Tag Archive for 'Tesco'

Smart Phones Make Shoppers Smarter

At Perception Research Services International (PRS), we recently conducted research to find out how smart phone users are actually using these hand-held gadgets. First of all, we found out that ownership of smart phones is rapidly approaching levels of traditional mobile phones (36% vs 53%), and most smart phone owners (83%) use them while shopping. Interestingly, they’re not being used solely for big ticket items such as appliances (39%) and electronics (59%), but also for everyday items such as groceries (49%).

Similar to how consumers have shifted from paying in cash for purchases to debit cards another transition is taking place. For instance, Starbucks has seen a significant uptick in the number of people who pay for their purchases (or coffee experience) with a mobile application. As one news outlet put it, “Starbucks is the worldwide leader in mobile payment transactions”.  The manner which we have integrated the use of smart phones into our daily tasks is revolutionizing business transactions.

Our research into smart phone usage further indicates that smart phone owners, who use their phones while shopping, most often utilize them during the decision making process (comparing prices, gathering product information, searching for sales/coupons or reading reviews/opinions), and about one-third make actual purchases with their phones.

Importantly, Hispanics and African-Americans are more apt than Caucasians to use their Smart phones while shopping.  Smart phone owners, who use their phones to shop, tend to be under 35 years old, are employed full-time and are better educated than the average consumer.

Most recently, I read that some retailers are bringing mobile shopping to commuters. First, Tesco was exploring this space in Asia and now commuters in Philadelphia are able to scan the QR code on posters located in transit stations to order groceries and have them delivered to their home the same day!

Marketers would do well to ensure that they understand the role of smart phones and digital content – relative to packaging and POS materials – in the shopping process within their categories. They need to ensure that all their communications are complementing each other and working together. And retailers should now consider how they set their shelves and create merchandising that is “smart phone-friendly.”

About the author

Jonathan Asher - Guest Blogger for Phenomena.com

As Executive Vice President, Director of Account Management, Jonathan oversees the company’s client services function including account management and marketing communications, and also manages client relationships for qualitative and quantitative studies.  He is highly sensitive to the information needs of designers while also having a researcher’s ability to ask questions in an effective and appropriate manner. He is particularly adept at illuminating the risk of making wrong decisions as well as the opportunity cost of missing out on the right ones.

Jonathan has over 30 years of experience in consumer goods marketing beginning as a project director for Newman Stein, Inc. He also held research positions with Thomas J. Lipton (now Unilever) and the Lorillard division of Loews Corporation.  Jonathan entered the design field by joining Gerstman+Meyers (now Interbrand) where he was vice president, director of marketing services.  He went on to lead The Coleman Group where he developed the company’s proprietary strategic services.  From there, he established the New York office of Dragon Rouge, a leading, privately held European design agency.

A frequent speaker and lecturer on topics pertaining to marketing and design, Jonathan, has been quoted in major publications including Fortune, The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Brandweek, and Advertising Age.

Jonathan is also a Distinguished Faculty Member at the Path to Purchase Institute (formerly The In-Store Marketing Institute). He can be reached at jasher@prsresearch.com.

The Future in Store: Desired Destination

Passion is the great driver of retail. Shoppers have embraced the digital world, yet they still have a passion for living in the physical world. Consumer expectations have been set by a decade of online shopping. As shopping moments multiply and become nearly ubiquitous, retailers and marketers must focus on bringing passion to the in-store shopping experience. We must make it worthwhile for shoppers to visit the store.

The ways consumers think about, shop for and use products are not purely rational. People don’t shop simply to get basic necessities and conduct transactions as quickly as possible. Shoppers look to have new experiences, exchange news, gossip and ideas, learn something, escape from daily life, haggle for a bargain or feel a sense of community. The role of Shopper Marketing is to keep current about why people shop, in order to create a desirable way for shoppers to fill their needs.

Retailers and marketers are deploying a number of approaches to rekindle passion in-store. We look at four areas that have been emerging — Backstory, Experience, Theatre/Discovery and Shopping Trip Alignment — with an eye towards learning from these approaches.

1.      Backstory

Backstory makes it easier for shoppers to understand and share an experience. One of the things that All Saints, The Upside Down Gap Store (Toronto), 4010 Telecom (Cologne, blurring of retail and art) share is their use of backstory as a way to drive footfall. Food retailers like Whole Foods (food literature) and Trader Joe’s (campy product descriptions)  are using backstory to engage shoppers at the shelf.

Backstory is not just about entertainment, but provides useful information about health and nutrition, provenance of food, carbon footprints, etc. Equally important, backstory makes it easy for consumers to recount their experience to others.

2.      Experience

Experience helps shoppers envision how a product works for them. Retailers such as Lululemon , LUSH and Desigual  create unique, engaging in-store experiences which allows shoppers to see how products fit with their lives.  Tommy Hilfiger’s Prep Pop-up House lets shoppers experience the true meaning of prep.

Mark’s Walk-in Freezer Lab (Edmonton), a revolutionary  state of-the-art walk-in weather simulator lab, lets shoppers try out apparel. Coca Cola’s Freestyle machines drive patrons to different locations and encourage them to experiment with their drink.

