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When experience defines how consumers buy, what will retailers sell?

The metaverse is emerging as a new space for retailers, bridging the physical and virtual worlds to deliver new shopping experiences.


In brief

  • Consumers expect a retail environment that delivers consistency across their physical and digital experiences.
  • Retailers need to embrace a new channel model, that uses data to blend experiences around the consumer, in any context.

Findings from the EY Future Consumer Index have shown how the pandemic has accelerated some fundamental changes in consumer buying behavior:

  • Forty-four percent plan to consolidate shopping trips and shop less frequently.
  • Thirty-six percent will do more of their shopping online and only visit stores that provide great experiences.
  • Forty-three percent will shop more at local, small businesses.

What will the pandemic’s legacy be for retailers? Essentially, it’s the creation of an environment where consumers want consistency across their physical and digital shopping experiences, without differentiating between them.

We can see this mindset playing out every day. If a consumer feels comfortable walking into a store and browsing, they still want to be able to do so. Or if they want to order online and have their items delivered at home, to work, or to click-and-collect them. Or to do social shopping on Instagram. Or any combination of these options.

It’s a world of endless choices that span channels and buying experiences — a world where bricks and mortar has a role, the online store has a role, and neither will fully replace the other. Consumers don’t see these channels as separate or distinct, just as different aspects of their everyday life.

However, for retailers and brands, a new frontier is opening up — the metaverse is starting to emerge as a new space capable of bridging the physical and virtual worlds to deliver completely different experiences.

    Welcome to the “metachannel”

    Retailers looking to win with the consumer must create new value for their customers, beyond just selling them something. Future retail spaces will become a genuine blend of physical and digital, and consumers will want a compelling, experience-driven reason to go there.

    Retailers can achieve this by going beyond an “omnichannel” strategy— being present everywhere, to embrace a new “metachannel” strategy — being integrated everywhere. It’s a model where retailers stop thinking in a polarized way about distinct digital and physical channels or experiences— using data to reimagine, integrate, coordinate and blend experiences around the consumer, in whatever context the interaction takes place. The result is that physical and digital spaces work together to create experiences that deliver far more value than a single channel can by itself, to the point where the distinction becomes meaningless.

    But some things won’t change. In all spaces, retailers will continue to curate brand experiences to generate demand for goods and services. Whether the interactions are physical or digital, retailers must create spaces that people will visit. Market share and share of wallet are increasingly giving way to share of attention. If people or algorithms aren't going there and engaging, the business will fail. The metaverse is only adding to the need to compete for consumers’ attention by creating a space they will choose to visit — and purchase in — depending on their mindset, moment in life and the experience on offer.

    How physical spaces could be reimagined

    With the pandemic having boosted online buying and home delivery, physical retail spaces’ traditional role is declining in importance and will never return to where it was. So, bricks-and-mortar outlets need to be able to fulfil another purpose that’s every bit as relevant in attracting shoppers.

    The solution is for retailers to create flexible, multifunctional physical spaces that showcase products that can be bought through any channel and also host a range of different services and events — any or all of which may make consumers want to visit, stay and purchase. Be it community events, leisure, workspaces, lifestyle, sports, learning — there are a host of possibilities. The common thread connecting them is that they fulfil a need, add purpose and deliver unique experiences to keep the retail space relevant, vibrant and an attractive place to be.

    This is an important transition in how physical space can create value. Retailers must take a holistic view on the role that their space can play in the communities that they serve and the experience they can deliver. Get the purpose and experience right for the individual consumer, and the shopping transaction becomes a by-product of being in the space. There are already many instances of retailers successfully creating this effect, for example, the House of VANS skateparks, Nike Unite community stores or the grocery retailers around the world that are hosting cookery classes in-store.

    How digital spaces will be reimagined

    If that’s the future for physical spaces, what about their digital counterparts? The reimagination of digital retail spaces follows the same principle: giving people a reason to visit and spend time there.

