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Retail’s mojo is back — and online

The eco­nom­ic recov­ery has helped UK con­sumer con­fi­dence rise once again, send­ing retail sales vol­umes up by a daz­zling 6.9 per cent in April, the high­est year-on-year jump for almost a decade, accord­ing to the Office for Nation­al Sta­tis­tics.

How­ev­er, the more telling fig­ure was the 13.3 per cent rise in the amount spent with online retail­ers com­pared with April last year. E‑commerce is far from a new phe­nom­e­non, but with online now account­ing for about £1 in every £5 spent on non-food items in the UK, every retail­er, no mat­ter what their size, needs a strat­e­gy for deal­ing with this struc­tur­al change.

For gen­er­al retail­ers with a large num­ber of bricks-and-mor­tar stores, the rise of online is mak­ing it more dif­fi­cult to main­tain their prof­itabil­i­ty. That has result­ed in unvi­able out­lets being closed or relo­cat­ed and few­er new stores open­ing as “show­room­ing” – con­sumers look­ing at mer­chan­dise in store and then order­ing online – becomes com­mon prac­tice.

Yet the move to online con­tin­ues to have unex­pect­ed con­se­quences. As Clive Black, an ana­lyst at Shore Cap­i­tal, explains retail­ers, such as N Brown, the 140-year-old cat­a­logue cloth­ing com­pa­ny, is start­ing to open phys­i­cal stores for the first time.

“The show­rooms act as a halo and a draw for their web propo­si­tion,” says Mr Black. How­ev­er, he adds: “The dom­i­nant process is retail­ers reduc­ing the num­ber of stores they open, and clos­ing and down­siz­ing exist­ing out­lets.”

Being able to research online, see and touch the prod­uct in-store, while also receiv­ing expert advice, is huge­ly valu­able

Nei­ther are shop­pers nec­es­sar­i­ly mak­ing a choice between phys­i­cal and online retail­ers. Sebas­t­ian James, chief exec­u­tive of Dixons Retail, own­er of Cur­rys and PC World, says more than 80 per cent of cus­tomers are using both online and stores to make their deci­sions.

“Being able to research online, see and touch the prod­uct in-store, while also receiv­ing expert advice, is huge­ly valu­able,” he says.

Tech­nol­o­gy may also help to blur the lines between phys­i­cal and online as aug­ment­ed-real­i­ty apps help shop­pers to see if a shirt flat­ters their body or whether a new sofa com­ple­ments their liv­ing room’s colour scheme.

Retail­ers either need to use their floor space to show­case their offer and present new prod­ucts and ideas to con­sumers or focus on con­ve­nience, argues Patrick O’Brien, lead ana­lyst at Ver­dict Research: “If you try to be some­where in between, there will be a real dif­fi­cul­ty,” he says.

Food retail­ers are fac­ing the biggest chal­lenges as the reces­sion has fun­da­men­tal­ly changed con­sumer behav­iour, prompt­ing them to reduce waste by mak­ing more fre­quent trips to super­mar­kets, shop­ping in a more dis­ci­plined way and embrac­ing the keen prices offered by dis­coun­ters, such as Aldi, Lidl and Pound­land.

Mr Black says that last autumn each of the big four super­mar­ket chains – Tesco, Sainsbury’s, Asda and Mor­risons – all lost mar­ket share for the first time, which he calls “total­ly, utter­ly unchar­tered ter­ri­to­ry”.

At the same time, the big super­mar­kets are hav­ing to offer online shop­ping to cus­tomers at the same prices offered in stores, despite deliv­ery cost­ing far more than they are able to charge for it, while the dri­ve to open more local and express out­lets con­tin­ues apace, even though they are less prof­itable than super­stores.

As Mr Black puts it: “There real­ly is a very broad squeeze on super­mar­kets at the moment – they aren’t yet ben­e­fit­ting from improved eco­nom­ic con­di­tions.”

Where we go shop­ping has changed in recent years and will con­tin­ue to do so as more shop­ping cen­tres open with any­thing up to a quar­ter of their floor space giv­en over to leisure activ­i­ties, such as restau­rants and cin­e­mas.

While some high streets con­tin­ue to suf­fer vacan­cy rates of close to 40 per cent, Mr Black believes that a new kind of indi­vid­ual butch­ers, bak­ers, delis and the like is emerg­ing.

“As a nation of shop­keep­ers there’s already evi­dence that a new breed of entre­pre­neurs and inno­va­tors are start­ing to come through on the high street and make them more inter­est­ing – it’s the essen­tial ingre­di­ent for their recov­ery,” he says. The gov­ern­ment could help stim­u­late this trend by offer­ing new small retail ven­tures relief on busi­ness rates and even rent sup­port.

The most suc­cess­ful retail­ers appear to be those that have fought and won cus­tomer loy­al­ty, be they John Lewis or a local fish­mon­ger. Shop­pers either want it as cheap­ly as pos­si­ble or are will­ing to pay more for bet­ter qual­i­ty and more atten­tive ser­vice.

Retail­ers that have sur­vived the shake­out appear to have learnt the lessons of the reces­sion, and tweaked their busi­ness mod­els and store port­fo­lios.

Mr O’Brien does not believe there will be anoth­er wave of busi­ness fail­ures, if the econ­o­my con­tin­ues to improve, but con­cludes on a note of cau­tion. “The retail­ers left stand­ing in many mar­kets are healthy and have devel­oped their mul­ti­chan­nel offer,” he says. “Those who will find it dif­fi­cult are the small­er retail­ers that don’t have the resources to put this kind of infra­struc­ture in place.”