Innovations and Technology


Tuesday, January 10th, 2012

Tablet-land

Tablets were on almost every holiday gift giving guide last month and those that haven’t made the jump into “Tablet-land” sure are jealous when they see their iPad-touting friends walking around. By 2014, approximately 90 million Americans will use a tablet device, with the iPad leading the way.

Here are some stats on this ever-changing, popular technology:

  • Asian-Americans and Hispanics are the largest early adapters of tablet technology. 12.6% of Hispanics and 14.4% of Asian-Americans use tablets.
  • 39.5% of tablet users planned on researching home décor from their tablets during the 2011 holiday season. 26.3% said they would use it to make a home décor purchase.
  • eMarketer estimates that this year, 31.5% of tablet users are ages 18 to 34, while 55.5% are 35 or older.

What does this mean for retail? Tablets are changing how people interact with technology in their every day lives. They are replacing laptops, books and in some cases, cameras (on a recent vacation, I witnessed a tourist taking all of his photos with an iPad). According to a recent article Tablets, Smartphones Redefining The Retail Shopping Experience on MacNews.com, tablets and smartphones are also redefining the retail shopping experience and will be a $5 billion market per year in the U.S. by 2015.

Many retailers are starting to utilize this new technology on their showroom floor. Rooms to Go, an independent home furnishings store, has been using tablets to create a better customer experience. Instead of having to lead customers over to a kiosk for orders, Rooms to Go sales associates can now engage the consumer in the room setting they wish to purchase. Associates no longer have to run around the showroom looking for SKUs, they can pull the information up through their Rooms to Go app. View the YouTube video on how Rooms to Go is utilizing this technology at: http://tinyurl.com/rooms2go.

With tablets still considered a fairly new technology, the growth, excitement and ideas to utilize this technology will continue to grow. Many industry technology providers are looking at new ways to integrate tablet technology into their Point of Sale systems. How else do you envision tablets changing the retail environment?

Leave your comments on how you think tablets will influence retail in the future.

Thursday, July 14th, 2011

Connecting Through Bar Codes

You’ve probably noticed recently that there is a growing presence of small, square boxes containing a black and white, puzzle-like bar code on magazine advertisements, billboards, websites, and even at the recent Las Vegas Furniture Market. This new bar code, known as a QR Code (Quick Response Code), is a two-dimensional bar code that can represent a few thousands characters of text. Unlike a traditional bar code that is only able to represent 9-12 digits of numeric information and is scanned left to right by a laser scanner, QR Codes are able to provide customers instant access to digital information with a small snap of a camera on their smart phones.

While the technology for QR Codes has been available for some time, the utilization of this quick link to information has become much more prevalent in the last few years due to the increase of smart phone users in the United States. According to a study by ComScore, over 45.5 million people in the U.S. owned smart phones in 2010. “QR Codes have only recently became popular, because now everyday consumers are walking around with enough technology in their hands to be able to access them,” said Ron Gordon, vice president of technology of MicroD. “The increase in people owning smart phones with a camera to scan the code, and then the smart phones being able to surf the Internet, had to happen in order for the QR Codes to become popular.”

Smart phone users have grown accustomed to having instant access to emails, news and information. QR Codes are able to satisfy the instant-connectivity needs of a smart phone user and also allows businesses to easily direct customers to a specific piece of detail they want—all for free. “One of the things I like about QR Codes is they are free to use, and you can link them to pretty much anything,” said Ross Barlett, owner of ViewIt Technologies. “You can create a QR code that links to a company YouTube video, a coupon special on your website or an SMS message—basically any digital venue can be linked to. I have also seen people using the code on a business card, so someone can use their smart phone to capture the information, and then they can get their contact information uploaded directly onto their phone.”

With almost unlimited uses of this technology, how can you use it within your home furnishings store? Here are four ideas on how you could utilize QR Codes in your store:

1.    Print and Online Ads
Every time you run a print or online ad, include a QR code linking the customer to a specific page on your website. This page might include a special coupon for shopping in your store, or just provide more information about your products and services. You can even include a QR Code on your home page and link it to a special, limited time offer.

