opportunity to develop a better understanding of their consumers, allowing
for greater targeted services, content and advertising to be offered in the
future.”

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