Monthly Archives: August 2025

Curating the clutter: How brands can cut-through product overwhelm

Consumers are met with an overwhelming volume of information each day, leading to decision fatigue that can make it difficult to choose products, and even cause them to abandon their shopping baskets altogether. When this happens, shoppers are more likely to stick to a well-known brand or pick up the first thing they see – so brands need to stand out.

Curate the clutter

To be a category leader – and encourage consumer switching – brands need to be seen and heard for all the right reasons. The features and packaging of the product itself is only one factor in a consumer’s consideration process, with visibility, brand positioning and consistency all playing a significant role in the wider customer journey.

Taking a strategic approach to curating the clutter across digital and physical channels helps consumers to notice and understand your brand, clearly see what your products offer, and appreciate their true value in relation to user need.

Cutting through the online chaos

In contrast to a good physical store, where effort will have gone into curating the offering, online there is often too much choice, leaving many shoppers overwhelmed and having to decipher things for themselves. Many third-party sales platforms are nothing short of chaotic, but their convenience has been a boon for time-poor consumers. These platforms can make comparing products easier for consumers but, with so many options, brands need to go the extra mile to make sure they are firmly in the mix.

Investing in an effective web scraping service, such as GWS (Gekko Web Services) – can help brands to understand their digital performance in granular detail. By monitoring and analysing the digital shelf, GWS offers powerful insights that can drive smarter decisions about pricing and product descriptions.

Pricing

Price remains the main driver of purchases for consumers, and it is mission critical that brands understand how their product pricing compares with the rest of the category. Digital shelf analysis provides the clarity product owners need to make quick and confident decisions based on their brand positioning and in response to market shifts, particularly during discounting periods.

Product descriptions and tagging

Showing up in searches via both search engines and on specific sites requires the right keywords in product descriptions, as well as tagging appropriately in line with retailers’ filters. Monitoring is critical for maintaining a smooth customer journey, ensuring that your brand shows up with consistent messaging that aligns with your brand positioning.

Driving in-store visibility

In the same way that your brand’s digital footprint is vital for online retail, its physical presence in stores is also an important consideration. While few brands have control over shelf positioning, products can attract consumers and increase consideration through clever merchandising and in-store promotions.

Investing in point-of-sale merchandising can often be more valuable than expensive activations elsewhere. Strategically placing promotional materials and displays near the point of purchase can capture attention and encourage consumers to make impulse buys or consider additional products.

Sales promotion continues to be an effective way to engage consumers in store. Recent research from Savanta revealed that, while half (47%) of shoppers have favourite brands, 40% will try something new if a product is on promotion, highlighting how brands can shift consumers’ preferences through strategic and well-timed campaigns.

Consideration through careful curation

Balancing brand presence and driving sales across owned and third-party channels online and in-store is a tall order, especially when competition and complexity only continue to grow.

With a strategic approach, brands can curate the clutter to ensure they stand out from the crowd. Brands that can enhance the customer journey through clarity, consistency, visibility or positioning will be more memorable, and ultimately succeed in a busy and potentially overwhelming retail setting.

To read the published article by Dan Todaro, Gekko Group CEO, please visit Retail Sector

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Listen Up!

One of the most common traps we see is treating the entire audio market as a single entity. It’s not. In reality, it’s split into two categories. The first is the hypervolatile world of personal audio. Here, trends in wireless earbuds and portable speakers move like fast fashion; a feature like AI-powered noise cancellation or spatial audio can go from a differentiator to a baseline expectation in a single generation of product releases.

The second is the considered purchase, high-investment world of hi-fi. This is a marathon, not a sprint. The customer journey is longer, driven by a deep appreciation for craftsmanship, acoustic heritage, and demonstrable performance. Here, trust is the primary currency. A retailer’s authority is built over years, not months, and a single misguided product choice can damage a carefully curated reputation. Trying to apply the same strategy to both is a recipe for failure — you’ll either exhaust your hi-fi customers with fleeting trends or appear ancient to the earbud crowd.

First up is the Headphone (1), Nothing’s first-ever pair of over-ear headphones. It’s a significant move for the brand, taking them into the premium audio space to compete with established giants. True to their style, the headphones feature a distinctive transparent design but also add practical, tactile controls
(a roller and paddle) instead of relying only on touch. To ensure high-quality sound. Nothing entered into a major Partnership with KEF, the highly respected British brand, co-engineering the acoustics for the Headphone (1).

Amp up

Next up, the resurgence of vinyl. It is no longer just a trend; it’s a significant, mainstream
movement backed by hard numbers. In the UK, vinyl sales have now seen an incredible 17 consecutive years of growth, with music fans purchasing 6.7 million LPs in 2024 alone (BPI/Official Charts Company).
But here’s the modern dilemma: the very people driving this revival have built their home lives around the convenience of wireless, multiroom speaker systems. So, how do you bridge that gap?
That’s precisely the problem the Victrola Stream Onyx was built to solve. The Victrola Stream Onyx taps directly into this by offering a simple, elegant solution. In non-technical terms it’s a high-quality record player officially certified to work wirelessly with any Sonos speaker in your home.

Meanwhile, the hi-fi audio category continues to hold its ground and even grow, despite the fast shifts in other areas of personal audio. In 2025, the global hi-fi market is projected to grow from £12.4 billion to over £13.1 billion, with long-term forecasts estimating a rise to more than £22.2 billion by 2033 (DataHorizzon Research, 2025; The Business Research Company, 2025). Wired systems, prized for their clarity and fidelity, still account for roughly 68% of global revenue (GlobeNewswire, April 2025), but wireless hi-fi is gaining ground fast, particularly in residential and automotive segments.

Tune in

The UK’s own hi-fi market is expected to hit £1.1 billion by the end of the decade (Future Market Insights, 2025). This growth isn’t just being driven by longtime audiophiles; there’s a new wave of listeners who value audio quality but also want the simplicity of smart home integration, wireless setups, and even AI-enhanced tuning. Beyond the established worlds of headphones, earbuds, and even high-end hi-fi, a new form factor for portable music is quietly emerging: smart audio glasses.

The leading example of this trend are Meta’s range AI glasses. While they are known for their hands-free camera, a core feature is their ability to play music and take calls. This is achieved through discreet “open ear” speakers built into the arms of the glasses.

This isn’t about replacing headphones; it’s about creating a new category of use. The customer for audio glasses is someone who prioritises convenience and safety over critical listening. They are buying into a lifestyle where music and information are seamlessly layered onto their daily activities.

Understanding your customer’s intent is everything. Personal audio, home audio, and hi-fi are no longer just product categories; they’re expressions of identity, taste, and lifestyle. Treat them that way, and the strategy will follow. Ignore the nuance, and you’ll miss the mark entirely.

To read the published article by Rupert Cook, Marketing Director, please visit ERT

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