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OPINION


mid the ever-increasing turmoil of the high street, brands are facing a growing number of challenges. While the bricks-and-mortar model seems to be in a tailspin, e-commerce is booming, with 2018 sales accounting for 11.9 per cent of all retail sales worldwide, and this figure is set to move skywards, reaching 17.5 per cent by 2021.


The e-commerce boom has seen a large number of more affordable brands join established behemoths, dramatically increasing the number of products available to the online shopper. In an increasingly crowded marketplace, where shoppers are spoilt for choice, but brand value may be diluted


through continuous discounts, 16


navigating the complex world of e-commerce can be a daunting task. Retailers


need to understand who their


customers are and how best to reach them. This will enable them to create a communications strategy that delivers on customer experience, which is expected to overtake price and product as the key brand differentiator by 2020. In mapping out customer journeys, retailers can identify touchpoints that can influence shopper behaviour and create content that will fulfil these.


So, where to start?


Auditing existing channels can help shed light on successes so far. What has worked? What hasn’t and why? How has the competition tackled comms? Are they appearing in the spaces identified? If so, what have they done differently? Once existing customer journeys have been mapped out, you can undertake audience research to help better understand


target shoppers, evaluating what


touchpoints are neglected in your strategy and how to incorporate these going forward. Identifying the critical touchpoints is only the first step. How these will be utilised to address and engage customers is far more important, as this will determine the content that should be used to populate them. Are the touchpoints facilitating discovery? Are they assisting in closing the sale? Shoppers have unparalleled choice; therefore, you must think carefully about how you communicate in each part of the shopper journey. A one-size- fits-all approach will not work, and content will depend on the touchpoint: the type of customer engagement and interaction it is striving to achieve, and the degree of personalisation required. Of course, setting a media plan and activating it is by no means a one-time event. How consumers respond to content will determine the evaluation and longevity of the touchpoint and associated content. If the content isn’t engaging, the audience will not respond to it. Depending on the objective, certain touchpoints may be switched on and off at different stages throughout a particular programme of activity, in line with shopper behaviour. In an ever-evolving consumer journey, retailers need to adapt to new ways of operating and respond


You must think carefully about how you communicate in each part of the shopper journey. A one-size-fi ts-all approach will not work


to new trends to ensure the relevance of all touchpoints. This is where digital has the upper hand, enabling you to be flexible in how you tailor your messaging across the shopper journey and how you update it.


This doesn’t mean physical touchpoints are obsolete. Physical stores are, in fact, critical, especially for categories where trial is important to consumers. Offering shoppers the opportunity to touch and try products goes a long way to increasing footfall and influencing purchase decisions.


Effective store experiences To deliver on seamless customer experience, retailers need to gain an understanding of their wider business strategies. Increasingly, determining the role of physical stores rests on determining the in-store experiences offered therein. Effective store experiences, however, go beyond the store visit. You need to join offline and online journeys, integrating physical retail into the


overall customer journey, rather than seeing it as a separate touchpoint. How did the customer get to the store? What content were they exposed to pre-visit and how did it influence their decision to visit? What happened after? Will they share their experience? The recent struggles of the high street have shifted the power balance between retailers and brands, allowing collaboration to flourish – both retailers and brands are targeting the same audience after all. Retailers are responsible for being knowledgeable about what they’re selling and how it will integrate into consumers’ lives; it is not just down to brands to educate them. Similarly, retailers need to share their own data with brands to better inform their strategies, by identifying relevant audiences and possible in-store footfall, the scale of in-store experiences possible and their capacity in influencing the frequency of store visits.


Integrating offline and online journeys will


ensure a seamless experience and a consistency in communications. Understanding consumer motivation enables retailers to uncover the purpose of different touchpoints in a customer journey and how these can be activated with great content. Ultimately, it comes down to targeting shoppers with the right message through the right channel at the right time.


April 2019 ertonline.co.uk Mark Burgess l Business Director, smp


How to win in retail and ecommerce A

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