    This is already happening, as consumers’ online shopping behaviors evolve hand-in-hand with the proliferation of digital choices and experiences open to them. Witness the rising take-up of social shopping, squad shopping, shoppable streaming, Instagram buying, in-game purchases and more.

    All of these behaviors demonstrate the act of buying online transforming into an experience that is embedded in other activities. Put simply, the right experience will mean that people are so immersed and engaged that they don’t really feel like they’re shopping at all. It’s a set of dynamics and experiences completely unrecognizable from the early days of online retail.

    How retailers will realize the full potential of the metaverse

    An experience that’s a little further away is a three-dimensional virtual realm where people interact through digital avatars. The metaverse presents both exciting opportunities and profound questions. We are still at the early, experimental stage of seeing retailing in the metaverse. In many ways, despite the excitement it has caused in the media, the metaverse remains a largely alien concept to most consumers. To those few who have engaged, it represents playful, brand experiences rather than a fundamentally different approach to shopping. The metaverse feels like an exclusive club for people to trade non-fungible tokens, or branded 3D spaces that replicate physical stores in a digital environment.

    Retailers grappling with refitting dated store layouts for a post-COVID-19 consumer, or addressing bounce rates, payment bugs and last mile costs for their ecommerce platforms may see a niche conceptual digital space as little more than a distraction. However, the need to invest and experiment now could prove crucial as the metaverse develops in the coming months, years and decades. Just as the internet evolved from a pixelated novelty to be an integral part of everyday life, the metaverse has the potential to completely transform the way we shop.

    The development of the metaverse will raise and potentially resolve some very important questions for retailers, such as:

    • What will a retail experience look like in a distributed 3D immersive digital space?
    • How will assortments balance between physical and digital products?
    • How will value propositions evolve as digital and physical worlds become more blended?

    Currently, many virtual stores are reflections of physical stores, offering the chance to explore and fill a basket up just as you would in the real world. This approach will change as innovative new use cases begin to emerge and reshape engagement.

    There are three stages of opportunity for retailers in this fast-evolving space: 

    1. Acting as gateways to brand discovery

    In a space such as the metaverse, retailers may be trusted to act as curators for consumers across a range of brands, enabling chance discoveries without overwhelming the customer. This is not a radical departure from how many retailers operate both physically and online today. But it demonstrates that they can still achieve relevance by creating the right experience around products and services; offering customers choice; and granting brands access to customers.

    2. Extending their virtual worlds

    Retailers can build out their presence in the metaverse by using virtual spaces to drive gamified, social or event-driven shopping, where the transaction becomes the secondary by-product to the experience. Imagine shopping as a digital treasure hunt or as a live-streamed event. Brands have opened virtual stores in mass multiplayer online games to tap into their growing popularity, and many are increasingly blurring the boundaries between selling physical and digital products in the metaverse. In fact, restaurant chains are already exploring the opportunity of allowing people to buy a virtual meal in a virtual restaurant while having a real one delivered to their door at the same time.

    3. Becoming co-creators

    Retailers and brands can begin to work together with consumers to create a blend of experience and product that bridges physical and digital spaces. This opportunity remains largely untested, but as consumers start to use the metaverse to design and create their own digital products, retailers can collaborate with brands and manufacturers to convert these into physical goods. Equally, retailers and brands can work together to deliver entirely personalized branded experiences that use augmented reality (AR) overlays to enhance physical products and spaces. Much of this remains a long way off, but as it takes shape, it raises profound questions about intellectual property, data and cyber risks, brand protection and, more fundamentally, the way that value is created for consumers, brands and retailers. 

    The changing role of the retailer

    This heralds a new world of retail experiences for consumers. But the implications for the companies selling to them are equally game-changing. Because whether you look at the physical space, digital space or the blending of the two, some fundamental – and likely permanent – shifts are underway in the age-old relationship between retailers and brands.

    Throughout history, retailers have been the gatekeepers for brands’ access to the consumer. But now this relationship is morphing at pace, as the future value proposition of retail pivots to the attention economy. The core of this new proposition relies on selling a curated brand experience to the consumer – an activity that in turn benefits the brand.

