This will be an unpredictable holiday season, Mastercard warned in its holiday spending outlook for 2024.
Retailers will need to woo both the “value-conscious consumer” stretched by economic pressures, as well as the “confident consumer” who feels more easy to spend, Mastercard noted. That’s why finding unique and innovative ways to reach shoppers will be crucial.
Retail Brew sat down with Jason Goldberg, chief commerce strategy officer at Publicis Groupe, to do just that. Goldberg discussed ways in which retailers may serve as sources of inspiration to fend off competition during the busiest shopping season of the year.
How can retailers like Walmart spark inspiration in their customers’ shopping experiences?
I’m going to start in-store because of an analogy. When you think of a traditional store, you often have a lot of inventory on the shelves, which is kind of the base-level shopping experience. But then the way you generally spark inspiration and joy is in front of those shelves. You have what we call feature displays. So, an apparel store might have a shelf full of shirts, but they have a shirt dressed on a mannequin in front of that shelf. That mannequin is the featured display, and that shelf is the catalog of shirts, if you will.
So when you think about digital, we need the digital equivalent of those feature displays. Sometimes, that’s simply showing hot products or aspirational products, or products centered on these intermediate shopping pages, like category pages or department pages. But I think of it as more these new, novel experiences that our retailers are creating.
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