Winning in go to market is one of Amer Sports’ strategic cornerstones, and in-store excellence plays a key role in this area.
“The immediate thought is that in-store excellence is the visual impact”, says Michael White,
Amer Sports Chief Sales Officer and General Manager, EMEA and Americas.
“However, it is actually about the full shopper experience and therefore
can include the possibility to try the product or service as well as
the advice offered by staff in store. This can be a crucial part of the
purchasing decision.”
In-store excellence allows the brand to
demonstrate for what it stands for and communicates the benefits of the
product or concept to the shopper.
Ideally, this is done in a compelling way that attracts the shopper and
gives him or her the desire to buy into the brand and purchase the
product(s).
In-store excellence regardless of the channel
“In
today’s digital world, “in-store” excellence actually needs to extend
across both the online and physical worlds”, White emphasizes.
Pascal Clausse,
Vice President Retail at Amer Sports, agrees: “In-store excellence is
critical to deliver the right shopping experience to our consumers,
regardless of the channel.”
“First of all, consumers expect a
seamless shopping experience with a transactional and emotional
connection with brands. After that come consistent touch-points within
all physical formats: brand stores, factory outlets, shop-in-shops and
digital formats. Own e-commerce is vital to deliver one single brand
promise. Moreover,
the impact of visual merchandising is huge: there is a 30% sales gap
between good versus bad visual merchandising execution. And last but not
least, monthly stories aligned between on-line/off-line provide a good
reason for consumers to visit us more often.”
Strong retail
experience leaders at brand HQs and strong in-store experts in
go-to-market organizations enable us to win with in-store excellence”,
Clausse concludes.
Unifying physical and digital shopping experience
Megan Cheesbrough Director, Global In-Store Excellence at Arc'teryx and Oliver Majer-Trendel
In-Store Marketing Manager at Salomon discuss the importance of
in-store excellence and how physical and digital shopping environments
can be unified.
Megan Cheesbrough defines in-store excellence as
follows: “It is the physical representation of the brand – how the brand
comes to life, supports our product collections, and provides an
emotional connection and experience for our consumers.”
Oliver
Majer-Trendel continues: “Salomon uses a formal system that takes into
account visibility, equity, counseling, trial, recommendation, and
action. In-store excellence is the optimally orchestrated alignment of
all these components to create a customer journey that leads to a
purchase.”
Loyalty through emotions
Majer-Trendel emphasizes that when well-executed, in-store excellence adds quality and value to the product and the brand.
“It
helps us to differentiate ourselves from other brands, and it builds
loyalty. At Salomon, we want to invite, ignite, and inspire the consumer
with the rational and emotional aspects of our brand and products.”
Also Megan Cheesbrough highlights the importance of emotions.
“Without
realizing it, consumers create an emotional attachment to the brand as a
result of brand experience. If done well, the consumers will feel they
are part of the brand. They trust the brand, and as a result will return
again and again, sharing their experience of the brand with others in
their life.”
At its best, brand experience in the store can be very holistic.
“The
visual merchandising and product assortment, employee product knowledge
and attitude, lighting, music and even engaging with the consumers on a
deeper local or community level is extremely important”, explains
Cheesbrough.
Presentation and information
“We
want to provide a high degree self-service support by explaining next
to the product its benefits for the respective practice. Visual merchandising and storytelling around the product add emotion and attractiveness”, says Majer-Trendel
“Clean,
clear and authentic product presentation and communication on key
marketed styles or iconic styles is also critical”, adds Cheesbrough.
“I
believe in simplicity and honesty, and when the brand shows up that way
in-store the consumer will appreciate that authenticity.”
Mastering the fundamentals
“Brand
stores are the pinnacle expression of the brand and allow us to
showcase our storytelling in our own voice without interruption or
compromise”, says Cheesbrough.
The building of the brand store network has been an interesting learning case for both brands.
“With
each new store, we are learning a ton about what makes a successful
Arc'teryx brand experience. We have focused on mastering the
fundamentals in store by engaging window programs, brand-right
mannequins with authentic head-to-toe propping, elevated brand story
elements as well as product communication.”
The sales people are an utmost important part of the customer experience.
“We have built strong in-store staff teams that authentically connect with the brand and local community.”
Arc'teryx flagship store to London
This year Arc'teryx is opening a flagship store in London in August.
“It
is a great concept test for us. We are still quite new to our own
retail at Arc'teryx”, Megan Cheesbrough points out. “I look forward to
the ongoing learnings for us as a brand and ensuring we are relentlessly
pursuing best-in-class brand experience for our consumers.”
Salomon will offer consumer journey programs specially designed for key initiatives and commercial activities.
“These
journeys take the consumer from the window to the product via a special
presentation in the store entrance or department access area. These
programs for our commercial initiatives are specially designed for
coop-promotions with our retail partners”, Majer-Trendel explains.
Hub for omni-channel experience
According
to most experts, the future of the store lies in becoming a hub for
omni-channel experience. At Amer Sports, this development is in full
swing.
“It is a logical development parallel to that of today's
communication technologies and the growing demand for 24/7 convenience
and availability”, says Majer-Trendel. “The physical store will play an
important role, especially for products
that depend on experts' consulting credibility. To become the hub in an
omni-channel environment, the store needs to be a source of excitement
and unique experience.”
“Online and offline consumer experience
are interwoven. Brands that consider both physical and digital
experiences at the same time are more likely to be successful”, predicts
Cheesbrough.
“The path to purchase is not as linear and clean as
it once was, and the lines between offline and online shopping
experiences are blurring. Some consumers research product and brands
online and also buy online, some research online and buy in a store, and
some research online, review in store and return online to purchase.”
“Clear, consistent messaging and brand experience across all channels is critical”, concludes Cheesbrough.
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