When Does the ‘Human Touch’ Matter in Retail?
In
a 2012 interview that aired on CBS This Morning, Amazon CEO Jeff
Bezos was asked by journalist Charlie Rose whether the
e-commerce giant would eventually open bricks-and-mortar stores. “We would love
to, but only if we can have a truly differentiated idea,” he said. “We want to
do something that is uniquely Amazon. We haven’t found it yet, but if we can
find that idea … we would love to open physical stores.”
Nearly
three years later, Bezos apparently found that unique idea in Amazon@Purdue.
Opened on February 3, Amazon’s first staffed store is located on the campus of
Purdue University in West Lafayette, Ind., a town with a population of about
30,000, skewing male and boasting a median age of 23. An open-layout store
accented with the cheery color of Amazon’s flagship orange, it is a place where
students can pick up orders for anything from computers to macaroni and cheese,
as well as receive and drop off rented textbooks and other school gear. More
stores are coming: Amazon is opening a second one this spring at the Purdue
Memorial Union building on campus. Also on tap are campus stores at the University
of California, Davis, and the University of Massachusetts at Amherst.
Amazon
joins other e-commerce companies that began as Internet-only ventures but have
been opening physical stores as well. They include eyeglasses merchant Warby Parker and Bonobos, a men’s
fashion retailer, which have added dozens of offline stores in recent years.
While going online to offline might seem like a step back into old-fashioned
retail, these e-tailers are not opening stores that look like your parents’
Sears Roebuck. They are reinventing the customer experience with smaller, more
intimate spaces, focusing on delivering a special experience in addition to displaying
products.
Warby
Parker’s retail stores capture a sense of fun with pneumatic tubes that shoot
glasses from the stocking area to the sales floor. The stores also features
shelves of books for browsing, sometimes accompanied by rolling ladders, in an ode
to the company’s book clubs. Meanwhile, Bonobos’ so-called “guideshops” let the
fashion-forward gentleman choose and try on apparel. Afterward, the products
are ordered and shipped to the customer; they are not sold at the shops.
However, Bonobos also is selling its clothes through higher-end retailer
Nordstrom, in a partnership with the traditional bricks-and-mortar store.
It
makes sense for online retailers to add offline stores for the right types of
goods. “There are many categories where the ‘touch and feel’ of products and
sales associates’ assistance is important in the purchase process,” saysBarbara
Kahn,
Wharton marketing professor and director of the Jay
H. Baker Retailing Center. For example, consumers usually like to try on clothing
and eyeglasses in stores and examine groceries before buying. When products
need further explanation, it is best done in person. “For these categories,
offline experiences will continue to be valuable,” Kahn notes. “There is plenty
of evidence that bricks-and-mortar stores are not going away.”
Peter Fader, a Wharton marketing professor and
co-director of the Wharton Customer Analytics Initiative, goes so far as to say
that online merchants need offline stores to succeed in the long run.
” There is a belief that
e-commerce sites can do well with a limited number of intensely loyal
customers. “But that idea is not supported by the data,” Fader notes. “The key
to success for almost any retailer is to have a big base.”
While
starting out online is reasonable because start-up costs are low, there should
be a plan to eventually open up retail stores, Fader says. “Not only do you
bring in more customers, but those customers you have, old and new, will buy
more from you,” he explains. “They almost automatically end up buying from you
more because they see you in more places. You’re more visible.” For e-tailers
like Warby Parker and Bonobos, their bricks-and-mortar stores also offer new
experiences to the consumer without losing the authenticity of the brand.
“You’ve got to go out there and experiment,” Fader adds.
But
will the stores cannibalize sales on the website? There is evidence that adding
a physical store to an e-commerce site can boost sales overall, according to
“How to Win in an Omni-channel World,” a paper co-authored by Wharton marketing
professor David Bell that appeared in the MIT Sloan
Management Review in 2014. Last fall, Warby Parker Co-CEO Dave Gilboatold The Wall Street Journal that the company’s
first eight offline stores generated an average $3,000 in sales per square foot
annually, which is higher than most retailers.
Finding the Right Balance
Before
the advent of the Internet, the paper said, consumers traditionally had two
main means of buying products — going to the department store or ordering via
catalog. Today, shoppers operate in an omni-channel retail universe where they
go online to find products, check their mobile phones to compare prices, look
at social media recommendations, shop at physical stores to feel the
merchandise, and watch TV commercials or view newspaper ads before they make a
purchase. For retailers wanting to be everywhere that customers shop, finding
the right balance between an offline and an online presence can be a daunting
task.
One
general rule of thumb is that if a product has a high number of “non-digital
attributes” — it needs to be touched, seen and experienced before most
consumers would buy it — then an offline store is needed, according to Bell’s
study. “Physical stores provide multiple benefits. On a basic level, it gives hesitant
consumers a chance to touch the merchandise. Some people may be worried about
buying online without seeing the product first, and having stores lets people
interact with the product,” says Jonah Berger, a Wharton marketing professor
and author of Contagious: Why Things Catch On.
