Lessons Learned: What Retailers Can Take Away from 2024

As retailers navigate the ever-evolving landscape of consumer behaviors, technological advancements, and economic shifts, 2024 has offered invaluable lessons that can shape future strategies. The retail sector has witnessed a significant transformation, driven by digital innovation and changing customer expectations. In this blog, we will explore key takeaways from 2024 that retailers can implement to enhance their operations, improve customer experiences, and stay competitive.

The Rise of Omni-Channel Retailing

One of the most significant trends of 2024 has been the accelerated adoption of omnichannel retailing. Consumers now expect a seamless shopping experience across all touchpoints—be it in-store, online, or via mobile applications. Retailers have learned that integrating various sales channels is not just a convenience; it’s a necessity.

Actionable Insights:

  • Invest in Unified POS Solutions: A unified point-of-sale (POS) system allows retailers to manage sales, inventory, and customer data from a single platform. This integration facilitates real-time updates and insights, enabling better decision-making.
  • Enhance Online Presence: Retailers should invest in e-Commerce platforms and social media marketing to attract customers who prefer online shopping.

Leveraging Data Analytics

The ability to harness data analytics has proven crucial for retailers in 2024. With the vast amount of data available, retailers can gain insights into customer preferences, inventory management, and sales trends.

Actionable Insights:

  • Implement Cloud-Based Inventory Management: By utilising cloud-based inventory management systems, retailers can track stock levels in real-time, reduce excess inventory, and improve overall efficiency.
  • Utilise Customer Insights: Analysing customer behavior through data can inform personalised marketing strategies, product offerings, and customer service enhancements.

The Importance of Sustainability

Sustainability has emerged as a key concern for consumers in 2024. Retailers have learned that adopting sustainable practices is not only beneficial for the environment but also essential for building brand loyalty.

Actionable Insights:

  • Source Sustainable Products: Retailers should prioritise sourcing from eco-friendly suppliers and promoting sustainable products. Transparency in sourcing can enhance brand reputation.
  • Implement Sustainable Practices: Initiatives such as reducing packaging waste, optimising supply chains, and adopting energy-efficient technologies can resonate with environmentally conscious consumers.

Enhancing Customer Experience

In an age where consumers have numerous options, providing an exceptional customer experience is more critical than ever. Retailers have learned that personalised and engaging experiences can significantly impact customer loyalty.

Actionable Insights:

  • Adopt Mobile POS Technology: Mobile POS systems empower staff to assist customers anywhere in the store, reducing wait times and improving service.
  • Personalise Interactions: Utilising customer data to tailor promotions, recommendations, and communications can create a more personalised shopping experience.

Embracing Technological Innovation

2024 has highlighted the importance of keeping up with technological advancements. Retailers who embrace new technologies can streamline operations and enhance customer engagement.

Actionable Insights:

  • Invest in Cloud POS Software: Cloud POS solutions provide flexibility and scalability with features such as remote access, automatic updates, and real-time reporting.
  • Explore Emerging Technologies: Retailers should consider implementing AI, augmented reality (AR), and virtual reality (VR) to create innovative shopping experiences.

Strengthening Supply Chain Resilience

The disruptions caused by global events have taught retailers the importance of supply chain resilience. Those who adapted quickly were able to maintain operations and meet customer demands.

Actionable Insights:

  • Diversify Supply Sources: Relying on a single supplier can be risky. Retailers should diversify their supply chains to mitigate risks associated with disruptions.
  • Invest in Technology for Supply Chain Management: Utilising advanced technologies such as predictive analytics and blockchain can enhance transparency and efficiency in supply chain operations.

Fostering Community Engagement

Retailers have learned that building a strong community presence can significantly impact brand loyalty. Engaging with local communities fosters trust and enhances customer relationships.

Actionable Insights:

  • Host Community Events: Organising events or workshops can create a sense of community and attract new customers.
  • Collaborate with Local Businesses: Partnering with local businesses for promotions or events can enhance brand visibility and foster community support.

Conclusion

The lessons learned in 2024 have provided retailers with a roadmap for future success. By embracing omnichannel retailing, leveraging data analytics, prioritising sustainability, enhancing customer experience, adopting technological innovations, strengthening supply chains, and fostering community engagement, retailers can navigate the challenges ahead and thrive in an increasingly competitive market.

Fashionably Loyal: Win Customers Over in a Cutthroat Retail World

The fashion retail landscape is undergoing a seismic shift. Gone are the days of passive consumers simply browsing racks and accepting whatever a brand offers. Today’s savvy shoppers are bombarded with choices, empowered by technology, and fiercely loyal to brands that prioritize them. This “Fashionably Loyal” article explores the transformative customer landscape, the high cost of customer churn, and the power of a customer-centric approach in this competitive environment. We’ll then delve into actionable strategies for creating exceptional customer experiences, building long-lasting relationships, and ultimately, winning hearts (and wallets) in the cutthroat world of fashion retail.

