That is the number on the accompanying chart to which you should be paying attention. Why? Because that is the percentage of sales that ecommerce has yet to capture of total retail sales.
It is significant for two reasons. The first is that it means there is tremendous room to grow. The second is that it demonstrates, despite all the money and resources poured into the effort, to say nothing of the hype surrounding it, how far there is to go. And how much additional effort increasing that percentage is going to require.
This is not to suggest that e or mobile commerce efforts to date have failed or been ineffective. Rather, it suggests, that changing the habits of millenia will not be accomplished quickly and easily. But neither will they take another millenia. The implication is that additional investments in technology, yes, but also in rethinking how best to appeal to a consuming public that continues to rank shopping as one of its favorite passtimes. Three Cs - convergence, convenience and cost - will determine how long it takes to move that percentage above the number 5. JL
Greg Satel comments in Digital Tonto:
What’s the next big thing in digital? Mobile? Social? Online video? Those are things moving fast but the trend with the most potential for significant economic impact is, in fact, retail.
The sleepy, boring business of selling things to consumers is pepping up and becoming a hotbed of innovation. Technology and consumer trends are combining to create a shopping experience entirely different from anything we’ve seen before.
As Darrel Rigby points out in his HBR article, every 50 years retail goes through a major disruption. The rise of urban centers brought us department stores. Automobiles created suburbs and shopping malls. Then category killers and discount stores like Kmart and Wal-Mart challenged that status quo. Now retail is being reinvented all over again.
The Slow Crawl of E-Commerce
At the beginning of the dot com boom, many assumed that e-commerce would become an instant success. Eager VC’s threw money at just about any business plan that promised to end the drudgery of shopping with a few clicks of a mouse.
It didn’t work out all that well. When the bust came, e-commerce start-ups were hit the hardest and hot companies like Pets.com and Webvan got slaughtered. Some, like Amazon, survived and even thrived, but after 15 years online makes up a very small part of total retail sales.
A census bureau report shows that e-commerce is still garners a mere 5% of the total pie. I’ve seen estimates as high as 9%, but anyway you slice it, shopping continues to be primarily a bricks and mortar activity.
Therein lies the dilemma. With all the huffing and puffing, e-commerce has a very small impact on total revenues. So how do you inject digital technology into the shopping experience?
A New Omnichannel World
The answer lies in what Daniel Rigby calls the “Omnichannel Organization.” A purchase, after all, is more than a singular event, but a series of touchpoints that result in a sale. Consumers often browse online and purchase in-store or vice versa. They also will comparison shop in-store on their smartphones. The analog/digital distinction is a false one.
E-commerce is also flattening the path to purchase. Recommendation sites such as Yelp and Trip adviser are becoming an important part of the shopping experience and “daily deal” sites such as Groupon, Living Social and Scoutmob encourage consumers to discover new things.
Another persistent trend is pop-up shops. Digital technology allows the storefront to appear anytime, anywhere. So the question is no longer one of e-commerce vs. traditional commerce, but one of how digital technology can be deployed to improve the overall shopping experience.
In-Store Experience Transformed
While the online world has been transforming itself, the physical world hasn’t been exactly standing still. The Apple Store, for one, has become a cultural phenomenon as much as a commercial one. Here’s what Ron Johnson, who created it, says about what makes a retail success in an interview:
A store has got to be much more than a place to acquire merchandise. It’s got to help people enrich their lives. If a store just fulfills a specific product need, it’s not creating new types of value for the consumer. It’s transacting.
To buck that trend you need more than just gadgets and fancy displays, it takes an enormous devotion to detail. Ironically, digital has made the human element of retail more important, not less. If all a store has to offer is selection and a price, than why not just buy online?
It also takes experimentation and perseverance. Johnson and Steve Jobs worked on a prototype in a warehouse for almost a year before they got their store design right. The Genius Bar at the Apple store was a dismal failure the first few years, but they stuck with it and it became a hit.
Most retailers today understand the need to equip their store personnel with smart phones and tablets, but what should be on them? How should they be used? Like any other area of innovation, the future if retail will be created through trial and error as much as anything else.
A New Retail Mindset
Long a sleepy industry that prided itself on supply chain management and efficient use of floor space, retail is becoming much more daring, as psfk shows in their report.
Macy’s, for instance, has created a backstage pass program where consumers can get tips from celebrities, while Bloomingdales has created futuristic dressing room pods that drop down from the ceiling
Scanning technology is improving rapidly and will soon be making an impact. My Best Fit does full body scans to suggest the optimal size in various brands. Kraft is experimenting with technology that can suggest what you might want to buy for dinner based on information gleaned from a facial scan. Disney has a mirror that lets kids try on virtual outfits.
Do these technologies represent the future of retail? Maybe. Probably not. Nevertheless, it is clear that we’ve entered a new age where experimentation has become de rigueur. Churning out transactions is giving way to creating experiences and those experiences no longer begin in-store.
The future of retail, after all, is not a storefront, but an omnichannel, where digital, virtual and physical all merge into one.
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