Showing posts with label e-commerce. Show all posts
Showing posts with label e-commerce. Show all posts

Monday, 25 March 2013

Blockbuster, Jessops, HMV... but who's next? WHSmith, we're coming for you

Guest post by Alice Baker, Account Manager at Westgate Communications 

It was a tragic day and a clear sign of the times when a British institution like Blockbuster finally shut it’s doors. I’ll never forget the day my mum took me into the store to purchase Beauty and the Beast (a classic I might add) on VIDEO for my Birthday; something she had to pre-order because it wasn’t available elsewhere. Clearly, I’m showing my age, but the memory still makes a distinctive point - we needed Blockbuster in our lives. Disney is very important to a five year-old.

Fast forward twenty years and I enter that famous store again, this time for another classic: Reservoir Dogs. “Sorry, we don’t have it” the shop assistant replied. Angered by her indignation, her shrug, and by the fact there were 47 useless copies of Bridget Jones’ Diary strewn around the store, I realised Blockbuster had finally become disillusioned by what its customers wanted. It was also clear that I no longer needed the store; for Disney or Tarantino, it didn’t matter. Streaming became the way forward and quite honestly, I’ve never looked back.

A dissatisfied customer I may be, but the point that it makes is that in the last five years the consumer power of our UK high-streets has now shifted from retailer to customer. Blockbuster no longer had what I needed - availability of films, knowledgeable staff etc. - so I went elsewhere.  Understanding what your customer needs and what your USP is, is essential for maintaining customer loyalty. Adapting your retail channel to suit these needs is also vital because consumers appreciate retailers being considerate to their needs.

So who’s next to go? I’m hedging my bets - or should I say hopes - on WH Smith. Here is a store which epitomises all of the issues above. It’s expensive, it has no USP - does it sell books, sweet or arts and crafts materials? And the staff seem adamant on selling me a giant bar of Dairy Milk every time I purchase a lottery ticket. The staff are generally unfriendly and mostly unhelpful and their website seems to offer the same service too as its far from intuitive; so why oh why has it survived at the forefront of British retailing for so long?

As digital books sales with the likes of Amazon and Kobo continue to rise how much longer can WH look to hold on?

Friday, 29 January 2010

High ground for brands in a W-shaped recession

This is my first blog post for a few weeks, because I've been busy. I've actually been busier with pitches than I've been for more than a year. And quite evidently I am not alone. There's something in the water I think.

It's generally at this time of year that the pitches for the new year are well out of the way. We used to win our big accounts either just before Christmas or just before the other financial year starts in April. This year is different for us, and we've seen a surge in pitch work for eCRM actually happening in January. We think there's a logical explanation for this, and it comes down to the great typographical recession debate that's been going on for the past few months: is this a U, V or W-shaped recession?

If you are a marketer, then the past year of austerity has probably been quite trying. Selection for auditable marketing – eCRM and DM while a no brainer for some, has been held up by (respectively) lack of experience and expense. ECRM is cheap and responsive, works beautifully for retail and FMCG, and generates monetary returns, but very few companies have done it so in times of restriction and risk aversion new forays were rare. DM is proven and runs on the same principles as eCRM, but it's extremely expensive and lumberingly slow (not to mention impossible to port directly to digital because it requires native digital community experience). The most logical path for marketers has therefore been difficult to take.

But a year without engaging consumers with either big budget media or small budget retention marketing is dangerous. Smaller nimbler brands can operate with startup mentality and gain a disproportionate step up. A year after budgets stopped, a year during which eCRM has proven itself with spectacular achievements for foresightful adopters, marketing budget holders are facing a situation where we're either in recovery having reached the other side of the V or U, or at the very least on a temporary island in the middle of the W.

It's time to re-engage with customers and at the very least reinvigorate relationships with them. If it's the W then there's a window of opportunity. If we're out of recession (and personally I find it difficult to believe there won't be a backwash from the debt that's been stacked up to facilitate quantitative easing – let alone the poke in the eye that repairing the country's potholes is about to deliver), then it's time to spend. And clients are doing just that. Cautiously to be sure, and only on things that can be proven to work.

Marketers have been dabbling in eCRM. It's now time to take the plunge. The worst that can happen is that it does turn out to be W-shaped, but brands will have reconnected with customers at a critical time to ensure they stay brand loyal during the next leg of hardship. The best that can happen is that the process of spinning up extraordinary loyalty early means a spectacular resurgence in sales.