2.    Product Hang Tags
Some home furnishings stores have started adding QR Codes to their product hang tags, allowing the customer to instantly find out more information about a product, add it into a room planner, catalog it for future reference, or send it to a spouse to get their approval for the purchase. “People are printing QR Codes on hang tags that they affix to the furniture in their showroom. The consumer then comes in to shop with their smart phone, scans the code and at that point they can be taken to a web page that provides all of the product details,” Ron said. “One reason I personally like QR Codes is that if I am out shopping and see something, I can scan it, send the link over to my spouse through an SMS message, she can view it and then we can discuss the product. In the end, I can purchase the item and know that she likes it as well.”

By attaching QR Codes to your product, you could reduce the number of “Be-Backs” your store has by giving your customer more information at her fingertips. This could lead to more sales for you since you are making it convenient for her to ask her spouse and receive his approval—without having to drag him into the store.

3.    Product Labels
Another application you could use QR Codes for is on your product labels that are affixed to the piece of furniture entering the customer’s home. When the product is delivered, the customer can easily scan the code and submit her product registration on the spot. The QR Code would contain specific information about the product, such as model number, upholstery type, etc., and be very simple for the customer to submit her registration.
“Another use for the QR Codes on product labels is if the customer spills something on her sofa, she can scan the code and can take her to a web page with cleaning care instructions,” Ron added. “Using these codes allows your customers to connect to you easier, and you are able to provide an even higher-level of customer service.”

4.    In-Store Contest/Signage
Include QR Codes on your in-store signage. If you are having a special event, add a QR Code linking to an online promotion and include the code on your event signs. The code can then take the customer to a page where they can download a coupon or be entered into a drawing.

QR Codes give you another opportunity to interact with your customer. While it isn’t a personal interaction, it does empower your customer with more information. Ron believes one of the largest benefits of utilizing QR Codes in a retail environment is that is brings your customer directly to the information they are seeking—instantly. “The more information you give a customer at their fingertips, they more likely they are going to want to do business with you,” he said. “You can make interacting with your business much more convenient. By using a QR Code for product registration and care information, it makes it much more convenient for the customer to actually complete the task, and it makes the retailer look much more professional. The QR codes allow the retailer to address the customers needs in a convenient fashion.”

As time goes on, and more and more consumers purchase a smart phone, they will be wanting to access information instantly. What other ways can you use this new technology in your store? The possibilities are endless!

Retailer Perspective

Dan Herron, Sr. Programmer Analyst
Kittle’s Home Furnishings

Kittle’s based out of Indianapolis, Ind., is a family owned and operated business since 1932. They have grown to become one of America’s leading furniture and bedding companies and recently created a program that will utilize QR codes on their showroom floor. While they are still in the experimental phase of using QR codes, Kittle’s sees the importance of creating additional ways for their customers to easily access information. Western Retailer magazine recently caught up with Kittle’s Senior Programmer Analyst, Dan Herron and asked him the following questions about QR codes and Kittles.

WR: How is Kittles incorporating QR codes into their business?
DH: We are trying to figure out a way to use QR Codes to benefit our customer. The world is changing and people are using their smart phones more and more. People are more tech savvy, so we are trying to incorporate that into the shopping experience and allow customers to scan these QR codes and provide them information about our product.
WR: Where will Kittle’s use the QR codes?
DH: Each of our products has a sale tag with the description, vendor and price. There will be a QR code on it that they can scan, and it will take it to our products page which will have dimensions, fabric types and other information on it.
WR: How did you learn about QR codes?
DH: We have seen QR Codes in magazine ads and newspaper ads—knew they were out there but didn’t really use them. When MicroD came along to help us with our website, we realized there was an opportunity to increase the customer’s shopping experience in our stores without them having to be on a computer.

By Melissa Dressler, Western Retailer Managing Editor

Friday, June 24th, 2011

The Power of eCommerce When Selling to the Hot Buyers

Do you have a successful business and want to ensure its future success? How secure are you right now? Maybe you think your brick and mortar store is all you need. Think again. Times are changing and you’ve got to follow the trends of today to survive in tomorrow’s marketplace.

Many retailers are changing their eCommerce selling strategies to entice today’s key purchasers: the ‘Under 45s’, Generation X and Y (a.k.a. the Millennials). Keep reading as we outline the top features required in order for your eCommerce solution to gain the attention of the Generation X and Y buyers, while also being a revenue generator. This article provides insight as to how you can increase selling power and market to the younger generations with your online presence.

Sure, you have a website, but are you selling online? If you are not, you are missing out and here’s why. The younger generations have the buying power now and the first place they usually look, before even stepping foot into a store, is on the Web. Technology is a part of their daily lives; it defines these generations. Without an online retail presence, you’re losing valuable customers.

