|
Nearly 1 in 4 (24.4%) online apparel orders are returned, and the most common reason, cited by 53% of clothing retailers, is fit, according to a 2023 Coresight Research report. That’s why clothing retailers are so bullish on online virtual try-on tools, with 27% reporting they already had them and another 58% planning to add them in the future, per Coresight.
Now Tote, a retail technology startup, has a solution that ensures online shoppers get the right size by enticing them to come to a store to try it on properly.
Daniel Nickel, founder and CEO of Tote, said the concept arose from his own frustration. Nickel, who lives in Brooklyn, once saw a jacket on J.Crew’s website, and walked into a J.Crew in Tribeca, only to be told that it wasn’t in stock but was in another location on the Upper East Side.
When he got home, he ordered four jackets from J.Crew online, expecting to return three but ultimately returning all four, an inconvenience for him and—particularly in the free returns and shipping era when this occurred—a major expense without a sale for the retailer.
“This was a pretty crappy experience, not just for me, the shopper who didn’t get what I wanted and then was saddled with these returns, but for the brand too, who missed out on a sale, who paid for shipping twice, and then paid the cost of reprocessing these items that are out of stock for six to eight weeks,” Nickel told Retail Brew.
An alternative scenario occurred to Nickel.
If “I could have told them, like, ‘Hey, J.Crew, I’m Dan. I’m coming into your Tribeca store Wednesday after work at 5:30. I’d like to try on these three pairs of jeans and these three jackets. Can you have them pulled aside? Can you have them waiting for me in a fitting room?’ That would have solved everything,” Nickel said.
Keep reading here.—AAN
|