Survey: Webrooming—research online, buy in store—tops showrooming
New York -- Incidents of smartphone “showrooming”—seeing a product in a store, then buying it online from another retailer using a smartphone—dropped from 37% in the United States last year to 28% in 2014. But “webrooming,” in which consumers buy in a store after researching a purchase online using a smartphone, was reported by an even higher proportion of respondents, 41%. Those are among the findings of GfK’s 2014 FutureBuy global study of shopping habits and preferences.
“The big takeaway from this year’s FutureBuy study is how dynamic the shopper environment has become,” said Joe Beier, executive VP of GfK’s shopper and retail strategy team in North America. “We are seeing double-digit point changes in metrics designed to measure relatively foundational behaviors, such as omnichannel and devices used to shop. This volatility, combined with significant variability in shopper behavior by category and generation, makes it even more imperative that manufacturers and marketers build out an up-to-date and nuanced shopper insights platform, from which highly engaging and relevant programming can be developed."
Across 15 product and service categories studied, 44% of shoppers reported combining online and in-person shopping activities—up 7% versus 2013. Once limited primarily to big-ticket purchases, this omnichannel behavior is surging in even lower-priced categories such as beauty and personal care (reported by 39% of US shoppers), lawn and garden (29%), and food and beverage (22%).
The largest US increases in omnichannel shopping came in home improvement (57%, up 19 points from 2013).
Shoppers who decided to make their purchases in a bricks-and-mortar environment were motivated by key differentiators such as “see and feel before buying” (58% prefer bricks and mortar, versus 9% online), “get products sooner” (53% versus 16%), and “hassle-free returns” (35% versus 10%).
When online was the preferred purchase venue, attributes such as “save money” (61% versus 28%), “easier” (53% versus 24%), and “better selection” (46% versus 16%) were deciding factors.
Though PCs and laptops still account for the lion’s share of online research and purchases, mobile devices (smartphones and tablets) are playing a growing role. Internet shopping via a traditional home computer (PC or laptop) dropped from 78% to 63% in the US in just one year, while use of mobile devices doubled—from 8% to 15% for smartphones, and 5% to 10% for tablets.
Rises in smartphone shopping were more dramatic among Generations Z and Y, while tablets recorded significant upticks with Generation X and Boomers. Tablets have very consistent (though currently lower) usage for shopping across generations, while smartphones clearly skew younger.