The Importance of a Retail Website is Not to be Ignored
Rich Mitton, director of IT, at Mathis Brothers Furniture recently stated, “There are many customers, especially those in California, who don’t necessarily want to drive to a store. They prefer buying from our site. If they have visited one of our stores, had the Mathis Brothers’ experience and purchased furniture, then they are even more comfortable adding those extra pieces by just buying them online. eCommerce has been a great improvement to our overall business. It’s an evolution.”

Today, it’s so easy to search for a company, business, retail store, etc. on the web and find exactly what you are looking for quickly. The competition is out there creating a brand and making a name for themselves, and making money doing it.

A television commercial for Verizon that is currently running in the New York tri-state area features a local retailer who searches for her company name on the Web and is surprised to find that it’s not listed. This is because she doesn’t have a website or any other presence on the Internet. The Verizon rep tells her, “If you don’t have a website, you’re basically invisible.” He then shows her how to create a small business website to promote her business. In the end the setup was easy, and she is happily branding her retail business via the Web.

Who are the Hot Buyers?
Take a look into the lives of your hot buyers; the statistics may surprise you.
Generation X makes up 75 percent the size of the Baby Boom generation, and just 68 percent the size of Generation Y, according to the Retail & Consumer Insights report. Born 1966-1976, they are entering their peak earning years. This generation is highly-educated and uses caution when purchasing. They are spending money on big ticket items for their children entering college.

They are buying practical products, such as home improvement equipment, furnishings, children’s needs, sports and leisure items.

Generation Y, also known as the Millennials, or the Echo Boomers, are the largest generation compared with the Baby Boomers and Generation X. Born 1977-1994, they are 120 percent the size of the Baby Boom generation, and 170 percent of Generation X. They make up 85 million of the country’s population (Retail & Consumer Insights). This generation was born into technology and image matters to them. They are the primary influencers of all generations because they have information at their fingertips via mobile phones, iPads, YouTube, etc. Constant technological advances are normal to these generations. They are always ready to seize the next big item, the latest trends and to make an upgrade.

Why Do They Buy?
Retailers should understand the needs of their consumers and adapt to each of the different generations. Know how to target these consumers and gain their trust. While the Baby Boomer generation responds to newspaper, radio, print, and TV ads, Generations X & Y respond to mobile technology and social media.

Generation X wants you to help them, not sell them. They are looking to gain more for their money. If you provide evidence as to why your product will benefit them more than your competitor’s and prove it, they will buy. Post testimonials of your products online. These buyers like to research first. The more information you have online, the better the opportunity for you to make sales. Turn your website into a retail atmosphere. Offer easy access to your products and services.

Generation Y consumers are connected to technology. They shop together in groups. They respond to word of mouth. You have to go where they are: Facebook, Twitter, mobile, school, etc. They care about communities. Be a part of their lifestyle. Build loyalty. Enable customers to use their mobile phones to obtain information on a product, download coupons, discounts, etc.

Come on and Get Social
Facebook, Twitter, YouTube—it’s the Social Network, so get on board. You have to embrace the trends and go where the buyers of today are spending their time. According to www.laptopmag.com, Twitter has gained over 190 million users since its inception in 2006. The average Facebook user has 130 friends, and there are more than 500 million active users today. The average user is connected to 80 community pages, groups, and events. Imagine what kind of marketing impact this can have for your website and your brand.

Create website appeal by making it easy for them to click and buy. Performance matters when it comes to your website. Make your site easy to manage and browse. Become interactive by adding virtual screen options, such as a room planner where one can select a product and preview it in a room for size, color and style. Enable customers to “check-in” with Facebook Places through their mobile phones and reward them for “advertising” your company. Their network of friends can instantly see the places they’ve checked into, triggering more potential customers to notice your brand and strike an interest in visiting your store.
Start a following on Twitter with tweets that grab the consumer’s attention. Twitter runs in real-time, so your response is instantaneous. Offer a one day sale and highlight deals in your tweets. Focus on your local community of followers. You can offer specials to those who follow you on Twitter and in turn, convince them to buy online or in the store.

Keep them engaged and coming back. Give them coupons; offer discounts for referring or sharing with a friend, or donate a portion of their purchase to charity. Create loyalty programs so that they return and invite their friends to shop your store. Social media is huge for advertising in retail.

