Retail Weekโsย Stores Week 2022 event has started gathering the top worldwide retailers to speak about their retail investments, strategies, and how they see the future of stores.
For this occasion, Retail Week published the five top trends their retail expert speakers believe will soon transform brick and mortar stores:
Stores without experiential and digital elements will become redundant
Stores have to be convenient and effortless places for consumers to visit. According to Julian Beer, flagship general manager of iconic department storeย Liberty, this requires that retailers blur the line between the physical and digital shopping experience. As a result, Liberty has invested in everything from beacon technology โ which tracks a userโs movement around a shop and sends them notifications while in-store to incentivize purchases โ to interactive pop-ups complete with usable sewing machines. Beer believes retailers must design stores with CX at their core and will speak more about this at the May 12 Stores Week summit.
Stores as retail destinations and meeting places
Ingka Centres, the real-estate arm ofย Ikea, opened its Livat Hammersmith shopping centre two months ago as a space designed for communities to โmeet, eat, spend time and experience new thingsโ. Speaking ahead of her appearance at theย May 11 virtual masterclass, Natalia Petalina, Livat meeting place manager, indicated that early footfall had been โgoodโ with โpeople spending more time on siteโ than they would at a typical shopping centre or Ikea store. She believes retailers can no longer afford to rely on consumers using stores for transactional purchases and they must adapt to become meeting places for shoppers to socialise and meet with friends as a secondary purpose to their shopping trip.
Retailers should bet on new formats
Retailers and brands have been trialling big and smaller box formats in their droves โ fromย Poundlandย with its larger-store formats and Nisa with its relaunched small Local proposition to the aforementioned Ikea. It is a trend that Caroline Crosswell, chief retail and development officer at cycling brand Rapha, believes is here to stay. In 2021, Rapha reopened its flagship store, the London Clubhouse, complete with a bigger product range, on-site personal shopping service, upgraded fitting rooms and a cycling exhibition centre alongside its cafe. Crosswell will speak at theย Stores Week summitย about how she feels retailers should be innovating and investing in new store formats and flexible bases.
Tie-ups will be essential to get in front of consumers
Shop-in-shop partnerships are nothing new but, as retailer collaboration improves, we can expect to see greater store tie-ups, such as concessions, in a bid to reach more customers. This is a view shared byย Mamas & Papasย chief executive Mark Saunders, whose business has seen success in partnering withย Next. Having originally entered into a concession partnership in 2018 at Nextโs store at Cribbs Causeway, Bristol, in 2021, the nursery retailer announced further openings including Nextโs store at Brent Cross shopping centre and Milton Keynes Central retail park, taking its total to five. At theย Stores Week virtual masterclass, Saunders will share the rate of ROI from the tie-up and why physical retail remains an important part of the businessโ multichannel strategy.
Store-based fulfillment will be the normย
It is not just Petalina and Crosswell that believe stores must become multi-purpose.ย B&Qย strategy and development director Chris Bargate is among the retail leaders who see the opportunity in stores as fulfilment centres. Following a trend that was cemented during the pandemic when many retailers had to adapt their stores to cater to soaring online sales, businesses such as B&Q are using shops as part of their delivery networks. As of March 2021, 20% (60) of B&Qโs stores were being used for store picking. The retailer has also been testing same-day delivery and click-and-collect lockers. Bargate will speak at theย Stores Week summitย about B&Qโs new online marketplace and plans to cater to third-party returns in-store.
For more information on Retail Week click here.