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E-Tail Meets Social Networking

Online retailing entering its next phase and a major showdown is taking place. Tim Danaher reports

People won’t buy fashion online. They want to see it, feel it, try it on.” Less than two years ago the chief executive of a major fashion retailer was emphatic that the internet wouldn’t affect them. He wasn’t alone. People might buy books or DVDs over the web, but fashion? No chance.

Try telling that to Nick Robertson, co-founder and chief executive of Asos.com, a phenomenon of online fashion retailing. Asos stands for As Seen on Screen, and has cashed in on consumers’ fascination with celebrity lifestyles by enabling them to buy outfits worn by the stars from its website.

But this is no niche player. From nothing in 2000, the company is now valued at around €300m. It wins awards for retailing innovation so frequently they have almost become routine. And in the most savage consumer downturn that UK fashion retailers can remember, it grew sales by 90% to €105m for the year to the end of March – it’s profitable too. As Robertson puts it: “People choose to shop on the internet for value, choice and convenience – it’s nothing to do with the economy.”

If there’s one indisputable truth about retailing on the internet, it’s that the established retail cliques have consistently underestimated how it would grow. That’s allowed the new wave of entrepreneurs, led by Jeff Bezos of Amazon and Pierre Omidyar of Ebay, to break into mature markets where they theoretically had no right to become established, and build that foothold into positions where much longer-established retail rivals operate in fear of them.

Now online retailing is entering its next phase, and a fascinating showdown is taking shape. The big beasts of the industry now know they can’t ignore the internet, so they’re muscling in. And while some of their efforts are surprisingly defeatist – UK retail giant Marks & Spencer is employing a rival retailer, Amazon, to run its site – signs suggest that few will give up their entrenched positions without a fight.

The start of the 21st century has been the era of online retail. In this age of multichannel retail the customer rules, and the successful vendor will fit in with the shopper. Want to buy a TV online at 2am and collect it from the store the next day? You’ve got it. See the TV in store but don’t have a car to take it home in? The retailer will do it for you.

Only established retailers with a combined store, web and catalogue presence can offer the full range of multichannel options. And for those who have cracked the challenge of ensuring the stock is in the right place and that its staff are tuned into the vision, it can be transformational.

Argos is a peculiarly British phenomenon. It pioneered the concept of catalogue shopping, where the stock is held in a shop’s storeroom and brought out when a customer orders it, thereby increasing dramatically the number of lines which its store can carry. Argos stores are modest affairs – the ambience is similar to airport arrivals halls, where anxious shoppers nervously await the appearance of their goods from behind a mysterious screen.

But its catalogue heritage gave it a unique advantage in the multichannel stakes. It was already used to fulfilling customer orders remotely, and keeping tight control on what stock it has and where it is. Now this most unglamorous of retailers finds itself as a pioneer of multichannel retailing.

One day in the run-up to last Christmas – a time when customers most seek guarantees that products will be in stock – its ‘click-and-reserve’ service, enabling customers to ensure the product is in store waiting for them, took 250,000 orders. Over a third of Argos’ sales now involve more than one channel. It has even been paid the ultimate compliment by the mighty supermarket Tesco, which has moved into its territory with the launch of a non-food website and catalogue – but Argos has defied the market.

Indeed Argos illustrates that in the multichannel retail age, consumers are harnessing the potential of the internet intelligently. It is not just about ordering items for delivery, although as Asos shows there is plenty of that going on. Web 2.0 technologies are beginning to be used to build communities among customers who share similar interests linked by the brand. After all, if shoppers are excited by the same shops, the chances are they will have similar interests they may want to discuss. It’s early days, but retailers are beginning to recognise that incorporating social networking into their websites can improve customer loyalty and encourage add-on sales. UK supermarket chains Sainsbury’s and Waitrose have embraced the potential of attracting foodies to discuss products and recipes on their sites, which while reinforcing their credentials, also tempts shoppers into buying to create the recipes discussed.

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