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Retailers Battle Back Against Price-Comparing Shoppers

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Showdown Over 'Showrooming' (Wall Street Journal)

Target and Consumer ShoppingStore-based retailers are struggling to deal with the modern shopper.  More and more retailers are seeing consumers enter their stores, spend time looking around and then leave without making a purchase.  If retailers watch closely, they also will notice that consumers are not only looking and touching the merchandise, they are using their mobile phones to compare prices against other retail outlets.  Retailers are finding this to be a real problem, especially when consumers are comparing products found in a store-based retailer to products offered by online retailers.

Of course, many store-based retailers have a valid reason to be worried.  Here they are spending large amounts on inventory, store personnel, equipment and real estate, only to see some consumers use them only as a showroom for products since they are more likely to buy online.  This is particularly the case for more expensive products and for products consumers do not need immediately.

The trend of pricing checking using mobile devices is something most retailers saw coming.  As we noted back in 2010, “As technology continues to advance us to having instant access to almost anything, retailers are facing a host of issues with repercussions that could change how retailing is done.”

Well, those changes appear to be playing out.  Target is one of the world’s largest retailers, and they are frustrated with how consumers’ shopping behavior is changing.  According to this story, Target is going on the offense by enlisting the support of its suppliers to help fight off the so-called “showrooming” consumer by encouraging suppliers to offer unique products that are found only at Target and, thus, cannot be easily compared to products available through other retailers.  Additionally, the story discusses other ideas retailers are considering to combat the change in consumer shopping behavior.

Last week, in an urgent letter to vendors, the Minneapolis-based chain suggested that suppliers create special products that would set it apart from competitors and shield it from the price comparisons that have become so easy for shoppers to perform on their computers and smartphones.

What other strategies can store-based retailers implement that may keep customers from buying elsewhere?

Image by kevin dooley

Comments  

 
#2 mopsyd 2012-02-09 23:25
In short, retailers really cannot compete with online stores. The overhead for a physical location is immensely higher, and the costs of shipping, stocking, advertising, and staffing all take a huge bite out of profits in a way that online retailers just don't have to deal with. Short answer, until there is a high demand for a physical store to look at goods in, there really isn't anything that can be done. It would be much wiser to go with the ball than to try and fight it, perhaps becoming exactly what the store is being used for: a showroom. Keep a small stock and facilitate purchases through the companies website for local shoppers for a small nominal fee to help pad operational costs. Aside from that, the death of the retail outlet is not far down the horizon.
 
 
#1 Michael 2012-02-03 16:46
I went to Walmart today, looking to buy a USB A to USB A cord. They had one that cost $15. I went to Radio Shack and they had one for $39.95. Then I went online to Amazon and purchased one for 1 penny plus $2.99 shipping. I wonder why I bothered comparison shopping in the first place.
 

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