Post Pricing on Your Products
It’s an instant turn-off to buyers if you don’t have price tags for your products on your website. You are automatically running the risk of losing the potential buyer’s trust. What do you have to hide? Your competitors are listing price tags. If your products are expensive, but well worth the quality, give them the opportunity to shop. If you prove your quality and offer the essential reasons they should purchase your products, young consumers will buy.

“eCommerce was a big move for us because we’ve always been so guarded in protecting our retail pricing. Ironically enough, we found out that people don’t like to look at websites without pricing. So we had to look at the hard facts and make a change for our customers. The younger generations (X & Y) are shopping online and that’s how it’s going to be in the future,” stated Nestor Reyes, Director of IT at City Mattress.

Why is My Website Important to Them?
Consumers feel secure with your business when they can find you on the web. Having a website places your business a step above the competition. Offering the option to buy online makes life easier, and saves the shopper time.

Reyes continues, “Having an online store is a lot less expensive than opening an actual retail store location. It’s a great compliment to our store network because people like to research online first. Then they will come to our store with papers in hand ready to purchase. It also makes it easy to manage products. In store, we update our pricing and it populates directly into our website. We don’t have to update pricing in separate locations. It’s the wave of the future.”
Other smart retailers have jumped on board the eCommerce platform because they know that it can only increase their branding, sales and staying power. The Consumer Behavior Report of Online Purchasing Trends by Generation reported that 69 percent of consumers purchase online as much as they do in store. Also noted, 96 percent of online consumers are confident that the site is safe and secure for purchasing. If your website is suspicious, slow, or quirky, they won’t buy. Web performance can be a killer. If your online retail site is not up to speed, Gen X & Y are not going to stay. They want it to be easy and fast. They are multi-taskers.

Top 100 retailer American Furniture Warehouse has been an innovator with their eCommerce website. They understand that reaching out to the key buyers is important, and they’ve created a website that is consumer friendly. “We’ve been using an eCommerce platform for years. It’s nice to have real-time inventory and order information on our website, and it’s seamless to our store operations. Online sales are really growing for us as we’re projecting record sales online this year,” confirmed Jake Jabs, owner of American Furniture Warehouse.

Why My Website is Important to Them

  • 18 percent of traditional TV campaigns generate a positive ROI
  • 90 percent skip commercials via TiVo or DVR
  • 78 percent consumers trust peer recommendations
  • 14 percent trust ads

The Future is Now
What’s next is already here. Interactive displays in store and online are sweeping the consumers off their feet. This technology offers the ability to use touch screens to find products, view them room by room, share the look with family or friends, and even check into the store online for a coupon.

Are you convinced yet? Sure you’d like to keep marketing to the Baby Boom Generation. They respond to TV commercials, newspaper and print ads. But the up-and-coming buyers do not. They skip TV commercials on recorded shows, using TiVo and DVR technology. They view content on iPhones, iPads, and the web. Gen X is emailing and instant messaging, while Gen Y is texting, blogging, tweeting and so on… The best way to succeed is to stay at the forefront of technology, by connecting and interacting with these active buyers.

Michelle Beres Skyta has over 10 years of industry experience with Advertising and PR. She has been with STORIS Management Systems, a leading retail software solutions and services provider for Big Ticket retailers, for the past five years. Currently, a Marketing Communications Specialist, Michelle is a Millennial embracing new technology and social advancements. She holds a degree in Mass Communications and Media from Ramapo College of New Jersey. For additional information please contact Michelle at (888) 478-6747 x286 or mlb@storis.com.

Wednesday, June 8th, 2011

Web Simple

By Leslie Carothers, The Kaleidoscope Partnership

Definitions
Before you know where you’re going, you have to know where you’ve been. How many times have we heard this tired cliché?

What is happening in our industry is that many people know where they’ve been, and they used to understand the language in which the question “where are you going” was couched, but, today, the vocabulary — the literal language — being used to explain the world of technology is foreign to many of our industry’s business leaders.

In addition, our business is a legacy business. As a result, the people with the financial capital to invest in new ideas — the parents — don’t understand the vocabulary and are uncomfortable releasing scarce financial resources into an unknown realm and the people with the intellectual capital regarding technology and the Internet — the next generation — do not have the experience of their parents so they can’t put the benefits of technology into a context their parents can understand.

