Multichannel shoppers spend nearly twice as much on goods and services as their single-channel counterparts, but they are also more astute about pricing and most likely to purchase from multiple retailers, according to (pdf) a study from Opinion Research Corporation (ORC), writes MarketingCharts.
Customers who use more than a single channel to interact with an organization - shopping online as well as in a company’s store, for example - are becoming increasingly challenging for retailers, who need to spend more marketing and customer-service dollars to retain them, ORC said. (See chart of consumer competitive spend, single vs. multi-channel usage).
“Multichannel retailing is growing at a rate of approximately 30 percent a year in transaction value, and the way customers use these channels is rapidly expanding,” said Jill Glathar, PhD, vp and director of the market planning and development practice at ORC. “The assumption that multi-channel consumers are loyal and profitable is not necessarily true.” (View spend vs. loyalty chart.)
Consumers’ multichannel use varies by industry. The retailers that have had the most success implementing multichannel strategies include big-box organizations Borders and Home Depot (17 percent); mass merchants such as Wal-Mart and Target (16 percent); department stores (14 percent); and restaurants (11 percent) - view chart.
Other survey findings:
About the survey: The telephone survey was conducted April 10-14, 2008 by ORC among 1,090 respondents.
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