retail

PwC: Even With Social, Stores Aren't Keeping Up

Online-Shopping

While it’s easy to assume that, by now, brick-and-mortar retailers are 100% on board shoppers’ multi-channel preferences, a new study shows they aren’t keeping up with consumers’ online expectations.

In fact, the PwC survey finds, people aren’t waiting for stores, but inventing the multichannel experience for themselves as they go along. “Because most retailers haven't yet created efficient multichannel models, consumers are working it out for themselves, using different channels in ways that best suit them,” the report finds. 

“Consumers may choose to research a product in the store - a shoe perhaps - then use their mobile phone to find a better price online, and then call into the retailer's customer service line to order and have the shoe shipped to their home. In essence, consumers are creating their own multichannel experiences by leveraging multiple retailers across a single category or product.” 

advertisement

advertisement

In fact, in the U.S., 72% of online shoppers consider themselves “very accomplished.”

Social media clearly has a large potential for retailers, with 32% of U.S. respondents saying they use some form of social media daily. (Both China and Hong Kong had higher social-media participation.) Yet overall, only 3% of the survey’s respondents have used it to actually make a purchase. 

The study, based on responses from more than 7,000 consumers around the world, found that while most people like online shopping because of its 24/7 convenience, it is the pricing, free and fast delivery, and a wide range of products that appeals to them most. Yet even though retailers would gain an additional margin opportunity of 8 to 12%, 59% of retailers still charge for shipping. In the U.S., two out of three shoppers say they’ll bail out of a transaction if it turns out they have to pay shipping charges.

Online shopping’s appeal is also greater than many acknowledge. While 2010’s online sales penetration of total retail sales was 8%, once grocery sales are excluded, that rises to 11% of all sales. And in such categories as PCs and software, it’s 50%. Online shoppers buy in many more channels than some realize, the survey finds, with more than 90% of global online shoppers buying books, music and films, clothing and footwear online. And more than 60% of online shoppers have made purchases in categories with relatively little online shopping, such as jewelry, watches, sports equipment and outdoor goods.  

To make the most of these trends, PwC says, retailers need to focus more on what people expect from their physical stores, as well as the online experience. The store of the future, it says, will most likely be “a showroom where customers come for inspiration, to browse and to physically interact with, and to road test the products, as well as a convenient transaction point and customer service center, where customers come to complete a journey started on the web or to seek service for products bought regardless of the purchase channel.” Shoppers will likely enter these stores  “knowing what they want and what price they expect to pay. They are using the store simply as a vehicle for completing the transaction and getting personal assistance that they can't find, or isn't available, on the web.”

By 2015, PwC says, it expects U.S. e-commerce sales to reach $279 billion.

2 comments about "PwC: Even With Social, Stores Aren't Keeping Up".
Check to receive email when comments are posted.
  1. Doug Pruden from Customer Experience Partners, March 30, 2012 at 11:16 a.m.

    I agree with PwC's suggestion that in many retail categories "the store of the future will most likely be a showroom where customers come for inspiration, to browse and to physically interact with, and to road test the products." But if price comparisons via smartphones and online shopping continue to grow, I question how many purchases will take place in those showrooms. Questions: How could any but the largest retailers be price competitive and afford to have most customers use them only as showrooms? Will the showrooms instead be owned by the suppliers and manufacturers(e.g. Apple)? Will there be a new class of multi-product (department store like) consumer showrooms in which manufacturers pay to have their products displayed (but nothing is actually purchased)?

  2. Charles Nicholls from SeeWhy Inc, March 30, 2012 at 1:48 p.m.

    Interesting. What the name / source of the Report referred to?

    Thanks

Next story loading loading..