ICSC “Halo Effect” Study Finds Physical Stores Drive Increase in Online Traffic and Brand Awareness

Openings lead to 37 percent uptick

NEW YORK--()--Retailers with physical stores experience higher web traffic, attract new customers and increase brand awareness in the market, according to a recent ICSC study, “The Halo Effect: How Bricks Impact Clicks.” The research revealed that opening a new physical store leads to a 37 percent average gain in overall traffic to a retailer’s website and increases its share of web traffic within that market by an average of 27 percent. The opposite is also true as web traffic tends to fall when stores close.

The “halo effect” – commonly defined as the tendency for an impression created in one area to influence another – is radically transforming how retailers do business and innovate. The research explores, and quantifies, how physical locations impact a brand’s digital presence, why that relationship matters, and why physical stores are essential to any successful retail strategy.

“The clicks versus bricks debate is over. We have long suspected that there is a direct and positive correlation between having both a physical and a digital presence, and the Halo Effect study confirmed this,” said Tom McGee, President and CEO of ICSC. “What we are seeing now is a retail renaissance as both new and established retailers are investing in their stores and reinvigorating their physical presence.”

The study, the largest of its kind, found that physical stores have a material effect on the success of a brand not just through sales but also in driving market performance and boosting customer perception. Customers in markets where emerging retailers have stores tend to consider those brands 69 percent of the time, versus 51 percent in general.

“The physical store is the hub of customer experience and service,” McGee continued. “Consumers today want to choose where and when they shop. Retailers that innovate and create a true omni-channel experience, leveraging the strengths of both physical and digital, will thrive.”

As physical stores act like “billboards” for brands, retailers can use both these stores and online retail to drive traffic to each other. When and where stores exist, consumers tend to use them: 84 percent of shoppers either shop exclusively in store (53 percent) or in combination with online (31 percent).

The full report can be downloaded here.

Methodology

The study looked at web traffic for retailers that opened or closed a total of 804 stores, in 145 markets covering a population of 222 million residents. For each store opening, a five-week buffer was set around the opening date and the 13 weeks before and after that buffer were analyzed. For each store closing, share of web traffic was analyzed in the 13 weeks before and after the quarter in which the store closed.

The analysis of consumer perceptions, including approximately 4,200 respondents, compared results from a benchmark set by 21 retailers with 9,516 stores across the United States to a subset of 923 stores in 10 markets where those retailers specifically had at least one store.

About ICSC

ICSC serves the global retail real estate industry. We provide our 70,000+ member network in over 100 countries with invaluable resources, connections and industry insights, and actively work together to shape public policy. For more information about ICSC visit www.icsc.org.

Contacts

ICSC
Shannon Troy, Media Relations Manager
media@icsc.org

Contacts

ICSC
Shannon Troy, Media Relations Manager
media@icsc.org