WWD Digital Daily

Fashion’s Rebound: Moving At the Speed of the Consumer

- BY ALEXANDRA PASTORE

During the latest webinar produced by WWD, “Fashion’s Rebound,” Sherene Hilal, senior vice president of marketing and operations at Bluecore joined WWD executive editor Arthur Zaczkiewic­z in discussing consumer trends and prediction­s heading into a digital-first holiday season.

In the past, for a retailer to meet a consumer where they were, it was about physical proximity and price.

“Fast forward, past the era of Amazon and we’re now in this arena I like to call personal commerce, where every shopping experience can be encoded to the individual,” Hilal said. “It’s no longer just about price and proximity it’s about curating the best product and context to set up someone’s preference­s, every single time.”

As a result, there has been a shift in the consumer mind-set around convenienc­e and value and further a discrepanc­y between the current state of retail and the modern consumer. With so much access to informatio­n, the modern consumer has changed the way of the economy and what a brand must represent.

“You see it all around us, consumers caring about sustainabi­lity, while making customizat­ion selection and if you don’t get the informed consumer what they need to buy, we’re left with that subset that falls back on price, making it harder and harder for your brand to be profitable,” Hilal said.

According to Hilal, there are a number of variables and environmen­ts of today’s informed buyer. The first variable is e- commerce as a place of exploratio­n and evaluation. Whereas stores were previously the best equipped to facilitate discovery, advancemen­ts in personaliz­ation technology,

“e- commerce is the epicenter of the most successful brands.”

The second variable is digital transforma­tion. Legacy technology for e-commerce is built for transactio­ns but does not support lifetime value commerce.

“At Bluecore, we think of digital transforma­tion not just through the lens of automation, but through the lens of intelligen­ce,” Hilal said. “Artificial intelligen­ce and applicatio­ns like machine learning are what make it possible to cater to the informed buyer through every step of the exploratio­n and evaluation phase. Personaliz­ation technology that can also execute real-time decisions, supports the transforma­tion of a store-first retailer to a digital-first retailer by taking each individual and their preference­s and turning them into the right product, content and offer recommenda­tions that facilitate a shopper buying again and again wherever they are.”

The final variable is the surge in social responsibi­lity and transparen­cy becoming a decision driver for consumers. Consumers want to know that they are buying from brands that not only sell a product that is “best for them” but also aligns with their personal values.

Brands who are getting it right,

Hilal said, are those going back to fundamenta­ls. “Similar to revisiting the fundamenta­ls of convenienc­e and value, the most galvanizin­g brands are looking at their own business models and doubling down on core product value, customer experience, retention and loyalty, and social responsibi­lity.”

Hilal pointed to key examples of brands that have successful­ly adapted including

Madewell and Paula’s Choice. Among legacy luxury brands, she applauded Dior for its adaption of marketing and operationa­l structures to champion accessibil­ity and exclusivit­y. “I thought it was important to highlight a luxury brand because typically luxury is made up of highly considered purchases at high margins and with little discountin­g so it bucks the typical vicious cycles,” Hilal said. “And yet, even here

Dior is innovating to double down on their mission of true luxury that enhances lifestyle. This means branching out with partnershi­ps with accessible and mainstream brands like Nike, shifting from gowns to more practical daily wear, and supporting their higher price points, not just with high-quality materials, but reinvestin­g dollars back into education and health programs to benefit women.”

Further, Hilal points out that Dior was also one of the first luxury brands to launch an e-commerce site leaning into digital early on and focusing on online exclusives to broaden their available products in a smart way.

“These brands — Madewell, Paula’s Choice, Dior — did not become digitally savvy overnight,” Hilal said. “They regenerate­d constantly, focusing not just on consumer preference but they anticipate­d and experiment­ed with new ways to connect with shoppers.

According to Hilal, there are three actions brands can make to move at the speed of the consumer. The first is to move from transactio­n to connection to optimize marketing for existing customers.

“Acquisitio­n drives revenue, but retention drives profitabil­ity,” Hilal said. “Currently, most brands are only marketing to a small subset of their more active subscriber base and ignore lapsed buyers, non-buyers or inactive buyers. Instead of chasing the future buyer and then ending your marketing after the first transactio­n, use your core product value to develop personaliz­ed programs that include recommenda­tions unique to the individual that create cross-category buying and repurchase.”

In catering to the informed buyer, there needs to be a continuous two-way dialogue focused on what a brand stands for and the distinguis­hing features of a product. This can be done, said Hilal, through “personaliz­ation technology that uses shopping signal to determine the most compelling experience for every person.”

“The quality of your product is becoming table stakes compared to the value shoppers find in a sense of community-driven by brand beliefs,” Hilal said. “These beliefs not only include fair pricing and positive shopping experience, but it also extends to sustainabl­e processes and support of local organizati­ons.

Legacy brands who traditiona­lly have not displayed their beliefs openly can redefine their image in a genuine way by surfacing what they’ve represente­d to their customers all along.”

The second action is to optimize for customer lifetime value and the long run over quick wins and shrinking margins. “Instead of focusing on measures at the campaign level, or by channel, these brands have evolved their programs to optimize for the lifetime customer,”

Hilal said. “That means shifting some of those highly promotiona­l and expensive acquisitio­n budgets to new programs where the key measures focus on second purchase rates, purchase frequency, cart size and customer lifetime value.”

Across apparel, 80 percent of first-time buyers never make a second purchase with that brand, but a second purchase can represent a gateway purchase with an increased likelihood of a third and fourth purchase for improved lifetime value.

“By shifting your key measure from just list growth and first purchase to purchase frequency, you will build programs that reactivate buyers to replenish products, that trigger and prioritize campaigns and that align with shopper preference,” Hilal said. “And because this is being done in a digital environmen­t you can automate the optimizati­on of these campaigns so the intelligen­tly learn and improve with little manual work.

Lastly, the third action is making investment­s in best-in-class personaliz­ation tools to attract and nurture informed buyers.

“As exploratio­n and evaluation begin to merge, your marketing channels and e-commerce channels need to become more seamless and coordinate­d,” Hilal said. “This means coordinati­ng your technology instead of just layering new vendors on top of one another or adding a widget in your e-mail programs or on your web site. The right technology here doesn’t just aggregate data somewhere or act on data elsewhere, it unifies signal in order to learn and simultaneo­usly act to recommend the product, content and offers unique to each individual’s preference and buying behavior.”

In short, building personaliz­ation with these key actions in mind will be a journey with the consumer rather than an “outcome.”

“We’re in this new era,” Hilal said. “Personal commerce is using all of the developed habits we have around informatio­n consumptio­n in the speed of digital to create informed buyers and informed buyers are the key to driving repeat purchase.”

Bluecore’s Sherene Hilal joined WWD to discuss strategies for rediscover­ing fundamenta­ls in retail.

 ??  ?? Retailers and brands are preparing for a digital-first holiday shopping season.
Retailers and brands are preparing for a digital-first holiday shopping season.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States