- Connected consumers are better retail consumers: Consumers who feel emotional connections to their retailers are four times more likely to shop those retailers first when relevant needs arise, as compared to consumers who are simply familiar and satisfied with their retailers. Connected customers also respond to direct mail from their retailers twice as often as consumers who are familiar and satisfied.
- Connected consumers are more engaged through social and mobile channels: Consumers that feel a connection to their retailers are shopping their retailers’ websites via mobile devices ten times more often than consumers who are simply satisfied. And these connected consumers are following their retailers on social media networks like Facebook and Twitter, four times more often.
- Retailers build connection by fitting into the real lives of consumers: While consumers want to be inspired, they’re also looking to retailers to help make their lives simpler. For example, top connections resonating with retail consumers include: the retailer simplifies my life; the retailer helps me live my life the way I want to live it; and by shopping at the retailer, I get a sense of accomplishment.
- Connected consumers will recommend retailers to friends and family: When consumers feel a connection with their retail brand, they are 50 percent more likely to advocate for the brand and recommend the retailer to others.
“The findings of our most recent study will help retailers as they plan for the 2011 holiday season,” said Alan Zorfas, co-founder and CMO of Motista. “But the long-term takeaway for retailers is the importance of establishing more relevant connections with their customers. What’s really motivating them beyond expected themes? We see connection driving higher levels of purchasing and advocacy across a multitude of industries, and the brands that act on this data are able to execute successful marketing campaigns that motivate their target audiences more effectively.”
Gender and Retail
Motista also segmented the data to look more closely at how men and women interact with retail brands, and the data reveals that genders connect and experience retailers in different ways. Consider the following:
- Men take retail more personally: Men are 50 percent more likely to feel that their preferred retailer makes them a more valuable person. Appearing to seek to enhance their identities and sense of self through the retailers they choose, men are also 53 percent more likely to feel that people will see them differently because they shop at a particular retailer and 30 percent more likely to feel that their retailer personalizes its relationship with them.
- Women seek fun and style: Women, on the other hand, establish connections with retailers around the perception that the retailers are fun and stylish. Women are 18 percent more likely to connect with retailers they consider to be fun, and 18 percent more likely to connect with their retailer if they believe the retailer is stylish.
- Men connect via emerging online touch points: While men and women both follow retail brands on social media networks at approximately the same rate, 10 percent, men are more likely to engage with retailers through emerging online touch points. Men are twice as likely as women to engage in a live chat through a retailer’s website, and twice as likely as women to make purchase through mobile devices.
“Although everyone instinctively knows that men and women engage with retailers differently, this data provides valuable insight into some surprising differences in how men and women actually connect with retailers,” said Zorfas. “Knowing what emotions drive connection for both genders and what channels they prefer when shopping can provide critical insights for campaign planning. As retailers are gearing up for the 2011 holiday season, they should consider the connections that motivate each gender to shop with them to help drive their marketing efforts and end the year on a high note.”