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Showing posts with label future. Show all posts
Showing posts with label future. Show all posts
Sunday, November 25, 2012
Saturday, July 14, 2012
The future of shopping.
Came across this wonderful article on HBR which talks about how every 50 years or so, retailing undergoes a kind of disruption.
A
century and a half ago, the growth of big cities and the rise of
railroad networks made possible the modern department store. Mass-produced automobiles came along 50 years later, and soon shopping
malls lined with specialty retailers were dotting the newly forming
suburbs and challenging the city-based department stores.
The 1960s and
1970s saw the spread of discount chains—Walmart, Kmart, and the
like—and, soon after, big-box “category killers” such as Circuit City
and Home Depot, all of them undermining or transforming the old-style
mall.
Like most disruptions, digital retail
technology got off to a shaky start. A bevy of internet-based retailers
in the 1990s—Amazon.com, Pets.com, and pretty much
everythingelse.com—embraced what they called online shopping or
electronic commerce. These fledgling companies ran wild until a
combination of ill-conceived strategies, speculative gambles, and a
slowing economy burst the dot-com bubble. The ensuing collapse wiped out
half of all e commerce retailers and provoked an abrupt shift from
irrational exuberance to economic reality.
Today, however, that
economic reality is well established. The research firm Forrester
estimates that e-commerce is now approaching $200 billion in revenue in
the United States alone and accounts for 9% of total retail sales, up
from 5% five years ago. The corresponding figure is about 10% in the
United Kingdom, 3% in Asia-Pacific, and 2% in Latin America. Globally,
digital retailing is probably headed toward 15% to 20% of total sales,
though the proportion will vary significantly by sector. Moreover, much
digital retailing is now highly profitable. Amazon’s five-year average
return on investment, for example, is 17%, whereas traditional discount
and department stores average 6.5%.
What we are seeing today is
only the beginning. Soon it will be hard even to define e-commerce, let
alone measure it. 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?
How about gifts that are ordered from a website but exchanged at a
local store? Experts estimate that digital information already
influences about 50% of store sales, and that number is growing rapidly.
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