RE-ENGINEERING RETAIL: How 2016, The Year of Promotions, Shifted Consumer Behavior and the New Retail Direction for 2017

DynamicAction Retail Index shows 44% of all 2016 orders sold on promotion and 67% on markdown. With a 23% rise in returns to kick off the first two weeks of the New Year, retailers need insightful strategies to protect profits in 2017.

REDWOOD CITY, Calif.--()--2016 will be remembered as the “Year of Promotions” in retail, with 44% of all orders during the year sold on promotion, and 67% of all orders sold using a markdown. This rampant promotional and markdown activity led to a 24% margin reduction for North American retailers in 2016. Retailers are also entering 2017 with merchandise returns on the rise, already up 23% for the year versus January 2016.

But it isn’t all doom and gloom for North American retailers. Although many struggled to deliver on shipping promises in years past, the focus in 2016 on customer experience and tightening of operations proved successful just in time for gift giving, with orders that shipped late down an average of 6% during the holiday season.

These are among the key insights from the new DynamicAction Retail Index: 2016 Year-in-Review and 2017 Outlook, an analysis of more than $9 billion in consumer transactions globally. The report was released today at NRF Retail’s Big Show 2017. The final analysis of 2016 trends and playbook for 2017 retail success are available in the most recent infographic. Among the key findings:

Merchandise returns were up an average 8% during 2016 and up an average 18% for the holidays in North America. Return rates are elevated headed into 2017 as well, with an average increase of 23% in the value of returns in the first two weeks of January, versus January 2016.

There were fewer late shipments, and free shipping was used on less orders during the holiday season. Late shipments were the norm throughout much of 2016, with an average 48% more orders shipped late compared to 2015. However, retailers tightened up operations throughout the year, leading to a decline in late shipments during the holiday season, down an average 6%.

Free shipping is still a consumer expectation, and an average 42% of orders shipped free in 2016, in line with 2015 numbers. Over the holidays, however, free shipping was used on an average 7% less orders than during the 2015 holiday season.

“The winner of the holidays and of all 2016 was the consumer, with more promotions and more markdowns available than ever. The consumer mindset has been hardwired to wait for a sale, and retailers continue to reinforce this wiring with ceaseless promotions in all channels,” said Sarah Engel, SVP of Global Marketing for DynamicAction. “As we enter 2017, retailers are more aware than ever that they need to re-engineer their strategies to balance customer expectations with the profit demands of the business.”

“Promotions are a new reality, but retailers don’t have to accept the status quo. Savvy merchandising teams are adopting new metrics and employing different strategies to protect the bottom line. Customers that buy on discount can also be incentivized to make add-on purchases at full price, by understanding affinities for products and brands. Retailers must also connect customer data across channels to understand what else motivates their customers beyond promotions – for example, early access to new product lines, exclusive services or curated selections. Retailers that adopt tactics like these will be the winners in 2017.”

Other strategies innovative retailers will be employing to re-engineer retail results in 2017 include:

  • Gaining better insight into returns by connecting online and store returns, viewing and acting on them holistically. This will enable retailers to garner a timely and complete picture on returns, based on the reality of new shopping and return behaviors, in order to limit profit erosion and customer dissatisfaction.
  • Test free shipping thresholds in order to determine how to increase average order value and improve shipping profitability. One women’s apparel retailer, for example, set a constant $100 threshold on free shipping after extensive testing. In 2016, the retailer’s free shipping orders were down 46% and had increased shipping profit per order by 121%.
  • Work with suppliers and vendors to support the clearing of overstocks, going as far as to replace vendor-supported "customer rebates" with direct promotions so that the retailer bolsters their loss of revenue with a reduction in the wholesale cost.

The DynamicAction Retail Index: 2016 Year-in-Review and 2017 Outlook Infographic further illustrates the above trends as well as the findings surrounding customers, marketing and inventory effectiveness. To speak with DynamicAction about these and other findings, as well as the strategies retailers can employ to be successful in 2017, please email dynamicactionpr@ketnergroup.com.

Methodology:

DynamicAction Retail Index: 2016 Year-in-Review and 2017 Outlook Review is an analysis of more than $9 Billion in consumer transactions globally. Those transactions account for more than $6 billion in North America and nearly $3 billion in Europe. It benchmarks retail trends in key categories from January 1-December 31, 2016 in comparison to the previous year. Any references to the “holiday season” indicate November 1-December 31, 2016 versus the previous year and any references to 2017 indicate January 1 – 10, 2017 versus the previous year.

About DynamicAction:

Better decisions. Faster action. DynamicAction is the most advanced analytics solution specifically built for retail merchandising teams. Headquartered in Silicon Valley, DynamicAction has offices in London and Dallas. Connect with us at www.DynamicAction.com and @Retail_DnA on Twitter.

Contacts

Ketner Group PR + Marketing (for DynamicAction)
Kathleen See or Mariana Fischbach, 512-794-8876
dynamicactionpr@ketnergroup.com

Release Summary

2016 will be remembered as the “Year of Promotions” in retail, with 44% of all orders during the year sold on promotion, and 67% of all orders sold using a markdown.

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Contacts

Ketner Group PR + Marketing (for DynamicAction)
Kathleen See or Mariana Fischbach, 512-794-8876
dynamicactionpr@ketnergroup.com