1. The Modern Transformative Shift in the Consumer Landscape

The rise of e-commerce, social media, and mobile technology has fundamentally reshaped how consumers discover, research, and purchase fashion items. Today’s shoppers are digitally-savvy researchers, often armed with smartphones and a wealth of information at their fingertips. They expect a seamless omnichannel experience, transitioning effortlessly between online and offline touchpoints (think browsing online reviews before stepping into a physical store). Social media influencers heavily influence purchase decisions, and customer expectations for personalized recommendations and loyalty programs have skyrocketed.

This shift in consumer behaviour demands a response from fashion retailers. Those clinging to traditional, siloed approaches risk losing ground in the ever-evolving landscape. ETP Group’s Unified Commerce Solutions bridge the gap between online and offline operations, providing retailers with a single, holistic view of their customer data. This empowers retailers to deliver consistent messaging and a seamless shopping journey across all touchpoints.

2. The High Cost of Customer Churn

Losing a customer isn’t just a missed sale; it’s a missed opportunity for future purchases, brand advocacy, and referrals. Studies by Bain & Company show that a mere 5% improvement in customer retention can lead to a profit increase of 75%. The cost of acquiring new customers can be five times greater than retaining existing ones.

Customer churn is a serious threat to a fashion retailer’s bottom line. It’s crucial to understand why customers leave and implement strategies to win them back. ETP Group’s Omni-channel Retail Solutions offer powerful analytics tools that help retailers gain insights into customer behaviour and identify potential churn factors. By proactively addressing customer concerns and creating personalized experiences, retailers can turn disengaged shoppers into loyal brand advocates.

3. Customer-centricity, a Competitive Advantage

In an environment of fierce competition, customer-centricity is no longer a luxury; it’s a necessity. Shifting the focus from selling products to building long-lasting customer relationships unlocks a multitude of benefits:

  • Customer Loyalty: By prioritizing customer needs and exceeding expectations, retailers foster trust and loyalty. Loyal customers are more likely to make repeat purchases, even at premium prices.
  • Referrals: Loyal customers become brand ambassadors, enthusiastically recommending the brand to friends and family. This organic word-of-mouth marketing is invaluable and cost-effective.
  • Resilience to Market Fluctuations: Loyal customers are less likely to be swayed by competitors’ promotions. They understand and appreciate the value proposition of their preferred brand, providing a buffer during economic downturns.

Building a customer-centric culture requires a strategic shift in thinking. It involves understanding your customers, their needs, and their preferences. It’s about creating personalized experiences that make them feel valued and appreciated.

4. Strategies for Delivering Exceptional Customer Experiences

Fashion retail success hinges on delivering exceptional customer experiences across all touchpoints. Here are a few key strategies:

  • Personalized greetings and recommendations: Train staff to greet customers by name and offer personalized recommendations based on past purchases and browsing history.
  • Streamlined checkout processes: Implement frictionless checkout options like self-service kiosks and mobile wallets to minimize wait times.
  • Engaging online experiences: Create a user-friendly website with high-quality product images, detailed descriptions, and easy-to-use navigation.
  • Omnichannel rewards programs: Offer a unified rewards program that allows customers to earn and redeem points across all channels, online and offline. ETP Group’s solutions facilitate the seamless integration of such programs, fostering a more rewarding customer journey.

By focusing on these strategies, fashion retailers can create an exceptional customer experience that fosters loyalty and drives revenue growth.

Stay tuned for Part 2 of “Fashionably Loyal,” where we’ll delve into the essential building blocks of customer-centricity – comprehensive customer understanding, data-driven personalization, and seamless omnichannel experiences.

How to Increase Retail Sales in 2024

Raise your hand if you’d like to improve your retail store’s sales.

Whether you’re looking to build on the positive momentum or trying to fix a dip in sales, you’re in the right place.

We’ve curated a list of tried-and-true things they’ve done that had a measurable impact on their sales.

Let’s dive in!

  • Focus on the customer service
  • Prioritize your customers
  • Turn your store into a destination
  • Refresh your in-store displays
  • Reduce wait times
  • Generate more online awareness
  • Increase in-store foot traffic
  • Set up a customer loyalty program
  • Level up your staff training
  • Focus on upsells and cross-sells

1. Focus on the customer experience

Your employees are your store’s front line. They’re the ones interacting with customers, creating positive connections and actually selling your products, so it makes sense to invest in them. To get your staff to effectively drive in-store sales, it’s important to:

  • Hire passionate people: When a sales associate is passionate for the products they sell, it seeps into how they interact with customers and makes them more likely to create positive interactions.
  • Focus on the customer’s needs: While sales are certainly important, actively listening to customers is even more so. By listening to what the customer says, sales associates can identify their pain points and better find a way to solve them through the products they sell.
  • Emphasize the importance of personalized interactions: There’s no cookie-cutter way to work in sales. Actively listening to a customer’s wants and needs helps a sales associate find the product that’s right for them.

