Monthly Archives: November 2024

Why digital shelf analysis is the key to Black Friday success

After another year of squeezed personal finances and lacklustre sales, retailers and brands are hoping for the biggest Black Friday ever to boost sales and profitability.

Last year, consumers spent £3.45bn over the Black Friday weekend, with 66% of purchases estimated to have taken place online. With fierce competition for a share of the Black Friday pie, brands need to ensure that their digital footprint is shipshape before the frenzy begins.

Getting your house in order

While pricing is important, it is not the only thing that brands need to consider – particularly if they have big-ticket items on offer. For brands that work with multiple third-party retailers, the chaos surrounding Black Friday means that ideal positioning, product descriptions and images can fall by the wayside – but this can lead to a disjointed experience for consumers.

When consumers are faced with multiple deals and a wide range of product options across multiple retailers, consistent presentation in digital merchandising is critical for avoiding confusion. Trying to compare different but similar products – or the same products across different websites – becomes much more challenging when descriptions, specifications and images are inconsistent, potentially losing sales to brands or products which are better aligned across platforms.

Certain elements, particularly description and images, are also critical for search, so it is important to ensure that your digital merchandising is on point so that potential customers find your product in the first place.

But, for brands working with multiple retailers, reviewing and tracking how products are presented manually can be a huge – arguably impossible – undertaking, so finding a digital shelf analysis or web-scraping service that can automate part of the process can significantly help when it comes to getting your house in order.

By tracking, collating and analysing data on your products, brands can identify where standards may have slipped or information vital for consistency and searchability is missing, and approach their account managers in good time – before the Black Friday chaos begins in earnest.

Thinking beyond the self to the wider shelf

During this discounting period, competition is fierce. When it comes to analysing your brand’s digital merchandising performance, it is critical that you think beyond consistency, stock levels and presentation, and consider the whole shelf.

If you are already undertaking analysis of your brand’s positioning, consider the value of analysing the whole shelf. How do your products stack up against your competitors? Maintaining your own marketing strategy is critical, but at a time when prices are constantly changing, it is important to know where you stand.

This is where digital shelf analysis that tracks not only your own products, but the competitors can really come into its own, helping you to create a real-time competitor strategy. Combining data from web-scraping with retail expertise will enable you to respond to competitors’ activity with your own at the right time and across the right platforms.

Staying one step ahead

Third-party retailers are juggling data from all their brands, and relying on their feedback could leave you behind the pack. Everyone wants a piece of the Black Friday pie and when the chaos hits, you’ll want to be armed with real-time and past data that can help you stay consistent and searchable and reactive to competitors.

Based on an analysis of data from GWS, our proprietary analysis tool, retailers started discounting from mid-November last year – and some of the biggest deals for consumers hit before the Black Friday weekend started. Equipping yourself with actionable information will allow you to be competitive when it counts, allowing you to cut through in an increasingly fragmented and challenging environment. 

To read the published article by Toby Stupples, Client Delivery Director please visit PMW

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Digital shelf analysis: The secret weapon for brands this golden quarter

In Britain, 67% of consumers plan to spend the same or more than last year during the 2024 golden quarter1 so brands will need to pull out all the stops to get their slice of the pie, particularly when it comes to sales and marketing strategies.

With huge retail events like Black Friday and Cyber Monday on the horizon, plus the flurry of activity surrounding Christmas gifting, having clear visibility of online activities and transaction success has never been more crucial for brands and retailers.

Smart shelf analysis with Gekko’s GWS

Maintaining a clear overview of inventory online has become harder due to capacity and sheer volume of points of sale. Online, data analytics is transforming the ways brands monitor data about both their own products and the others on the shelf, providing insights that help improve performance and the overall customer experience.

Digital shelf analysis is a secret weapon in helping brands understand what’s working, and what’s not. New tools and enhancements like GWS from retail experts Gekko provides brands with clearer visibility of metrics from retailers such as share of voice, pricing, stock availability plus ratings and reviews, providing visual and actionable insights to enable brands to maintain market share and execute strategic marketing objectives.

GWS helps brands to monitor, manage and review e-commerce performance across selected retail platforms, gathering digital shelf data from specific retailers and presenting it back in an easy to digest dashboard. In turn, this data helps brands to understand their performance against the competition, including monitoring and reporting on sponsored positions to understand which brands are investing with which retail partners, providing crucial information to better manage strategies, partners and product listings.

By monitoring how products are presented, these tools also help to enhance the customer purchasing experience online, as it allows brands to ensure that descriptions, images and positioning is consistent across third-party retail sites. Additionally, with customer reviews and star ratings of products being some of the biggest factors in converting sales online, web-scraping assists in constantly checking and maintaining the display of this information to enhance the purchase experience, and ultimately help to gain market share over competitors.

Maintaining the competitive edge

Despite Black Friday maintaining its position as the most anticipated retail event of the year, it is becoming more diluted than ever before. Coupled with high inflation and the continuing cost-of-living crisis, brands need to secure a competitive edge.

As many consumers are now making split-second purchasing decisions based on price rather than brand preference, retailers also need to consider how they respond. Unlike other web-scraping tools, GWS offers analysis of the full digital shelf, allowing brands to track real-time competitor activity and establish a strategy to maintain competitiveness, particularly at this time of year, when costs fluctuate so frequently.

Price monitoring via e-commerce platforms can provide last minute insights for brands to track prices and share of shelf against competitors to ensure they are offering the most compelling deals and packages; a clear advantage amid the deals battles of Black Friday and Cyber Monday, and across the omnichannel strategy.

Analysing the full spectrum of shelf availability provides a great overview of stock requirements in line with demand. Additionally, it provides clear and precise predictions many months in advance of seasonal discount days, like Amazon Prime Days, Black Friday, Cyber Monday and the Christmas gifting season.

Stamping out the competition for success

With this in mind, the best way to get ahead is to plan ahead. Having a full view of a product’s retail landscape and that of its competition provides brands with the information needed to negotiate with retailers for better pricing and placement throughout the year – but it is vital during the golden quarter.

Competition from other retailers and brands limits how successful traditional calendar events like Black Friday can be. So, brands need to get a leg up on the competition by taking a holistic view of the entire shelf, and adjusting their activity and pricing accordingly. This way, they can secure a higher return on investment, along with a wider understanding of consumer behaviours and the ever-changing market.

To read the published article by Toby Stupples, Client Delivery Director please visit Retail Sector

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