Opening
an offline store also “deepens brand engagement,” Berger adds. “It’s hard to
get a sense of what a brand stands for from just a website, but a physical
store allows potential consumers to experience the brand at a deeper level.
Finally, it provides a simple trigger that reminds people to shop there. If
you’re looking for clothes and you pass by the Gap or Old Navy, you’ll think
about stopping in. But if nothing reminds you to think of Amazon or Bonobos,
you might forget to purchase from them. So just like advertising, stores make
the brand top of mind.”
Bell’s
paper noted that instead of the offline channel cannibalizing online sales, the
two actually worked in concert to enhance overall business. In his paper, the
authors compared two cities with Warby Parker customers, one with a showroom
and one without a physical location, and culled data from a trading area with a
30-mile radius. They found out that total sales rose by 9% in the city with the
showroom. Meanwhile, online sales, instead of declining, also rose. Residents
in the area ordered 3.5% more on the Warby Parker website, the paper said.
“We
find that if you have two locations identically matched, the one with a
physical showroom will see higher online sales as well,” Bell says. He explains
that the offline showroom gives the brand “legitimacy. There’s a real store, so
it must be a real brand.” There is also another perk to having a store: The
number of online product returns fell. That’s good news because returns are
becoming a major area of concern for e-tailers, comprising up to a third of net
sales, according to the paper.
As
e-tailers are adding offline channels, bricks-and-mortar retailers are
sharpening their approach to online consumers. In addition to websites, some
traditional retailers such as Gap, Toys R Us, Home Depot and Crate and Barrel
are rolling out a hybrid service that lets customers order online and pick up
their goods in the store. Bell says such an approach has its benefits:
Consumers can easily get product information and place their orders online, and
they also get instant gratification because they can pick up the product
instead of waiting for it to be delivered.
Bell’s
paper studied the experience of Crate and Barrel, a furniture and home goods
store, after it offered the BOPS (Buy Online, Pick-up in Store) service. The
researchers found that overall sales rose as store traffic increased. “It drove
people to the store. While you’re in the store, you buy a bunch of other
stuff,” Bell notes.
Advice for Traditional Retailers
Bricks-and
mortar retailers also have been responding to omni-channel shoppers’ needs by
building their own digital experiences to coordinate with offline offerings,
Kahn says. Those offerings include mobile apps that send coupons to shoppers,
alert them to promotions and generally engage with them digitally. The result
is that consumers get better service and a more efficient shopping experience.
“Consumers want the omni-channel experience — and frequently, the mobile phone
is the connector between the offline and online worlds,” she notes.
“Coordination between the offline and online experience is going to be the norm.”
But
Fader believes offline retailers can do more. “So many big brands outsource
their online presence,” he says. Shoppers may not know it, but behind the
scenes at several bricks-and-mortar retailers, another company is doing the
merchandising and fulfilling orders. That is acceptable when a retailer is just
starting out, Fader notes. But in the long run, the retailer is ceding control
to someone else. He points out that Borders bookstores had outsourced its
online channel to Amazon, which contributed to its ultimate demise. “Eventually, you want to
be the master of your own fate,” Fader says.
It
would help if offline retailers considered online channels to be a critical
part of their core strategy instead of a separate operation. “Maybe what they
have to think about is how do they integrate the whole brand and provide the
exact online and offline experience that customers want,” Bell says. His paper
urged retailers to look at how they can make the buying process easy in every
phase, from providing product information all the way to delivery. The
researchers also advised retailers to focus on the customers’ perspective when
building an omni-channel presence in order to more ably deliver what shoppers
want, in the way they want it.
The
stakes are higher now in retail because consumers have new expectations about
convenience and service. According to a 2014 Forrester Consulting report, 71% of consumers expect
to be able to browse an offline store’s inventory online, while 50% expect to
make the purchase online and pick it up in the store. However, only a third of
retailers surveyed have put in place the basics to provide these services.
There are consequences to inaction: 39% of consumers are unlikely to visit the
store if they cannot view the store’s products online.
The
reverse is also true. A retailer or brand that masters the omni-channel
strategy increases customer satisfaction, loyalty and boosts brand perception,
the report said. But the danger is that many retailers have reached a “false
state” of comfort just because they have invested in some omni-channel efforts,
according to Forrester. Instead, retailers should continually fine-tune and
update their endeavors as technology and consumer expectations continue to
change. Some offline retailers could not keep up with the omni-channel shopper
and have stopped trying. “We’ve already seen it,” Kahn says, citing Borders,
Circuit City and Radio Shack, three offline retailers that have gone bust
or filed bankruptcy.
One
online to offline transition that did not work was Gateway Computers, Bell
says. The company started opening stores in the 1990s but closed them in 2004,
around the time that Apple stores were taking off. “They realized there was no
strong experiential component to their brand, there was no sizzle to sell in
the physical store,” Bell says. For products that are primarily digital in
nature, such as a piece of software, the need for tactile interaction is a lot
lower, he adds.
While
retailers will see failures and successes as they move from one channel to
another, the bottom line is that they must be online and in physical stores.
“Customers are in both environments, so retailers have to be there, too,”
http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/article/human-touch-matte
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