The survey, which sought to gauge consumer attitudes toward brick-and-mortar retailers and benchmark the proliferation of mobile shopping apps that offer barcode scanning in their current shopping experiences, uncovered several alarming facts pointing to retailers’ ineffectiveness in meeting their customers’ expectations.
58 percent of Survey respondents reported that after browsing items in store, they often or sometimes purchase them later with a mobile device. In addition, 41 percent of consumers said when an item is not available in the store they buy it from a competing online or brick-and-mortar retailer.
When respondents were asked what features they would or are planning to use in a mobile scanning app while shopping in store:
- 30 percent reported they would use it for self-checkout
- 26 percent would use an app to search for sale items
- 25 percent would use it to access customer reviews
- 24 percent of survey participants said they would access in-store coupons
In the UK this was illustrated by 23 percent of respondents saying that they would use a digital shopping assistant app on their smartphone or tablet if they were offered it and 41 percent confirming that a mobile device enhances their shopping experience.
The message from consumers is clear: brick-and-mortar retailers are falling short of delivering a seamless, digitally connected in-store experience that satisfies customers and converts engagement into sales.
These findings are supported by a recently published VDC Research white paper, Reengineer, Restructure, and Revamp Retail with Mobile Data Capture Technology, which reports “omnichannel enablement of the physical store is crucial to meeting customer expectations regarding instant gratification and a consistent shopping experience”. VDC Research highlights two key areas in which brick-and-mortar retailers lag behind online competitors: inventory visibility-in-store inventory accuracy averages around 65%-and digital shopping, with too few brick-and-mortar retailers offering popular features such as product lookup, adding products to shopping carts, self-checkout, etc. To compete long-term, retailers must work to close these critical service gaps.
In light of these findings, Scandit has published a point-of-view paper, Think Like Amazon, to explain how brick-and-mortar retailers can blend the digital and physical shopping experience in a way that turns a typical physical store environment into a connected hub of seamless retailing for employees and customers alike. “Web retailers’ increasing entry into the brick-and-mortar retail space inspired us to share how to leverage current technology to create the store of the future today”, said Scandit CEO Samuel Mueller. “For example, a customer seeking a specific product such as a food item with vegan ingredients can scan an entire shelf of goods and then use augmented reality feedback to have all vegan products instantly highlighted in their smartphone screen display.”
“Consumers and industry experts agree that brick-and-mortar retailers are well-positioned to take back sales revenue from big online enterprises,” said Mueller. “The retail ecosystem is already built around the barcode as the primary source of product information. By using ubiquitously available smart devices and affordable software, retailers can turn barcodes into a seamless customer experience foundation with minimal overhead. The next-generation mobile data capture technology that Scandit provides will help brick-and-mortar retailers compete successfully by allowing them to deliver the best of the online and in-store shopping experiences to their customers.”