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Adding Bricks to Clicks: On the Role of Physical Stores in a World of Online Shopping Cover

Adding Bricks to Clicks: On the Role of Physical Stores in a World of Online Shopping

Open Access
|Jul 2014

Abstract

E-commerce is gaining ground and leaving the role of traditional brick-and-mortar stores open to question. With this in mind, a team of researchers performed a case study to determine what effects the store openings of one multichannel retailer of fashion, home furnishings and high-end accessories would have on its catalog and online sales. The opening of brick-and-mortar stores had positive and negative effects for the retailer, but complementary consequences clearly outweighed sales drops in individual channels: In the short term, only catalog sales declined slightly. But over time, both the catalog and online channels increasingly benefited from the presence of the new brick-and-mortar stores. Within 79 months, catalog sales recovered to a level that would have been expected had the store never opened and subsequently continued growing more than in a sample without new stores. An enhanced understanding of both positive and negative cross-channel effects helps retailers better anticipate and respond to changes in sales in existing channels when a new one is added. It is the basis for strategically managing a company’s channels as a portfolio rather than as separate entities.

Language: English
Page range: 28 - 33
Published on: Jul 16, 2014
Published by: Nuremberg Institute for Market Decisions
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 2 issues per year

© 2014 Jill Avery, Thomas J. Steenburgh, John Deighton, Mary Caravella, published by Nuremberg Institute for Market Decisions
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 3.0 License.