A retail store is a great touchpoint where you can engage with your customers directly and help them solve their problems. Offering great in-store customer service that simply can’t be replicated online is the key to more lifelong retail customers (and sales).

Make your customers your top priority. Which brings us to the next point…

2. Prioritize your customers

Being customer-centric is something that every retailer should aspire to be. It really comes down to understanding what your customers want and making their needs your top priority. That doesn’t just end at having the products they want in stock. It starts by making customers feel good.

If your sales associates treat the people that walk into your store like people, you’re heading in the right direction. Nobody likes being sold to, so enough with the pressure sales tactics. Just have a conversation with the customer, find out what they need and propose a few solutions that match their price point. If they like your service (and the product), they’ll come back.

If you don’t carry the product that your customer truly needs, don’t be afraid to recommend it to them anyway and tell them where they can buy it. They’ll appreciate the help and your sales associate will establish trust with the customer. When that customer comes back to your store, they’re far more likely to trust your sales associates as a result. Think long-term relationship-building, not short-term sales!

The most successful retailers are obsessed with their customers and making them happy. Are you?

3. Turn your store into a destination

Customers crave unique, creative and memorable in-store experiences. Not only does that include approachable, knowledgeable staff (that’s a given), it also means rethinking the way your store operates. People are so accustomed to the typical store setup: there are products, salespeople and a cash register—boring. Some companies have pioneered a new store format called experiential retail.

In a nutshell, what that means is that the store’s goal is more than just to sell products; it’s to create an immersive experience that focuses on customer engagement. And they achieve that with interactive product demos and fun activities that are related to the products they sell.

For example, a visionary mattress store has provided nap pods that people can rent for a 30-minute nap. They come fully-equipped with an original mattress, sheets, and pillows, along with a bathroom to freshen up after your nap. If people enjoy their nap, their perception of the brand’s products is positive and the probability that they will make a purchase and become brand evangelists is higher.

There’s science to back this up, too. When a person touches and interacts with a product, they’re more likely to develop an affinity for that product.

In an article published by Harvard Business Review, Lawrence Williams, a marketing professor at Leeds School of Business, says “Physically holding products can create a sense of psychological ownership, driving must-have purchase decisions. This idea may underlie the push to move inventory from display cases into customers’ hands, a trend seen in many electronics outlets such as the Apple Store.” Pretty cool, huh?

Experiential retail is blowing up and there are tons of ways you can apply the concept in your store. We teamed up with Cate Trotter, Founder of Insider Trends, to cover this topic in-depth—read her piece below!

4. Refresh your in-store merchandising

Assembling persuasive in-store merchandising is part art, part data.

You use data to pinpoint which products are typically bought together, and you use your creativity to make those products look irresistible.

Good in-store merchandising will have no clutter. The only things that your eyes are drawn to are their products. Displays that are too busy will just overwhelm your customers and make your store look cluttered and unkempt. The store planogram has to be well organized. Every product has its place. It’s easy for customers to find what they’re looking for faster, which contributes to a better overall shopping experience.

Related products are grouped together. Notice that pants and shirts from matching color palettes are next to one another. (Hint: if you want to see which of your products are typically bought together using ETP Omni-channel Analytics, just check out your Products Frequently Bought Together report.

Must-have, low-cost accessories are nearby. Odds are, if you’re buying stylish gym gear, you need a bag to carry it in, right? The store will therefore place their tote bags next to their gym gear for exactly that reason.

5. Reduce wait times

Long wait times to pay are a big turn-off for customers and can cripple your sales. Research shows that most customers will typically abandon a checkout line and leave a store after waiting just six to eight minutes before heading for the door. The best way to stop losing sales due to long checkout lineups? Eliminate them altogether.

Brick-and-mortar retailers need to “banish the wait in line, once and for all” to avoid losing sales. But how do you do that?

It starts with scheduling enough sales associates to serve customers quickly even during peak hours. In ETP Analytics, you can easily see when your peak business hours are in the Sales by Hour of Day report. Use that information to make sure you schedule enough workers to assure you’re promptly serving each customer.

Next, why not eliminate cash registers altogether?

Unlike traditional cash registers and in-premise point of sale (POS) systems, cloud-based POS systems and mobile POS systems enable sales associates to serve customers and ring up sales from anywhere in the store. Retail MPOS helps customers get in and out of your store as fast as possible, which is what most of them want anyway.

