The Importance of Identifying Shopper Intent
December 9, 2011 Leave a Comment
A couple of weeks ago, we wrote about the importance of measuring the non-buyer experience. The simple truth is that not all people who pass through a retailer’s doors have an intention to purchase during that shopping excursion. But, even among non-buyers, there are gradations, and these can best be understood through the lens of shopper intent.
Parsing out the various shopper intent segments allows the retailer to drill down into two critical non-buyer groups:
1. shoppers who intended to buy but were deterred by an easily identifiable and correctable buying barrier
2. shoppers who had no intention to buy, but instead were gathering information for a future (online or offline) purchase
In the case of the latter cohort, it is critical that the browsing session sculpts and influences the shopper’s next steps, such that the shopper returns to the company’s store or website to buy at a later date. The last thing a retailer wants is for his store to be used as a showcase or demo hall, where shoppers get a tactile sense for products in anticipation of conversion events that might happen at a competitor’s store or online presence. This is particularly the case when it comes to the sale of high-end electronics, as most shoppers will indeed pay a visit to a big box store to see, experience, and manipulate an iPad or an LED television, but their actual transactions will frequently take place at whichever website happens to post the lowest price for the item in question. Indeed, it is frequently said (not always in jest) that Best Buy stores function as the best possible showroom for Amazon.com.
To ensure a store experience that stands above the rest, it is invaluable to have feedback from a complete set of customers. The key to retaining customers and winning over new ones is relevancy — the ability to tailor shopping experiences to match the intentions and needs of customers. Customers will stay loyal to stores that have made the effort to understand intent and to demonstrate this understanding through a relevant customer experience.
The basis for this transformation must lie in a holistic and representative approach to customer feedback. While it will always remain important to collect experiential data from actual purchasers, converting browsers and researchers into buyers will require engaging with an entirely different set of non-buyer pain points, which can only be done if retailers have methods in place to measure the intent of every shopper that passes through their stores.