Omnichannel Retailing Trends in 2018
August 20, 2018It’s not about online or in-store sales; it’s about all-lines that provide a seamless customer experience across every channel.
Omnichannel shoppers are shifting effortlessly among different digital channels and in-store. Are retailers?
The U.S. Omnichannel Retail StatPack 2018 that eMarketer released takes a deep dive into omnichannel trends. We highlight key findings about omnichannel, the path to purchase, in-store purchases, digital purchases and product delivery in this article.
Omnichannel
Although omnichannel is most often defined as providing a “seamless experience, regardless of channel or device,” the precise meaning differs, depending on which retailer you ask:
• 67% define it as “having different methods for transacting with your customer”
• 66% define it as “delivering a seamless and consistent customer experience across sales channels”
• 64% “define it as marketing geared towards customers converting on any channel”
• 40% “define it as processes like click and collect”
• 37% “define it as giving customers the ability to see orders in one place”
• 21% “define it as speedy delivery times”
No matter how you prefer to define it, there was a 13% increase in the number of retailers who said their omnichannel businesses were profitable from 2016 to 2017.
Omnichannel customers generate a higher lifetime value in terms of sales than digital-only or in-store only shoppers. Omnichannel shoppers make up 7% of US customers yet account for 27% of all sales.
Sales are shifting away from in-store to digital purchases. Retailers estimate a 14% decrease in the amount of in-store sales in the next 12-18 months.
One in 4 retailers have already implemented customer omnichannel experiences and 53% of retailers plan to implement omnichannel throughout 2018. The top omnichannel challenges that retailers face are:
• 61% budget pressure
• 58% turning data into usable insights
• 52% integrating different selling channels
• 48% choosing and implementing new tech
• 48% integrating with other marketing
• 42% communicating the value/need to senior management
• 36% competition from online retailers
• 36% price transparency
• 33% finding/retaining good staff
• 30% high customer expectations
Path to Purchase
The channel that customers use for research is most likely the same channel that is used to make a purchase, although there is still some cross-channel research and purchasing occurring:
• 53% of consumers start researching digitally; of those, 34% purchase digitally and 19% purchase in-store
• 48% of consumers start researching in-store; of those, 42% purchase in-store and 6% purchase digitally
Digital influences 50% of in-store sales and is expected to influence 58% of total sales by 2022. The most prevalent digital influences are:
• 52% recommendations from family/friends
• 47% online consumer reviews
Customers tend to webroom (research online and buy in-store) more than they showroom (see an item in-store and buy it online).
• 38% of US internet users research via mobile and buy in-store
• 22% of US internet users see an item in-store then by it online via mobile
In-Store Shoppers
Shopping in-store has its benefits for both shoppers and retailers. Seven in 10 in-store shoppers make an impulse purchase. And shoppers think in-store has better customer service, is more reliable, has higher quality and has the “fun factor” over digital shopping channels.
The top categories for in-store purchases are:
• 97% food and beverage
• 88% paper/plastic household products
• 87% cleaning supplies
• 80% personal care products
• 72% home furniture/furnishings
• 71% lawn/garden goods
• 67% tableware/kitchenware/cookware
• 65% medicine/vitamins
• 56% clothing/footwear/accessories
• 52% cosmetics/fragrances
• 51% electronics
The top frustrations when buying in-store from digital shoppers include:
• 32% store lacks inventory of needed item
• 21% inconvenient location
• 20% takes too long to make the purchase
• 16% unhelpful sales staff
• 5% no in-store WiFi
Digital Shoppers
In general, consumers use a desktop or laptop to look for specific products and use a mobile device for browsing. No matter which device they are using, digital shoppers show clear preferences for whey plan to shop in 2018:
• 83% retail websites
• 70% in-store
• 42% brand sites
• 26% via search engines
• 20% flash sale sites
• 12% apps
• 7% social media
• 4% via voice
The top reasons shoppers use digital channels are:
• 56% convenience
• 46% time spent
• 45% low-cost options
Delivery Preferences
Cost, timeliness and convenience are the major factors consumers consider when deciding on delivery options.
Customers have high delivery expectations:
• 75% prefer shipping to in-store pickup
• 63% expect 3 days as standard delivery timeframe
• 40% say delivery that takes more than 2 days prevents them from making a purchase
Buy online, pickup in-store is the most-preferred delivery method by 18-29 year-olds. About 1 in 4 digital shoppers under 30 would favor the click-and-collect option. The top reasons why digital shoppers use buy online, pickup in-store:
• 50% high shipping cost
• 50% immediate need
• 43% product discount
• 33% long shipping time
• 28% product not offered in-store without digital order