Ring up sales from anywhere – with ETP’s mPOS software – ETP Mobile Store, you can eliminate customer wait times and reduce lost sales, all while offering amazing service.

6. Generate more online awareness

‘Clicks and bricks’ isn’t just a catchy line; it’s literally how consumers shop now.

Last year, more than 80% of retail purchases were made by first using online search. Increasingly, people are researching what to buy and where to buy it online before ever setting foot in-store. When they get to the store, those multichannel shoppers spend an average of three times more than single-channel shoppers.

Of course, retailers should have an online presence, but that doesn’t just mean having a transactional website. Things like a Google My Business (GMB) profile, Facebook and Instagram are amazing tools to get discovered by more potential customers in your area.

With a little bit of work, you can make it easier for people to find your store online, research what products you offer and get directions. Your goal is to make it as easy as possible for customers to see that you have what they need.

Setting up a GMB profile and optimizing your Facebook and Instagram accounts for local online searches isn’t as hard as you may think.

7. Increase in-store foot traffic

What good is online awareness if nobody is actually visiting your brick-and-mortar store or buying online? It’s not worth very much.

Part of that is getting a transactional eCommerce store up and running; the other part is showing customers that your brick-and-mortar store has what customers are looking for.

There are several ways to incentivize customers who discover your store online to visit and make a purchase.

Organize in-store events. The benefit? If a customer is interested, they have to visit your store. Things like weekly clubs, workshops and hands-on events are a great way to build a community and generate more visits.

Run exclusive in-store offers. Nobody likes passing up a great deal. Try offering a free giveaway for in-store purchases, or featuring certain items available exclusively in-store.

Show inventory levels online. People are more likely to visit your store if they know you have what they’re looking for. With ETP Omni-channel Inventory Management solutions, you can show your brick-and-mortar inventory levels online in real-time at the click of a button.

Offer free in-store pickup. This option benefits both you and your customers. For them, they can avoid paying for shipping, while you save on shipping costs.

8. Set up a loyalty program

A loyalty program incentivizes customers to purchase more to unlock personalized rewards. It’s a super accessible way to increase customer lifetime value while rewarding your customer’s loyalty to your business. When customers can use their loyalty program points to discount future purchases, you can bet they’re going to take advantage.

9. Don’t treat product returns like a loss

Returns happen, and when they do, customers should get the same great service as when they bought the item. Put yourself in their shoes. The product didn’t work out; they’re disappointed, too.

Treat each return like a sale and serve them willingly and with a smile. It makes the customer feel like they’re valued for more than just their hard-earned money, which creates an emotional sense of loyalty.

If they appreciate your service, they’re more likely to make another purchase at your store. Make the process quick and painless, and most important of all: treat your customers with positive intent.

Of course, there are serial-returners out there who will try to take advantage, but a loyal customer base that consistently shops at your store because of great service more than makes up for that minority.

10. Focus on upsells and cross-sells

Upsells and cross-sales can add up; have you considered making them a part of your sales strategy? When done wrong, it can make your sales associates (and your store’s reputation) look dodgy and self-serving. But when done right, it’s just flat-out great customer service.

With upselling, you should train sales associates to use the rule of three. Take the item that the customer was initially interested in (for example, a pair of running shoes) and show the customer three different models at three different price points (entry-level, mid-level and high-end). This is the best way to upsell since it shows the customer that you understand their needs. You want to show them everything that’s available so that they can make the most informed decision possible. You’re not pressuring them; you’re informing them.

With cross-selling, you should apply a similar approach: don’t try and sell a customer something they don’t actually need. Going back to the shoe example, an illustration of an authentic cross-sell would be educating the shoe shopper on the various types of running socks: from expensive compression socks and moisture-wicking ones to the generic cotton socks. Educate them on the differences between the three and let them choose what’s best for them.

With cross-selling, another important factor is “does this purchase make sense?” For shoes, socks are pretty much a given, but sometimes it can be tricky. The best way to find out if a customer needs anything else is to simply ask, “Could I help you with anything else today?” After all, a sales associate’s job is to facilitate the customer’s needs and offer solutions. Suggestive selling is the most authentic way to do that without coming across as an overly-pushy, selfish salesperson.

Summing up, hopefully you can use the above tips and tricks to increase retail sales. Ultimately, it comes down to prioritizing your customers and understanding that you’re in the business of serving them.

From your staff to the systems you use to run your store, everything and everyone’s job should be to create more “wow” moments and earn their trust; the sales will naturally follow.

Want to create an efficient in-store experience that your customers will love? Talk to one of our retail experts today to see how ETP V5 can help!