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Expanding brick and mortar while engaging customers online.
November 09, 2023

Retail Brew

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Good afternoon, everyone. Many believed the day would never come, but after more than a decade, the next Grand Theft Auto game…is getting a trailer next month. For the uninitiated, GTA VI could be one of the biggest mass purchasing events of next year, considering its predecessor has sold more than 185 million copies. It’s just like the Eras Tour, but for gamers.

In today’s edition:

—Jeena Sharma, Erin Cabrey, Alex Vuocolo

STORES

All over the place

Oak and Fort campaign Oak and Fort

Since its inception in 2010, Oak + Fort, the Vancouver-based modern lifestyle brand has relied on word of mouth and savvy social media marketing. Its main selling point that has helped the company survive at a time when many other fast fashion retailers are struggling has been pushing its “attainable luxury.”

Now as the brand has grown to several physical locations in North America, it continues to find ways to keep up with the competition while trying to engage its Gen Z and millennial consumers across a range of marketing and social media platforms.

“As we’re expanding our brick and mortar—which is such a great avenue for us to utilize our stores as just marketing efforts—we’re also looking at a full funnel marketing approach which really consumes a mix of owned, earned, and paid strategies,” Melorin Pouladian, Oak + Fort’s SVP of operations, told Retail Brew, adding that word of mouth has been a pretty savvy strategy for the brand so far. Social media has been another winner for the brand.

Keep reading here.—JS

     

PRESENTED BY PAYPAL

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GROCERY

The right stuff(ing)

Thanksgiving meal represented as a parade float Francis Scialabba

This Thanksgiving, consumers will continue to fill their shopping baskets with standard feast fare like turkey and pies, but as prices remain elevated, they’re keeping an eye out for deals.

Whether they’re making it all homemade or buying heat-and-eat, 90% of Thanksgiving meals are purchased from retail and made at home, according to data from consumer research company Circana’s Thanksgiving Tracker. The holiday is “the second-largest food holiday of the year” behind Christmas, and last year, shoppers spent $2.8 billion more on food for Thanksgiving dinner than during an average week, per Circana.

  • According to consumer insights company Numerator’s Holiday Preview, US shoppers will spend between $100 and $200 on Thanksgiving. Three-quarters will shop at grocery stores, 37% at mass retailers, and 29% at club or wholesale stores.

Keep reading here.—EC

     

DTC

Bits to bricks

FIGS' Community Hub storefront at the Century City Mall in Los Angeles. Figs

Figs, the DTC apparel brand for healthcare professionals, last week opened its first brick-and-mortar location at the Century City Mall in Los Angeles, on the heels of a strong third quarter for the company.

It joins a growing number of DTC brands that are expanding their physical footprint, and while some are relying more on wholesale partners to get this done, others are opening their own retail outlets.

Keep reading here.—AV

     

TOGETHER WITH INTUIT MAILCHIMP

Intuit Mailchimp

Sleigh your holiday season. Festive times are upon us, so that means it’s time to think long and hard about how you’re gonna reach your audience this season. The trick? You gotta stay relevant, and segmentation can help. Wanna know how? Peep our collab with Intuit Mailchimp for the scoop.

SWAPPING SKUS

Today’s top retail reads.

Pay the piper: Garment workers overseas who manufacture a large portion of apparel sold domestically want higher pay, which means consumers, brands, or both are going to have to pay up. (the Wall Street Journal)

Time to Shein: As apparel giant Shein prepares for its IPO, the company’s strong ties to China could complicate its plans to grow in the United States. (The Financial Times)

Out of pocket: Credit card debt in the United States has reached a record high as pandemic-era savings have dwindled over the past few years, and the effects could be significant. (ABC News)

Pay here: With PayPal Braintree, you can increase revenue, streamline ops, and manage security, all from one omnichannel payments platform. Oh, and snag a solar-powered charger when you take a meeting today.*

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JOBS

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NUMBERS GAME

The numbers you need to know.

We understand that you don’t read Retail Brew for politics, but as we’ve learned over the past few years, brands and their political messaging have come under intense scrutiny.

Corporate activism has been front and center, given that about 1 in 5 consumers have boycotted a brand, according to a Morning Consult survey data collected between August 2019 and October 2023.

  • A majority of respondents (61%) said in 2019 that corporations should not get involved with political or cultural issues. That figure has declined slightly to 53% as of 2020 and has held at that same percentage in 2023.
  • The real divide brands should take note of, per Morning Consult, lies in the generational divide: 67% of boomers believe brands should remain apolitical, a figure that’s only 39% for Gen Zers and millennials as of 2023.

“CEOs and other corporate leaders are going to have to weigh the risks involved with succumbing to that pressure with the increasing probability of blowback from the other side of America’s generational and ideological divide,” Morning Consult noted.

Among all US adults, the most important issues consumers believe brands should take a stand on include support for the police, diversity in the workforce, the environment/climate change, and gender equality/women’s rights.

  • Gen Z adults, specifically, are more likely than the public, by double digits, to want brands to take stances on issues of race and racism in America, LGBTQ+ rights, access to abortion/contraception, and gun control.

“Corporate brands that want to be active on political, societal, and cultural issues should know that many public positions are likely to turn off a portion of the American public,” Morning Consult said.

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✢ A Note From PayPal

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