Showing posts with label Brick and mortar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Brick and mortar. Show all posts

Friday, June 7, 2013

EveryWhere Commerce.

The ‘e’ in ecommerce no longer means electronic, it means everywhere.

Ecommerce is defined as the process of buying or selling over electronic systems, but as the shopper's experience has become more complex, the 'e' in ecommerce no longer means electronic, it now means everywhere.

The Harvard Business Review asked in 2011: "Is it an e-commerce sale if the customer goes to a store, finds that the product is out of stock, and uses an in-store terminal to have another location ship it to her home? What if the customer is shopping in one store, uses his smartphone to find a lower price at another, and then orders it electronically for in-store pickup?"

From the customers' perspective, they now expect access to the whole catalog, not just the range of goods in a particular location, and they expect this catalog to be available whenever and wherever they want it. People can shop potentially every minute of the day.

From the companies' perspective, there is an opportunity to connect with shoppers and have a much fuller relationship than traditional, mainstream bricks-and-mortar retailers ever did.

Monday, May 28, 2012

How Web Traffic is Driving Brick and Mortar Expansion

People will always want to shop, and that’s not going to change, but the online experience has raised shoppers’ expectations and made them much more discerning, so it behooves all retailers to know their customer that much better.  The Web is providing a much broader, more accurate and real-time picture of exactly who they are and where they live, arming retailers with the information they need to make smarter decisions about physical expansion — the most capital-intensive of investments.


This hybrid retail opportunity creates opportunities not only for retailers but also for the  brands. Data & trends provided by online retailing is a reflection of the offline consumer behavior and is far more accurate and trust-worthy as against data based on surveys and focused groups.