As the pandemic prompts consumers to seek contactless digital retail options, merchants must keep pace with customers’ expectations, stay on top of recent technology and understand the evolution of fraud tactics.
After more than a year of pandemic-related disruption in nearly every aspect of our lives, we’re finally getting a clear picture of how much the coronavirus disrupted the pace of the retail industry’s digital transformation. Before the crisis, digital upgrades were a matter of retailers’ organizational priorities and budgets. The switch to contactless shopping changed all of that, and many of those changes—from new payment options to new fraud control challenges—are here to stay.
The pandemic was the fuel that accelerated the digital transformation and forced companies to accomplish in a few months what they might have otherwise done over several years. For example, McKinsey calculated that North American companies made three years’ worth of improvements in digital customer interaction in 2020.
The driving force behind that acceleration was the vast increase in online spending. A new Mastercard report found that global online spending increased by $900 billion from 2019 to 2020, and the company estimates that as much as 30% of that spending shift is permanent. That has ongoing implications for retailers and the digital transformations they must make and maintain.
One of the first customer experience issues that arose from the sudden shift to online shopping was product availability. Shoppers quickly found that many basic grocery items and household goods were out of stock online. Another common frustration was that items appeared to be in stock on merchants’ websites but weren’t really there. Products showed up as out of stock at checkout, or in some cases, customers discovered what was out of stock customers places orders. By April 2020, 72% of consumers said they were “much more” aware of product availability than pre-pandemic.
Worldwide consumer adoption of contactless payment methods grew by 90% in 2020. Some stores could debut efficient curbside and in-store pickup processes quickly, but others left customers waiting at the curb for employees to find their orders. Over time, most retailers improved both their websites’ stock level data and their curbside processes.
After quickly pivoting to meet consumers’ new expectations, retailers found themselves offering more contactless and digital touchpoints than before the pandemic. According to a Salesforce report released in May, 52% of retailers expanded or rolled out contactless payment options since the pandemic began, 48% have expanded or launched buy online, pick up in store (BOPIS), and 45% have expanded or debuted curbside pickup. These are now standard offerings that many stores might have otherwise delayed implementing.
The recession that hit at the start of the pandemic also changed the way consumers wanted to pay. Adobe found that the number of people using “buy now, pay later (BNPL) options for their online purchases rose 215% from early 2020 to early 2021, reflecting a desire to avoid carrying credit card balances. Last year, 40% of millennials said they’d used BNPL, and the competition to provide BNPL services to merchants intensified. Now, offering BNPL can be a competitive differentiator for retailers.
Whenever consumer behavior changes, fraudsters change their tactics, too. We saw several notable shifts in ecommerce fraud tactics in 2020, and those are likely to persist along with new consumer habits.
As consumers continue to seek out contactless digital shopping experiences, merchants need to keep pace with their customers’ expectations. They also need to keep up with the evolution of fraud tactics targeting their industry. And they need to keep up with what’s next in retail technology so they can be ready for the next must-have features and fraud challenges that emerge.
original article at: https://www.digitalcommerce360.com/2021/07/27/the-pandemic-accelerated-retails-digital-transformation-where-do-we-stand-now/