3.      Theatre/Discovery

The Apple Store (“Come to the store to shop, return to learn”), IKEA and The School of Life (London) are three examples of retailers who provide points of discovery throughout their stores. Livraria Cultura (Brazil) encourages shoppers to explore and discover things cultural (from books to live musical performances and plays).

Not all retail theatre is a major production. Much of theatre/discovery helps shoppers find new, more desirable ways to meet their needs. Family Dollar, Dollar General and Five Below provide shoppers with ongoing opportunities to discover new values!

The Container Store, by dint of its expert advice and specialist nature, helps shoppers discover solutions for storage, organization and more. Publix Apron Cooking Classes allow shoppers to learn more about a wide range of food topics (gluten-free cooking, fine dining, wine and cheese entertaining).

A simple, at-shelf example is Seattle’s Best “Level System” which makes it easier for shoppers explore and shop for coffee.

4.      Mission Alignment

Mission alignment helps establish shopper empathy, makes it easier to shop. Retailers like Tesco, Carrefour and Walmart are experimenting with multiple store formats targeted to shopper segments and/or occasions.  Tesco’s Metro and Express formats are more tailored to quick trips, while its Extra format is more targeted to stock-up trips. Walmart’s Express format is much more focused on food/grocery trips.  Albert Heijn’s (Ahold) “AH-to-go” is a convenience format being tested in Germany.

Kmart’s “Buy Online, Pick up In Store” and  Walmart’s “Pick it Up Today” allow shoppers to order online and pick-up their orders at the store the same day; designed for a specific kind of shopper need. Similarly, lifestyle merchant Bed Bath & Beyond’s “Shop your local store & Pick up near your school” program is designed to serve back-to-college needs.

The ability to direct passion is what brings retail to life and engages shoppers. Retail is about simple ideas that are well-executed. These simple ideas are about human connection. Providing a better in-store experience forwards  business objectives  in four ways: 1) Shoppers are hard-wired to look to the new news, it attracts shoppers and drives footfall; 2) experience helps shoppers imagine how products/solutions will work for them; improving engagement, understanding and ultimately conversion; 3) discovery helps demonstrate more desirable ways to meet needs and increase basket size; 4) finally, in-store experience creates “first visit advantage,” an opportunity to create return visits in the future.

About the Author

Jim Lucas – Guest blogger for Phenomena.com

Jim Lucas is executive vice president, Global Director, Retail Insight and Strategy at Draftfcb. The acknowledged founder of the science of retail ecology and a 25-year practitioner in the field, he is internationally recognized as an experienced marketer and leading authority on understanding how consumers interact with brands and how they behave in retail environments. His article, Shopper Marketing: the discipline, the approach” appears in the international best seller titled “Shopper Marketing” (Kogan Page, April 2010), featuring subject experts from around the world.

He works with on a wide range of client issues for both manufacturers and retailers, domestic and global. He is a frequent speaker at leading industry forums including the Cannes Int’l Advertising Festival, In-Store Marketing Institute, and POPAI.

Holder of a PhD, Lucas has also served as an adjunct faculty member at the Lake Forest Graduate School of Management and The University of Chicago and Columbia College, Chicago.

Always Wired – Why Retailers Should Offer Free Wi-Fi In-store

Mobile devices are the nexis of consumer purchasing power, as they now give consumers the ability to comparison shop, purchase and share likes/dislikes from practically any location.  Retailers who embrace and encourage mobile-shopping with free in-store Wi-Fi will compete more effectively for longer-term loyalty vs. those retailers who attempt to limit or block access.

Nordstrom is one of the smart-thinking retailers who is encouraging smartphone usage in-store.  In order to accommodate customers who desire immediacy, Nordstrom installed Wi-Fi in its 187 retail stores in 28 states. By fall 2011, the company wants to equip its employees with handheld mobile devices. Nordstrom said mobile would change the shopping experience for customers and employees: Customers in dressing rooms would be able to text or call employees to get a different sized clothing item. Merchants would be able to know when a customer left and send a thank- you note for visiting or purchasing products.  “We’re on this journey together” Blake Nordstrom (president of the Nordstrom chain) said in a February, 2011 interview.  “E-commerce is the subject the customer truly values.  Reduce the complexity for the customer experience.”

Tesco is quickly following Nordstrom’s lead in the UK.  Currently piloting the service in 4 stores as of late July, 2011, Tesco is expecting to expand the free Wi-Fi service across its 2,700 UK sites.   Tesco’s chief information officers said customers were already using smartphones in-store to check prices.  The free wi-fi will also help drive additional shopper usage of Tesco’s in-store app shopping-route “map” app.  Tesco’s new app directs shoppers to their “shopping list” via the shortest route.  When a customer enters a Tesco store, the app will create a store map with all of the items on the shopping list laid out on it.