    This could have a profound effect on the way that retailers create value. One option may be that rather than selling brands to consumers, the retailer could sell consumers to brands. This could mean that consumers themselves increasingly become the product on which the retailer’s business model is based.

    The shift from relying on product margin

    This reversal of how retailers create value completely subverts their traditional business models. It means they’ll need to expand their sole focus away from retail margin to a wider range of revenue streams.

    As they combine their capabilities in new ways, retailers have the potential to become portfolio businesses. They could transition from a point-of-sale (POS) portfolio business to one which has multiple profitability sources – some marginal and some not. Over time, only a few lines will relate to product margin and they will have a mix of physical and virtual assets, retail, non-retail, products, advertising and data-driven business models or revenue streams ­– a portfolio with components that are mutually supporting, and which needs to be sustainable and profitable overall.

    This recalibration raises a host of possibilities. Will a retailer look to make money from selling the product to the consumer? Or should that transaction be zero-margin, realizing value instead from the consumer data they have gathered through loyalty programs, for example, which may be worth more to the brand than a one-off sale?

    By the same token, an individual component of the portfolio – say the bricks-and-mortar stores – might not be profitable on a stand-alone basis but may be contributing inputs, such as data and relationships, that support the profitability of the other components. So, it’s worth keeping in the mix.

    This will work if retailers focus on where they can add value. Leading retailers have several inherent core capabilities – consumer relationships, consumer data, physical spaces, people, online properties, real estate and so on. They need to ensure they have the digital capabilities needed to bring these components together to manage their IP, their back-end systems as well as cybersecurity. They now need to rethink how they can combine and leverage those capabilities to unlock the greatest value for themselves, their customers and their brand partners.

    Forget stores, focus on space

    For retailers to navigate the future in a world which is changing rapidly and often unexpectedly, they will need to stop confining their channel strategies to “stores” and “e-commerce.” Instead, they will frame their channel approach holistically around “spaces.” These could comprise physical, digital, virtual or blended spaces which will all come together to deliver a “metachannel” perspective.

    Here are three key imperatives for retailers to consider as they develop this strategy:

    1. Take a systemic approach to understand the value your spaces can bring

    Traditional KPIs, such as sales per square meter, are no longer an indication of the value a space can bring your business. Retailers are familiar with this concept and have used loss leaders for decades as drivers of footfall into their stores. Now they must go a step further and consider the value that a space brings to their business holistically. A store might not make any money, but the value of the data it generates might bring in alternative revenue streams. Similarly, a presence in the metaverse might be a costly distraction, but it could be laying a foundation for a much stronger opportunity that could safeguard the profitability of physical spaces tomorrow.

    2. Don’t anchor, experiment

    For too long, the experiences that retailers offer have been framed by their core business of selling products to people. Now retailers can decouple that relationship and explore transforming experiences in ways that are only constrained by their imagination and budget. That’s not to suggest that retailers should invest in major loss-driving concepts, but they should also step outside their comfort zone now to see how they could be done if given a blank slate.

    3. Understand what you are selling and who you are selling it to

    The retailers of today buy products from brands and sell them to customers. In that value chain, they are little more than transactional intermediaries. This may have worked for hundreds of years, but it may not work forever. One option may be for the retailers of tomorrow to be selling their consumer insights back to brands either through data or through commission on the products they sell. They may be selling services, time, events or experiences back to consumers. In considering how they make best use of their space retailers must also consider how it can create the most value for everyone.


    Summary

    The pandemic has accelerated many changes in consumer buying behavior, resulting in people no longer differentiating between where they shop, but simply shopping in ways that are convenient to them, wherever they are in their day. As a result, retailers need to focus on delivering a consistent, connected customer experience, that’s integrated across all their channels and gives people a reason to visit and spend time there. Whether that place is in a physical store, online, or in the metaverse, making it an integrated experience and measuring its performance overall will ultimately deliver far more value to customers and retailers.

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