Saturday, May 18, 2019

Showrooming

There is a hot puzzle for retailers these days, its called, showrooming. According to the Wall Street Journals article, Can Retailers Halt Showrooming, their definition of this term is, shoppers who scope prohibited merchandise in stores but buy on rivals websites, usually at a lower price. As stated in the article, Today half of shoppers who buy products online first checked them out in a traditional store, according to a recent study of 900 shoppers by Minneapolis-based research firm ClickIQ Inc.While the volume of survey respondents favored Target and Wal-Mart stores for researching merchandise, half of the online consumers wound up making their purchases on Amazon. So the problem many retailers are facing is trying to keep their customers from going to cheaper online alternatives. Many retailers are starting to hunt down for new ideas, some are dropping the price of their online stores 1% to 2%, others are trying to wreak with their suppliers to make their products exclus ive to their stores, and a few are encouraging clerks to refer shoppers to their online stores when they cannot find the item.Using this article managers may now understand why they seem to be losing profits in their stores. So the neighboring step for the managers would be to figure out why shoppers are not buying from them. As a manager, I would take a look at our prices compared to the online stores and figure out some incentives to keep our customers. I would start with coupons, rebates, and price matching programs.I would push to make our items more exclusive to our stores, and for the online shoppers, offer relieve basic shipping and more online deals and selections. I would push for ways to make shopping more pleasurable in the store with exceptional customer service, a knowledgable sales staff, next day store pickup truck for out of stock items, and a clean and friendly shopping environment.

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