Selective Consumption and the Retail sector
The Retail sector in Australia is slowing coming to grips with the fact that for the past 50 years, they’ve had a captured market and enormous profit margins. and that now, the times have changed. Whilst many point to the internet as a cause of their woes, others are pointing out the apparent high cost of labour as a major concern. Both of those issues are more or less out of the control of the sector and I would argue have only some influence of the retail sector. Yet what fascinates me is how few retailers (of all sizes) seem to be aware of the fundamental shift in the buying behaviours of consumers, and the implications for the retail sector:
Selective consumption is a relatively new term that depicts a more discerning consumer less able to be swayed by big seasonal sales or large discount offerings. The Big Retailers in Australia seem to have ignored the shift in consume mindset. This is IS where te internet has played a shaping role. When there is always a sale on somewhere in the world, the perceived value of a ‘big sale’ period drops dramatically. Yet many retailers still rely on this model of ever diminishing value.
Nowadays, ‘Big Sales’ work for exclusive customer sets – those clientele that have been nurtured and developed over time with limited run or high end offerings. The Big Box stores just feed into the core asset of Internet purchases when doing their big sales. The urgency factor when an offer is on for everyone no longer cuts it.
Selective consumption also means a better informed consumer. This is where the internet is an asset, not a competitor, yet once again we hear retailers complaining that shoppers don’t buy like they used to – in other words, they’re no longer the captive audience able to be fleeced with exhorbitant mark ups. But the true challenge for retailers now is that they fail to match what te internet offers by way of information, on the shop floor. Poorly trained staff (when you can find staff) offer no value to either the customer or the business. The consumer, looking for assistance and a reason to buy gets neither. A lack of knowledge of shop floor staff exacerbates the sense of lack of service and consumers are saying ‘well if I get no service in the store, I might as well have no service on line and at least buy at a lower cost’. The cost of labour isn’t a problem – it’s the cost of poorly trained staff that is a HUGE problem
Finally the internet allows customer to price shop. This is also a potential asset for retailers who instead, complain about needing to ‘match’ prices. The answer is so simple it’s gobsmacking that few retailers are doing something about it – bundling products. This makes price pointing more of a challenge, allows flexibility in margin spreads and attracts shoppers who want a more complete solution to their needs.
Oh and one last thought – the two biggest challenges for the retail sector are not high cost of labour and the internet. It’s an unwillingness to evolve the business model and high cost of floor space – rents, not labour is what kills a business. Poor labour (untrained) just exacerbates that problem, and the Internet exposes the high cost of shops, for what they are – white elephants
In parts of the world it’s Christmas day, a time for excusing your retail spending on a ‘worthy cause’. Which is fun in some ways and delusional in others 🙂 Don’t allow my grinchness deter you from enjoying today. As for me, I’m delighted that a) my present was wrapped in old newspaper and b)…
Read More >Part of being effective as a futurist is being able to assess potential issues and their impact over time. The Victorian State Election is on this Saturday and though many say that State elections have little bearing on issues we face, our system means that the fluctuations at a Federal level are often countered by…
Read More >‘m wrapped to be acting as EmCee for the third year in a row at Blackwood 8’s Celebration of Hope event, raising money to find a Cure for Brain Cancer. And delighted that the event has sold out. But fret not – you can still bid for some great auction items online or make a…
Read More >The major party in Australia’s dual party Government, the Liberal Party, has removed their leader Tony Abbott, replacing him with the previous leader, Malcolm Turnbull. PM designate Turnbull may be inclined to spend the first few days appeasing and reassuring his party members that everything will be okay. And that would be a mistake. Public…
Read More >When I look at my overall client types, it seems to me that I have two main types of client. The first is a client that has a good business and is generally successful and wants a futurist to help keep them ahead of emerging issues and opportunities. The second main client type is one…
Read More >As a consultant, one of the great puzzles I consistently discover is the mindset many clients hold with regard to their own abilities to conceive of and pursue, their own approach to futures thinking. I know this is not an issues restricted to futurists as where some clients have a ‘not invented here’ approach to…
Read More >I’m going to come back to an idea I first floated back in 2004. By and large it is hard to change societal perceptions. Doing so requires on going effort, time and often resources like money to create marketing campaigns of some description. Unless you have a crisis. And right now it might be fair…
Read More >Whilst I appreciate the efforts that Greenpeace, Sea Shepherd and the various Australian Governments have given regarding their aims to have the Japanese cease their annual whale harvests, I’m not quite sure they are tackling the issue through the best means available. Sure the confrontational approach of ramming ships, climbing aboard vessels, getting in the…
Read More >I’ve just read an article about Corporate Visions and getting employees on the same page. And as happens so often, I shook my head because it offered the same flawed advice about what a leader needs to do to get their employees to buy into the Vision. And therein lays the fatal flaw You CANNOT…
Read More >As the drought in California continues to bite hard on the lives of millions, a recent article on Triple Pundit suggested that many people want to help save water, they just don’t know what else to do. Which is why California needs to look beyond its borders to the driest inhabited continent on the planet…
Read More >