 How can retailers leverage Wi-Fi as a competitive advantage? First, your store’s Wi-Fi should be free.  It goes without saying that retailers should be more concerned with making money from purchases vs. internet fees.  Second, your store’s Wi-Fi should not block your competitors’ websites.  Consumers are using their mobile devices to comparison shop; if you attempt to thwart customer behavior, your customers will leave your store to become your competitors’ customers.  Third, your store’s Wi-Fi should be used as a promotional vehicle.  As your consumers are already in-store, try to do what you can to motivate a purchase with fast-acting discounts, additional perks (e.g., free shipping), and consumer reviews.

About the Author  

AnnaMaria Turano - Guest blogger for Phenomena.com

AnnaMaria Turano is a brand strategist with an emphasis on development and execution of strong customer value propositions.  As a founder and Executive Director with MCAworks, she has led client engagements across a diverse set of industries including financial services, food/beverage, pharmaceuticals, telecommunications, and software.  She has created and implemented strategic plans as well as identify opportunities for growth via new products, new targets, and new geographies for companies such as MasterCard, Development Bank of Singapore, Sage Software, Pfizer, Takeda, Johnson & Johnson, PepsiCo, and Verizon.   AnnaMaria is co-author of Stopwatch Marketing (Portfolio: 2008), chosen by the Toronto Globe and Mail as one of the ten best business books of 2008.  She is also a featured contributing author to Shopper Marketing (Kogan: 2010) and speaks frequently on consumer insights and shopper marketing topics. 

She is also a regular blogger at http://www.retailcustomerexperience.com/

The Relentless Battle for Collaboration and Understanding Shoppers and Retailers

Ongoing competition between retailers’ private label product and brand manufacturers has been portrayed as a “winner take all” battle for control of the shelf. However, a collaborative approach with shared shopper, goal alignment and a renewed focus on relevance is more likely to produce success.  This blog looks at why that is so, and what brand manufacturers can do about this.

The globalization of retailers and brand manufacturers, the rise of value merchants and the recent economic downturn have all contributed to the emergence of new issues. Faced with more choice than ever, shoppers are overwhelmed  and are looking for ways to simplify their shopping. Retailers and brand manufacturers are trying to address economic inefficiencies that have resulted from unbridled growth of assortments and product portfolios. Range rationalization, delisting of products, product portfolio rationalizations, and evolving new product development processes are the result.  To understand these trends and how to survive, we look at the shopper and the retailer.

Shopper

The recent recession served as a catalyst for shoppers to re-evaluate the way they consume and shop. Shoppers have reassessed and re-prioritized their needs, become more planful in their shopping and have altered shopping habits — consolidating shopping trips, shifting to value merchants and turning to more store brand solutions — to cope.  The recession has forced consumers/shoppers to examine and change their behaviors in a way that no amount of marketing could have.

The nature of loyalty and ways in which shoppers bestow their loyalty today have changed. Product proliferation has made it more difficult for consumers to assess the differences among them. Shoppers are looking for help, looking for choice editors or advocates. With shoppers making in the range of 150 shopping trips a year, retailers are perfectly poised for such a role. Shoppers have come to rely on and trust retailers as shopper advocates, while branded manufacturers have become somewhat dis-intermediated from shoppers. Retailers are taking on the role of brand intermediaries.

Retailers

Much of retailers’ behavior can be understood by knowing that they are concerned with two key goals—efficiency in the short-term and the long-term profitability of loyal shoppers.

Efficiency— Efficiency is a problem shared by retailers and branded manufacturers. Retailers have begun to reduce the number of SKUs and prioritize categories in their stores. Despite a proliferation of products, there has been no accompanying increase in sales. By reducing the number of SKUs in their stores they have not seen a reduction in sales.

Shopper loyalty—By offering exclusive private label products with value and relevance to different shopper segments, retailers are better able to retain shoppers. Retailers have realized that they cannot rely on branded products alone to draw shoppers to the store and sustain shopper loyalty. Private Label  products provide exclusivity and unique relevance to shopper segments (e.g., Tesco, Walmart and Carrefour). Private Label helps retailers prevent trade-down to value retailers and serves unique needs of their shopper segments, contributing to their perception as “shopper advocate.”

In the next article the author will speak about understanding the point of view of the Brand Manufacturers and what can be done from the Manufacturers on how to collaborate and co-create shopper marketing solutions.

About The Author

Jim Lucas - Guest Blogger for Phenomena

Jim Lucas - Guest Blogger for Phenomena

Jim Lucas is a director of shopper marketing at Draftfcb, Jim helps retailers, manufacturers, and service providers to motivate shoppers through value-added experiences. The acknowledged founder of the science of retail ecology, he is internationally recognized as an experienced marketer and leading retail expert.

During his more than 20 years in the marketing industry, he has served as director of strategic planning and research at Draft Chicago, director of planning and research at Frankel in Chicago, and director of analytics and modeling at Krumm & Associates LLC. His clients have included, among others, Burger King, Frito-Lay, Kellogg, Kmart, Kroger, McDonald’s, Mervyns, Procter & Gamble, Quaker Oats, Sears, Target, USPS, and Walgreens.

Jim Lucas

Director of shopper marketing at Draftfcb.

Jim.Lucas@draftfcb.com
http://www.draftfcb.com