Posts Tagged ‘consumer goods’

The SoLoMo Path To Purchase

Wednesday, May 9th, 2012

A funny thing happened on the path to purchase last year – it disappeared. The emergence of the SoLoMo consumer – socially enabled, location-aware, and mobile-device-connected – has turned the path to purchase into a minefield. The marketing funnel is no longer linear – it’s a convoluted mess that changes with every new Pinterest, Path, Shopkick, or Perch. Durable goods brands can create and sustain a differentiated presence by better understanding these consumer behaviors and purchase drivers:

People relate to brands on their own terms

“Don’t tell me, don’t show me, engage me” has become a prevailing consumer mantra, played out millions of times a day in social media and in customer service centers around the world. Consumers, not brands, are in control of the retail experience and the relationships they have with brands. To compete, brands must create interesting, intriguing content. Understand how people want to connect and engage with your brand. Enable people to share content with your brand and their social networks – and nurture these interactions into conversations and relationships based on what people want.

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Retailing is broken. The fix is “all-in digital.”

Friday, January 13th, 2012

By Scott Doniger, Executive Director, Strategy and Planning, [wire] stone

Retailers are reeling. Prolonged recession, a shrinking middle class, global competition, Groupon, LivingSocial, Amazon Prime, “every-when” enabled consumers, smart phones and smarter devices, sensing technologies, cloud-based gaming, virtual clothes-changing programs, 3D showrooms, social commerce and gaming, Level-Up, Foursquare, Etsy, Gilt, Pinterest, NFC and mobile wallets, digital coupons, device-enabled sales staff, LiveChat customer service…the list grows every week. Optimists see opportunity. Most see trouble.

Has e-commerce already dis-intermediated the physical store, like online has in newsprint? Some are right to think so. There is growing evidence that digital channel commerce just might displace brick and mortar. Among others, here’s a recent study validating that the motivation to shop in-store is decreasing:

“Digital usage and ecommerce increase when women become moms. Two recent studies show that women spend less time with media outlets such as TV and magazines—but more time online—during pregnancy and after becoming a mom. An Eric Mower and Associates survey, for example, found that more than half of new mothers spend less time watching TV (59%) and reading magazines (55%), and that 59% spent less time shopping in stores as a result.”

 

Sure, new moms will actually shop more and will be less inclined to go to stores. But do retailers want to make the risky assumption that this data is not a harbinger of a major fault line trend that confirms the question “if the experience shopping offline continues to get better, will people ever really need to shop in-store?”. We think this risk isn’t worth taking.

Brick and mortar sure seems broken – see Blockbuster, Borders, Kmart, Comp USA — who’s next to file chapter 11? But we are bullish on brick and mortar because our vision of the in-store future (unfolding on a few beachheads already) is that, done right, digital in-store is a game-changer. Retailers who don’t sprint to their own digital future will soon realize it’s game over if they don’t.

If the pace of chaotic, rampant disruption is roaring ahead, can retailers run fast enough? They can – IF they go “all-in digital”. We urge retailers to completely re-think how customers use digital devices to connect, share, and buy today – and how they’ll do so in the future. We propose that winning retailers will create their own scalable, sustainable, personalized, and digitally enabled path-to-purchase models, engagement platforms, and technical infrastructures, all driven by evidence-based learning specific to their domain. Here’s a short list of guiding principles as we see them today retailers of all types should embrace to go “all-in digital”:

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