The mobile and physical worlds continue to more closely integrate with
each other.
Consumers use mobile devices to research, explore and shop, even though most then go the brick and mortar store to make their purchase.
Some retailers ironically are being
bypassed or at least somewhat left out as brands take shortcuts around them.
It’s not necessarily that product manufacturers are looking to cut out their retail distribution points, but
rather that they are trying to better and more efficiently connect consumers with their products.
One way is for brands to incent customers with coupons they can redeem by scanning their
grocery receipt after their store visit, as I wrote about here last week (Mobile
Coupon Redemption AFTER the Shopping Trip).
The retailer still makes the sale, the consumer gets the deal and manufacturer moves its product.
There’s another
behind-the-scenes mobile move going on as a company sends mobile-armed individuals to stores with specific missions, such as to check on if products are where they’re supposed to be.
These secret-shopper types are independent contractors commissioned by Gigwalk, which bills itself as a local visibility platform.
The four-year-old company has signed up more than 500,000
of these gigwalkers who volunteer for available store-visit tasks.
The gigwalkers get paid, typically in the $5 to $15 range, for their in-store observations and reporting. The data is
reported back to the consumer packaged goods company and shared with the buyer for the store.
For example, one mission available via the app today was to check certain product inventory at a
specific Walgreens for $10.
“We can see a timeline of what happens in a store,” says Gigwalk CEO Bob Bahramipour. “Brands have a major problem. They’re spending $30-$50
billion a year in trade promotions with an unknown ROI. Our vision is to enable anyone to see into any location.”
There have been 4 million observations so far this year, according to
Bahramipour.
An observer may be sent to check on-shelf availability of a certain product. While a product may be listed as being in inventory, the gigwalker validates if it is available for
the shopper to see and buy.
The company is expecting to have about a million of these independent auditors to deploy to stores by the end of this year.
What looks like a mobile shopper
to a retailer may actually be a mobile auditor.
Just one more issue to add the list of the intricacies of mobile commerce facing physical retailers.
All the major issues
relating to mobile commerce will be discussed at the MediaPost OMMA mCommerce conference in New York on Aug. 7. Hope to see you
there. Check out the agenda.