“Here you can see there’s more to shopping, than shopping,” says Andrew.
“If your store is a pleasant place to be, wide aisles, good unintrusive music, warm and inviting, then you may find shoppers will come to spend time together as they browse and buy.”
“You could take this further by offering more than solely a retail experience. Creating a ‘destination store’, with perhaps a café or somewhere to sit down, can be really appealing to more than a quarter of adults,” he adds.
“You know your customer better than anyone. If you’re appealing to younger shoppers then making your shop a social experience could be a key driver.”
Bricks … and clicks (and collect?)
Other survey results highlight that almost one in five shoppers (19%) like the option to click and collect.
If you’re unfamiliar with this, it’s where shoppers can buy online or through an app and collect the item in store. They can pay as they order or on collection, perhaps at a dedicated time, from a dedicated place in store to reduce queues and make it a convenient and smooth transaction for them, and you.
This could offer an opportunity to expand your retail business into a so-called ‘omnicommerce’ model, mixing real life interactions with ecommerce options to take advantage of this market.
After all, if you are offering click and collect, you’ve got another opportunity to sell things when customers visit your store while using the power of the internet to widen your market reach.
If you haven’t already expanded into the world of online retail then we can help you explore if this is right for your business model.
Talk to us to find out more.