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Retail Revised: Adopting New Servicescapes

In-store retail is back, but with its return, there is no doubt that the way we shop, or want to shop, has changed forever. With the growth of e-commerce and the adoption of new shopping habits, retailers must act fast to create modern, in-store experiences that complement their digital presence while differentiating their offering from the saturated retail market.

Whether it’s online or in-store, revised retail strategies are crucial for brands as consumer behavior evolves. The stores of tomorrow must serve a purpose beyond that of the pure sales opportunity and transform into a destination where service, convenience, and discovery take place. In our latest ‘Retail Revised’ series we’ll be discussing key themes retailers must consider to enhance their in-store experience. This week we are exploring concepts and ideas that can enhance a brand’s service offering:

 


 

Across the retail landscape, new technology has lead the role of the physical store to shift from a static home for merchandise to a hybrid fulfillment center where shoppers can trial, order, or return items. As a result, shoppers are hungry for transparency when it comes to knowing how, when, and where to get a product as fast as possible.

Now, retailers should focus on providing tools to both shoppers and employees that provide accurate inventory tracking, seamless returns, and in-depth product information. From in-store touchpoints to handheld apps, here are a few brands that are providing enhanced services:

 

Walmart Apps

Walmart’s new store app allows customers to easily locate where products are and what’s in stock. After creating a shopping list, consumers open the app while in-store and receive maps that route to the exact locations of their chosen products. Given Walmart’s 180,000 sq. ft format, the app creates a seamless shopping experience that offers quick and easy navigation.

The brand has also introduced the new employee-facing app, Me@Walmart that answers sales assistants’ product and availability queries in-store.

Photo: Walmart

 

Bloomies by Bloomingdales

Bloomingdales latest store concept, Bloomies, created in partnership with NELSON will focus on delivering superior customer experience focused on rotating trends and a curated product collection.  The small-format store will offer stylists in departments to provide personalized service to customers. Each of the stylists will be equipped with digital selling tools that will enable them to find the right items for their customers, whether located near or far.

Photo: Bloomingdales

Photo: Bloomingdales

 

La Nouvelle Cave

Retailers are focused on acquiring resources that provide effortless and innovative experiences for both shoppers and employees.

La Nouvelle is a liquor store in Paris with a virtual sommelier. Shoppers scan a QR code with their mobile device or use in-store tablets to access advice/recommendations based on their preference. Once shoppers chose what they want, a unique color and lighting system guiding them towards the right bottle in-store.

Photo: La Nouvelle Cave

Photo: La Nouvelle Cave

 

It will be crucial for retail brands to create opportunities to better connect with their consumers – whether digital or in-store – these offerings must provide a seamless, customized experience to put shoppers on a pedestal and keep them coming back for more.

fireside MARKET Breaks Ground in Slinger, Wisconsin

Local and state dignitaries joined members of the Forest County Potawatomi community, Sagewind Development (a subsidiary of Potawatomi Ventures), NELSON Worldwide, and Windward Engineering to celebrate the groundbreaking of the first fireside MARKET in Slinger, Wisc. The market will bring high-quality, made-to-order food along with frictionless, technology-driven offerings to the community.

Part of a larger 130-acre Merchant Village development slated for the site, Sagewind is in contract for 5.1-acres to develop and open the market by Summer 2025. NELSON Worldwide, represented by Sarah Wooldrige and Rob Sullivan, is honored to be the architect of record on this project, which will play an important role in not only nourishing the surrounding community, but also creating full- and part-time jobs for area residents.

The Potawatomi are known as the “keepers of the fire” and to acknowledge the deep history of this community, our design team has specified an indoor/outdoor fireplace as a gathering place. Sustainability was also top of mind for this project, and the market will provide EV chargers, green space, recycling, local sourcing, and will incorporate solar power and skylights.

The Potawatomi tribe members opened and closed the ground breaking ceremony with a special drum circle. Check it out here.

Outside Business Journal: Inside The Grand Opening Of Public Lands

The doors opened this past weekend on the new outdoor retail concept by Dick’s Sporting Goods, Public Lands, led by industry veteran Todd Spaletto. The 50,000-square-foot store in Cranberry, Pa. (a suburb of Pittsburgh) is located in a busy shopping area, sandwiched between a Best Buy and a Walmart. The weekend-long event kicked off bright and early on Friday morning with a team pep talk by the executive chairman of Dick’s, Ed Stack. President and CEO Lauren Hobart was also in attendance to lead the store’s team in a raucous pre-opening cheer (captured below) and to support the 100+ staffers who have been working for months in preparation of the grand opening. Read the full article here.