Consumers around the world are reprioritising how they spend their time. And retailers need to respond. But what can retailers do to better serve a customer who is putting greater value on their time? What does it mean for their business?
To succeed, retailers likely will have to be agile enough to adapt to customers’ evolving preferences. The shifts in consumer behaviour can bring strategic opportunities to adjust product portfolio mixes and routes to market, tweak operating models and take a fresh look at profit contributions.
Our Global State of the Consumer Tracker survey of 21,000 respondents in 21 countries, shows the change in consumer intentions, with a clear focus on time—from where they spend it and who they spend it with, to what they spend it on. Together with the World Retail Congress, and for their 2022 edition, we have developed a paper on these consumer shifts.
“With time now top of mind for many, evolving time management goals and practices can inform both a consumer’s buying decisions and their work choices, and there are many opportunities for retailers to respond.”
Stephen Rogers, Consumer Industry Center
Lost opportunities and daunting health concerns during the corona pandemic made many of us realise just how precious our time is—and how careful we should be about how we choose to spend it. New strategies should acknowledge time as their stakeholders’ most valuable commodity. Rethinking customer engagement or boosting employee engagement might capture this sentiment.
Our survey shows that the overwhelming majority of global consumers feel they’ve become more focussed on personal change in the past year. We see an increased focus on wellbeing and the work-life balance, potentially a precursor to more lasting and bigger lifestyle changes, which also impact consumer behaviour. We all spend a large part of our week working. Even a slight shift caused by people working fewer hours or working more from home, represents a significant reordering of where and how people shop, and the products they need.
Despite people seeking more and more in-person interaction, our work and private life have an undeniable digital component, bolstering the argument for retailers to prioritise frictionless experiences. Omnichannel and unified commerce investments can be worthy causes to meet consumers where they are. Increased digitisation will likely require retailers to innovate around customer engagement in ways never imagined.
Some shifts around bigger topics like sustainability are already maturing globally. In terms of consumption, three in five consumers report that they’ve changed at least one aspect of their behaviour to help address climate change and almost the same number have purchased a sustainable good or service within the past month. Clearly, consumers want to do their part, but their prioritisation on time signifies they want retailers to make it easier for them. To do this, retailers should eliminate the perception that sustainable purchases necessitate trade-offs with functionality, price or convenience.
As consumers align their time to purpose, many leading brands also do so, or should do so. Retailers face the ongoing imperative to address the root causes of our climate change crises, the groundswell of activity to advance social justice and the accelerated expectations from government and investors around environmental, social and governance issues. Retailers must (re)define their purpose and help ensure that their activities and internal processes are consistent with their stated positions and values.
Consumers and employees alike are signaling that they want to spend their time—and money—with brands that foster a better quality of life, and many retailers are responding accordingly. Those who are not yet focusing on this need to step up their game.
Please explore the full paper for more detailed analysis of these shifting consumer priorities. We look forward to hearing from you if you would like more information or if you would like to discuss the implications for your company.