The vast majority of smartphone owners use their devices to shop, but they’re more likely to turn to retailers’ mobile
Web sites than their apps. Despite the rise of so-called showrooming, people are still more likely to shop using smartphones at home than in stores.
Those are among the key findings of a new
NPD Group study that found three-quarters of smartphone owners are using their handsets as part of their overall shopping experience. Within
that population, 71% are going to retailer sites such as Bestbuy.com, Amazon.com and Target.co, while only 57% are using those retailers’ apps to shop.
Eddie Hold, vice president of
NPD’s Connected Intelligence service, noted that retail apps are not typically part of consumers’ day-to-day shopping habits, so they tend to be used less frequently. “How often do
you go into a Best Buy and buy a TV?” he said. Three months after downloading a retailer’s app, 75% of users don’t even use it once a month, according to the study.
“Right now, engagement is low, meaning the app is clearly an experiment that is quickly dropped by most consumers,” said Hold. Furthermore, while virtually all (94%) smartphone users
shop via their smartphones while at home, only about a third (32%) do so in physical stores. Hold said that indicates people are using smartphones as an alternative device for online shopping rather
than as a showrooming tool.
“The reality is, if you have a consumer in your retail store, you still have the home field advantage,” said Hold, adding that prior to the spread of
smartphones, some may have been content simply to shop at home from their PC.
But he suggested that retailers can still do more to make their apps a useful complement to shopping in
brick-and-mortar stores by adding features like in-store mapping, integrated shopping lists and scan-and-go buying to encourage more regular app use. Even so, Hold expects consumers to increasingly
embrace mobile shopping in the upcoming holiday season.
A separate study by Compuware released earlier this week found almost half (49%) of smartphone and tablet users plan to use their
devices to research and buy gifts; 36% plan to do more mobile shopping this year than last.
The NPD study was based on a combination of on-device metering and consumer panel data. The research
firm’s SmartMeter uses a three-month rolling panel to track usage by 4,500 people, while the consumer survey polled 1,500 smartphone users ages 18 and older in September 2013.