Go


 
Top Drop Shadow
 
High tech, high touch future for stores
Printer Friendly Version  Email A Friend  Add This

High tech, high touch future for stores
Posted Date: 01/05/2012
By Jon Bird


The son of a mate of mine got his first iPad the other day. He’s 19 months old.

Granted it’s a first generation iPad (probably about the same vintage as its new owner come to think of it), but it’s an iPad nonetheless. Interestingly, the toddler learned his first language – baby sign language – from an app on the Apple tablet.

My friend’s little boy might not have any purchasing power right now, but he is the customer of the near future. And when using technology comes as naturally as breathing, he’s going to expect a very different experience from physical retail stores.

Already, we’re starting to see retailers incorporate far more technology and interactive elements into their store designs. I wrote earlier this year about the trend to 'Mashops' and 'Digitail' – “mashing up” technology with bricks and mortar so that it becomes difficult to tell where the store ends and the web begins and vice versa. I said that we will see more “endless aisles” in-store (terminals to allow customers to shop the web if they can’t find what they need on the rack), immersive and interactive digital experiences, checkouts on your smartphone, iPad enabled shop assistants and more.

It’s happening. And fast.

Bloomingdale’s in NYC has replaced six of its traditional window displays with interactive sunglasses shops. LCD screens with cameras identify the position of your eyes and superimpose different sunglasses on your image. When you like what you see, you can select a print button, which sends a picture of yourself wearing the glasses to the Bloomingdale’s “Sunglass Style bar” inside.



Top-end US department store Neiman Marcus has an iPhone app that takes service to another level. You can choose to automatically alert a sales associate when you enter the store, or you can browse first and then hit a button to summon help. The app lets the sales assistant see your shopping history, and uses a Facebook photograph to help recognise shoppers. The app also allows customers to scan QR codes on signs through the store to access the latest trends and product information.

UK department store John Lewis is trialing augmented reality, enabling customers to try clothes on virtually, via two StyleMe mirrors. Customers can stand in front of the mirror and select from 500 different outfits to create a virtual collection, which they can use to make a decision then and there, or opt to have their selections emailed to them.

Nike has launched a “FuelStation” store bristling with technology at Shoreditch in London, which features interactive avatars, digital signage and augmented reality iPads. 




In Australia, we’ve also seen technology embraced by the likes of Westfield with its innovative iPhone app, which puts the shopping centre in the palm of your hand, plus OPSM at their EyeHub flagship in Melbourne with interactive smart mirrors similar to Bloomingdale’s.

Apple Stores, unsurprisingly, were at the forefront of the trend, and still offer a view of where things are headed. They were first to market with mobile POS units; “line busting” technology that allows shoppers to checkout without going to the checkout. And Apple is in front again with their use of iPads for digital signage in store, that let customers get more detailed information, compare products, explore alternatives, and hit a button to call up human help.

There are some bad examples of 'Digitail' too. Piers Fawkes wrote recently in PSFK about the “greeter” hologram that shouts at shoppers as they enter a New York City branch of the US pharmacy chain Duane Reade. As Fawkes wryly noted, “I don’t how much a virtual sales person costs, but I’m sure it’s a lot more than a real one does”.

All of this will be laughably crude to my friend’s little boy. He’ll expect digital to be woven into the very fabric of the store design, so that it is not obvious but always there. As screen technology improves, every surface, down to the label in a garment will be responsive to the touch… offering more information, assistance and advice.

In a touch-screen world, however, the customer of the future will still look forward to the “high touch” experience of great service. In my mind, it’s a matter of striking the right balance between high tech and high touch.

Jon Bird heads up specialist retail marketing agency IdeaWorks, and is Chairman of Octomedia, publisher of Inside Retail. Email Jon.   Blog: www.newretailblog.com Twitter: @thetweetailer
Your Name:
Your Email:
Recipient Email:
Your Comments:
Word Verification:
Word Verification
 
Comments:

Thursday, May 03, 2012 by Tony
Burberry is also doing some amazing work bringing digital media into the store to create a digital arena in the retail space.
http://uk.burberry.com/store/experiences/events#/taipei-101/video

Tony
T: @Sizemikk

Leave your comment
CAPTCHA Validation
CAPTCHA
Code:
Please note: all comments are subject to moderation for legal reasons and to prevent spam. We'll approve your comment as quickly as we can. If you don't see it appear you do not need to repost it.


Related news
 
QLD reviewing shop actRetailers welcome government review into the Retail Shop Leases Act.
Male fashion's new guardAustralian fashion retail becoming subtly more masculine, as new guard of local brands set up shop. 
Sentinel acquires Hunter Supa Centre Brisbane-based property group continues interstate expansion following NSW acquisition.
French icon's new eraLuxury fashion icon unveils first flagship store since undergoing controversial rebrand and name change. 
 
 
Follow us  TwitterRSS Feeds

Australian Retail Chain Directory

LOG IN HERE


BUY HERE



Editors Picks
EXCLUSIVE FIRST LOOK: Open for businessEXCLUSIVE FIRST LOOK: Open for business
Williams-Sonoma, Pottery Barn, Pottery Barn Kids, and West Elm open the doors on their first Aust...
Rollercoaster ride isn't over yetRollercoaster ride isn't over yet
Many retailers will see a light at the end of the tunnel in 2013, but shouldn't hope for a miracl...
Visual spectacularVisual spectacular
First impressions can be lasting, and quality VM can say volumes about a retail store before a cu...
The new luxuryThe new luxury
Baffled by fashion? French fashion consultant Jean Jacques Picart can simplify it for you.
Giving backGiving back
While some department stores are struggling, Britain's John Lewis is an example of one getting it...
The perfect stormThe perfect storm
Retailers will face further pain as the impact of global fast fashion giants entering the Austral...

Top Drop Shadow