What is Omni-Channel Retail?
How to give shoppers a seamless, consistent experience wherever they engage with your brand.
By Lauren Wallace
How to give shoppers a seamless, consistent experience wherever they engage with your brand.
By Lauren Wallace
Convenience and flexibility are the dynamic duo of retail shopping — and omni-channel retailing takes these concepts to new heights. Here’s what omni-channel retail looks like to customers: If a shopper adds an item to their basket on desktop, they can purchase the same item later on their mobile app — without having to search for the merchandise all over again. If a customer wants to purchase an item online, but pick it up at a nearby store instead of waiting for it to deliver? Omni-channel retail can make that happen, too.
As customer expectations rise, a smooth shopping journey is no longer a nice-to-have. Seventy-four per cent of customers expect to be able to do anything online that they can do in-person or by phone. Not only should channels be aligned, but customers are also looking for consistency across their sales, service and marketing interactions: currently, a whopping 79% of customers expect consistent interactions across departments.
Omni-channel retailing is a model in which shoppers can interact with multiple physical and digital sales channels at once and have their information retained by the retailer as they move between them. This enables truly asynchronous shopping: Customers can resume their transaction wherever they left off, even if it’s much later on a new channel. Essentially, omni-channel retail provides a seamless, consistent shopping experience wherever a customer engages with your brand.
Omni-channel retailing allows your customers to browse on a desktop, compare prices on a mobile device, then visit your brick-and-mortar location to finalise a purchase — all without having to restart their customer journey. This links together all channels, combining your physical shop front with your website, retail app and social media channels to create a single, unified experience.
Omni-channel retail strives to unify several separate channels, whereas multichannel retail is made up of disparate (and often siloed) operations for each platform. The key difference between the two models is that omni-channel retail involves integration, while multichannel retail does not. Let’s look at examples of each to get a clearer picture.
In a multichannel model, a retailer will list the same products on (you guessed it!) multiple different channels. This can include ecommerce websites, social media, mobile apps and more. If an apparel brand uses a multichannel model, this gives shoppers more choices about where to purchase shoes and shirts, but doesn’t provide for any connection between them. Every channel is starting the conversation fresh. That’s where omni-channel retail comes in.
A brand that uses an omni-channel model also sells the same products across all platforms, but the customer can switch between channels without having to repeat or re-enter information, search for the same items again or create a new profile. The unification of the entire experience creates a smooth customer journey — with none of the frustrations or hiccups of a multichannel model.
Is a consistent customer experience really that important? In a word, yes. In fact, consumers’ #1 frustration with organisations is disconnected experiences. Customers demand speed, personalisation and convenience — and if they don’t get it, they’ll shop somewhere else. Seventy-four per cent of shoppers would ditch a retailer after just three bad experiences.
Omni-channel retail helps brands put customer experience at the centre of all they do. With a customer-centric approach that spans all channels, brands can create experiences that are
Omni-channel retail and unified commerce solutions can help your business turn every visitor into an engaged, satisfied, loyal customer — no matter which channel they prefer for browsing or purchase.
Now that omni-channel retail has taken the main stage, brands are experimenting with new ways to differentiate their experiences and push the envelope. Omni-channel trends are already emerging.
The rise of social commerce: The concept of selling products on social media has been around for years. Instagram introduced a shopping feature in 2016. However, social buying has hit an all-time high. In 2020, orders generated from social referrals were up a record 104% year over year. It’s estimated that the social commerce opportunity will reach $1.2 trillion by 2025.
Brands optimise in-store service: With a single view of customer activity across digital, social and more, sales associates can offer personalised, data-based service tailored to each shopper. They can identify a customer’s shopping habits, provide personalised recommendations and access inventory from any location — including online — to help shoppers find exactly what they’re looking for.
The line blurs between physical and digital spaces: Digital and physical channels are continuing to merge into one connected shopping experience. For example, 60% of shoppers have researched a product online using a mobile device while in store, a significant share have scanned a QR code while shopping..
As more brands enter the realm of omni-channel retail and explore innovative ways to engage customers anywhere, any time, on any device, the customer journey will continue to grow more complex. Brands need a decisive omni-channel strategy to stay ahead.
Make sure there are no dead ends for your customers — only green lights. When creating an omni-channel strategy, make sure to put yourself in the customer’s shoes as they navigate all different touchpoints. Is every channel optimised to put the customer at the heart of the experience?
Choose a solution that helps you to create compelling experiences on desktop and mobile. Bonus points if your vendor provides consistent updates to help you stay ahead of the curve. The right solutions will help you to create mobile shopping interfaces that scale naturally to various screen sizes, give you options to include push notifications and location-specific offers and simplify customer checkouts with auto-fill forms and single-touch payments.
Decide which tools you’ll use to track shopper activity as customers move from channel to channel. The most powerful tools will offer a 360-degree view of each customer along with real-time insights as shoppers move through the journey from discovery to delivery. With in-the-moment information about every customer and every channel, you can scale automation and personalisation and create operational efficiencies.
Launching a single retail channel is hard enough. Setting up multiple channels with a consistent user experience across the board? That’s a tall order. Here are some common hurdles brands face when making the move to omni-channel retail.
Channel conflicts: New channels, by definition, have no sales history to help commerce leaders forecast demand, proper inventory levels or possible disruptions. While that is a challenge in itself, it can also lead to forced prioritisation of one channel over another or conflicts between channels. To overcome this obstacle, retailers can take a minimum viable product approach when building new ecommerce experiences. This allows you to test the market, collect feedback from customers and properly forecast for the future.
Data, data, data: Think of all the information a retailer must collect to bring truly connected experiences to life. They need to identify the shopping habits of customers, inventory details across each location, usage details and analytics by channel and more. The best way to do this? Use tools that ensure ownership over first-party data so you can easily — and quickly — uncover the right insights. After collecting all the data, commerce leaders need to decide on a data strategy that puts customers at the centre.
The logistics whirlwind: Most brands already know that adding new channels can expand their reach. But managing all the orders that roll in from your website, social media and app? That’s another story. Inventory visibility, order management and logistics become more complex with every additional channel. Retailers need an integrated system across all of them — online and in store — to give shoppers the power and flexibility to choose how and when orders are delivered, where they are delivered and how they might be returned.
The good news? A unified commerce platform can help you to tackle these challenges and take your brand to new heights. The right solution will integrate commerce with your CRM, unify data across channels and streamline order management.
To earn the loyalty of more customers, you need a single, comprehensive solution that unifies all aspects of commerce. Salesforce Commerce Cloud integrates the world’s #1 CRM with store innovations, distributed inventory management, cross-channel data integration and a rich set of capabilities across mobile, social and web.
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