Experience Selling

Experience Selling

The value of Experience.

How many times have you heard that people are less interested in buying things or stuff these days and more interested in buying experiences?

The proliferation of lifestyle business selling everything from cookery courses to ballooning would suggest that we are spending our money differently.

In a time-poor society when most of us have too may things anyway buying experiences create memories and while things wear out or go out of fashion, memories last.

Recent research from San Francisco State University (2021 journal of Positive Psychology) seems to back up the theory that not only do people value the things they buy less over time but the reverse may actually be true for experiences.

So, this sounds like good news for all those lifestyle businesses, but it sounds like terrible news for Retailers.

Well. Maybe not.

Retail Evolution

A few years ago, I was in a lifestyle store in the West country while I was on holiday and with three kids ranging in age from 12 to 23 at the time I was struck when each one came back with something they wanted to buy, which they did. I remember thinking this place had us very well covered from a targeted merchandising point of view. It knew its target market and we were it.?

This is Lifestyle retailing. Lifestyle Retail and merchandising started with the opening of department stores and then to brand stores.

Liberty’s is possibly the best and my favourite example. They sell many different things but most of all they sell a lifestyle.

Department stores perhaps even more than others have had a hard time over the last few years so perhaps the new version of Lifestyle retail will take a different form. These days when we describe our lifestyle, we talk about what we do rather what we own. We listen to music rather than own records , CD’s , downloads etc , we cook rather than talk about our batterie de cuisine.?

So perhaps this is where Lifestyle and Experience retailing come together?

Experience sells

If you haven’t been to the Westfield shopping centre in London recently, you really should.

Its not only the biggest in Europe but there’s a new retail concept there that is a great experience in itself. The fact that there are some of the best places to eat in London there doesn’t hurt either, that’s all part of the experience too.

You don’t get that on-line.

Situ Live?is a venue in itself. It’s a new Retail concept that features live theatrics and storytelling around six curated arenas.?‘Fitness & Wellbeing’, ‘Connected Home’, ‘Nutrition Kitchen’, ‘Entertainment’, ‘Home & Mobile Working’ and ‘On?The?Move’.

It encourages you to engage with and learn about products in a way some traditional retailers have struggled to do. Situ Live’s QR code system then allows people to compare, discuss, and buy from the brand on-line at their own pace, exactly as consumers have been saying they want to for years.

So perhaps this is the new Lifestyle retailing that the industry should get behind. Situ Live is great fun and shows that in the end, experience sells.

The Venue is where it’s at;

Experience selling however is not a new concept The French audio-visual and book seller?FNAC?(Fédération Nationale d’Achats des Cadres.) started in 1954 near Paris as a member only discount buyers’ club in a second floor flat, now has over 180 stores in Europe.

FNAC holds “forums” throughout the year in person, also now as online events and concerts that allow customers to see listen and interact with authors , musicians, directors, and artists that have included Keane, Ben Harper and David Bowie.

Some stores also sell tickets to events and FNAC have a 1.8 million member loyalty program.

If anyone doubts the power of experience selling the HMV chain pulled out of France altogether after only six months in the 90’s as a result of going head-to-head with FNAC. While Virgin megastores stayed in France, FNAC built a 32,000 sq ft store nicknamed “The Cathedral” in response to the Virgin Megastore concept.

Perhaps not all experience selling needs to be on that scale but engaging with our customers interests, music , cars, books or cooking certainly seems to work on any scale. It’s a conversation about a shared interest not just a sales pitch and that builds trust.

When we share experience with our customers, they’re not just our customers but we have something in common. Perhaps a shared customer experience is the best one of all.

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Danny Rappaport的更多文章

  • Multifunctionality: Blessing or Curse?

    Multifunctionality: Blessing or Curse?

    Technology, like a tool, is usually designed for a specific job. Trying to make a piece of equipment designed for one…

  • Whose Roadmap is it anyway?

    Whose Roadmap is it anyway?

    Does technology drive the business or does the business drive the technology? For many CIOs and IT leaders the Roadmap…

    3 条评论
  • Retail in a recession – an opportunity to succeed?

    Retail in a recession – an opportunity to succeed?

    As the UK is set to head into a challenging period of recession, let's look back at the innovation and adaptation that…

    4 条评论
  • Getting the Balance Right on Technology Total Cost of Ownership

    Getting the Balance Right on Technology Total Cost of Ownership

    The Cost of Everything The definition of a cynic according Oscar Wilde is: "..

    4 条评论
  • Planning for Change in an Unpredictable World

    Planning for Change in an Unpredictable World

    The better you plan what you’re doing, the better the outcome. That's just as true in Retail as it is in life in…

  • Know your Customer (KYC)

    Know your Customer (KYC)

    We all know it’s harder to acquire new customers than keep and sell to existing ones..

  • Retail Collaboration

    Retail Collaboration

    Retail Collaboration Do you ever look at the “You may also like..

    3 条评论
  • Is PoS Dead?

    Is PoS Dead?

    You may well ask why we would ask such a question. Surely there is always a need for Point of Sale, but like so many…

  • People, Planet and Profit

    People, Planet and Profit

    We all know that a happy employee is a productive one, but is it as simple as: EX(Employee Experience) = CX(Customer…

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了