The result of this lack of communication: A void. No movement.

The generations cannot bridge the “language and context” gap and therefore strategies that could easily help retailers make money — even in these tough times — are not being executed because very few people with the financial wherewithal to make them happen even know they exist.

To be fair, many furniture retailers in the West do understand the web, and are driving revenue, engaging with their consumer and perfecting multi-channel marketing. To those of you who fit this description, congratulations — you are the leaders and the eventual winners — and you can stop reading now! For anyone else, my column over these next four months will help create a context for you and give you the language to use so you can ask intelligent questions and feel comfortable making the resource investments necessary to stay competitive in 2009 and beyond.

Backstory first
In 2002, I started my company, The Kaleidoscope Partnership. We are a social networking consulting firm and teach all industry segments how to use web-based new media strategies to drive sales. We provide online reputation management consulting, e-conversion sales training, e-content writing and website analytics consulting, too.

Over these past six years, I have also done a lot of writing and speaking on behalf of our industry with the intent of educating my readers and listeners to best practices. Earlier this year, WHFA asked me if I would speak in Maui next year to help their members understand the web and how to use it to drive sales and foster engagement with their consumers. We decided to call the seminar “Web Simple.”

So, for the next four months, I will write a column here to help all of you understand the steps involved in making money off of the Internet. There is a logical sequence. When you attend the seminar in Maui, I will present case studies, detailed visual presentations of the concepts I will write about in this column and a very interactive discussion will take place so your questions can get answered specifically vs. generally and you can leave the conference knowing that you can make money from the ideas gleaned from having attended my seminar.

To start: Vocabulary
In order to make the web simple, it’s important to make sure that everyone understands the definitions of the Internet language. You can do this on your own by going to Google and looking up: www.netlingo.com. This is a dictionary. You will need to go letter by letter to see what things mean, but if you already have heard of a word like “meta tags” but aren’t quite sure of what they are, what they do or why they’re important in getting your site indexed and found by consumers, then this site will explain it to you clearly.

Here is the biggest single mistake I see retailers making when looking at a web page: Understanding the layout of a search engine page. Let’s say you type, “furniture store San Diego” into Google. Those words, by the way, are called “keywords” which are simply the words your potential customers are typing into Google to search for what they are interested in finding. Don’t forget — the same consumer can type in many different keywords over a period of time depending on where they are in their buying process.

So, now Google “returns” to your computer a page of results.

Here’s how it works
On the left hand side of the page are the organic or natural search results. You cannot buy these.

Many times, there will be, still on the left, two or three search results that are on top of the organic/natural results. They will be in a light colored box. These are called sponsored links and are labeled as such. You can buy these.

Down the right hand side of the page is another column of sponsored links. You can buy these, too.

Here’s why knowing this matters: Consumers, about 80 percent of the time, only look at the organic links. It is imperative to be near the top of the first page of Google for your main “keywords” in organic search results. If you’re not, the chances of consumers even knowing you exist are very close to zero unless they find you through an offline resource.

How do you get near or at the top of organic search rankings? It’s very hard to do. The process of trying to make this happen is called search engine optimization or SEO for short. There are no guarantees, but some people are very skilled at it and are worth their weight in gold if they can get your website to those top spots.

You have to be where your customers are and they are on the web doing their research. For instance, let’s say your best product category is contemporary sofas. If I’m your customer, and I type in “contemporary sofa Sacramento” can I find your company’s website in organic search results?

If the answer is yes, excellent. If the answer is no, you have a problem. You are invisible to your consumers on the information superhighway. SEO is your answer.

In my next column, I will expand upon the most important element of making money with your website: getting found by your potential consumers when they’re searching for your company’s products.

The Kaleidoscope Partnership is a new media consulting firm specializing in providing retailers, manufacturers and suppliers in the home industries with the tools they need to execute social networking, online reputation management, e-conversion and analytics sales and marketing strategies. Principal Leslie Carothers has been in the home furnishings business for 26 years and has a deep knowledge of all stakeholders-especially the furniture consumer. Her goal is to show home industries executives how to grow top line revenue and cut, permanently, bottom line operating expenses through effectively engaging the online consumer. For more information, please see her profile on www.linkedin.com/in/lesliecarothers, visit her company page on Facebook at The Kaleidoscope Partnership, follow her on twitter at tkpleslie, visit her website at http://www.tkpartnership.com/