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08 July 2010

Time for Australian retailers to sell online or be left behind

Marketers have spent the last decade watching Woolworths maintain dominance in grocery while Coles failed to focus on customer needs and treated suppliers with disdain. Under Wesfarmers things are starting to change, yet the biggest fight in retail over the next decade is more likely to be driven by a huge shift to buying online.

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While Australia’s Westfield has over 30 years fine-tuned a profitable model to encourage a visit to the Mall, as therapy for the modern empty soul, the Internet is on the cusp of changing the behaviour of society in an equally profound way.

It’s already happening. In 2009 Australians spent $24billion on retail online according to research commissioned by eBay and predicts a 40 percent increase to $32.8billion in 2012.

Australia’s retailers are falling behind the rest of the world in grabbing a share of the online retail spend. "As Australian retailers struggle to build effective online presence, overseas competitors are taking advantage of the gap in the Australian market and are currently taking around 40 per cent of Australia's online retail spend," according to PayPal MD Paul Feller.

"There is a huge opportunity for retailers to capitalise on the growing online marketplace in Australia. In the last six months alone the average consumer spent $1,223 on online shopping, an increase of $130 from the second half of 2009."

So Westfield has to balance an online strategy with keeping footfall high in the malls to keep those retail tenants in biz. No easy task, now that broadband speeds and speed and reliability of delivery through the mail are narrowing the gap between online purchase and the wardrobe.

Who shops online?

My daughter buys most of her clothes online from the US and UK for a fraction of local prices, my son buys his music and sound gear from all corners of the world and Amazon keeps my partner well read. Online purchases of all sorts of items will become the norm, especially as the ways to enhance the shopping experience online grow.

In the past you would see the latest fashions in a magazine spread, be exposed to an ad on TV with Megan Gale for David Jones and go the mall to try it on. Now the whole experience can be completed online. The Ceros platform is being used by the likes of Sears, Tesco, Virgin and IKEA to show product and close a sale using a rich media eMagazine. Have a look. We’re already using it to help our challenger brand clients leave their competition behind.

Glenn | Tags: emagazine online marketing online publishing e-commerce


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