Reasons to Read

Flipkart’s Big Billion Days and Amazon’s Great Indian Festival are two of India’s largest annual online shopping events. Both shopping sales appear to have got off to a strong start, according to data released by the respective retailers. We discuss highlights from the events so far, including:

  • Sales insights released by Flipkart and Amazon—with detailers of sales numbers, seller and shopper locations, and new customers
  • Headline deals and promotions offered by Flipkart to attract customers during the sale
  • Sales offers and payment options offered by competitor Amazon to compete in India’s fast-growing online retail market

Click here to read all you need to know about Flipkart’s Big Billion Days shopping festival in our previous report.

Click here to read more about the retail industry in India in our recent Retail Tech Landscape. Learn more about subscriptions here.

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Reasons to Read

On September 29, 2020, Deborah Weinswig, CEO and Founder of Coresight Research, presented at the California Grocers Association Strategic Conference, providing insights into the trends shaping the future of the grocery sector.

In this report, we present three key takeaways from the event, covering the following topics:

  1. The acceleration of digital progress in grocery
  2. The challenges that face grocers when fulfilling online orders
  3. Optimization of the supply chain in the long term

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Reasons to Read

Our Consumer Tech Briefing series discusses recent developments in the world of technology. This month we look at new tech company launches to provide interactive virtual travel experiences for housebound travel enthusiasts.

We discuss the following technology developments:

  • The launch of Amazon’s new Explore service that offers live virtual tours of a range of tourist destinations led by local experts
  • Brand USA’s new partnership with Airbnb for experiential stay-at-home tourism
  • The new virtual travel experience launched by virtual reality startup Proxgy
  • Implications for tour companies

Read more about technological innovations in our previous Consumer Tech Briefing report, which looks at look at new foldable screen smartphone releases from Microsoft and Samsung, as well as Amazon’s latest move into the health-care space.

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Reasons to Read

This report is part of our 12 Weeks of Holidays series, in which we present key data, trends and observations as we count down to the peak holiday season.

We provide findings on how US consumer spending and retail sales have shifted amid Covid-19—and how we expect them to change further for the holiday season. Our discussion focuses on five data sets:

  1. Spending on key service categories such as restaurants, leisure services and travel—we consider how much consumers spent during holiday 2019 and provide our estimates for the holiday quarter in 2020. We discuss what the dollar changes mean for retail.
  2. Exclusive survey findings on shoppers’ expectations to switch spending from services to products during the holiday season—including which retail categories could gain
  3. Discretionary consumer spending shifts so far this year, with a review of the changes in 17 discretionary product and service categories and the total dollar impact
  4. Coresight Research survey data on where holiday shoppers expect to cut their spending this year
  5. Shifts in retail sales this year—we quantify the scale of the increases and decreases in retail sales by sector, from food to home-improvement to nonstore retail, to see where in retail consumer dollars are flowing to.

We consider the opportunities for retailers and provide recommendations to build retail sales this holiday season.

Click here to read the previous report in the 12 Weeks of Holidays series, which discusses last-mile shipping for the holiday season.

Click here to read all Coresight Research coverage of US holiday retail.

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We explore the continued impacts of the Covid-19 crisis on the US department store sector and present an outlook for the remainder of 2020 and into 2021.

This Post-Crisis Outlook covers the following key topics:

  • Our estimates for 2020, with nondiscount and discount department store breakdowns
  • An outlook for 2021—including the expected drivers of recovery
  • Accelerations in department store closures—including announcements from major retailers
  • Highlights from select department stores for the second quarter of 2020—Kohl’s, Macy’s and Nordstrom
  • Select retailers’ expansion of their digital presence in the wake of Covid-19
  • Updates on Chapter 11 bankruptcies amid the crisis for JCPenney, Neiman Marcus and Stage Stores
  • Holiday expectations for the 2020 season
  • Trend analysis and insight—including delivery services, in-store fulfillment and growth opportunity categories

Click here to read the Fall 2020 Update to the Post-Crisis Outlook report on US Apparel retail.

Click here to read more Coresight Research Market Outlooks and Post-Crisis Outlooks for other retail sectors.

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What’s the Story?

Coresight Research conceived the idea of the 10.10 Shopping Festival in June 2020 as a way to bring fun and excitement back to the US retail industry. The inaugural four-day festival was held on October 9–12 and involved two collaborators alongside Coresight Research, almost 100 participating retailers, brands and designers, 12 charity partners and 11 supporting retail partners.

Why It Matters

Coresight Research launched the 10.10 Shopping Festival to bring the excitement of shopping festivals to the US and to help retailers and shoppers address the disruption caused by Covid-19. The festival brought together a large group of retailers, brands, technology innovators and retail innovators that had not previously partnered together in a large-scale event.

In addition, the US-based festival saw its reach extend globally—largely due to the participation of apparel retailer Guess?, Inc.—opening the door for the future expansion of 10.10 and other retail festivals. We discuss such insights below as we present our 10 key takeaways from the event.

The 10.10 Shopping Festival: 10 Key Takeaways

1. Industry Participation and Support Reflects the Success of 10.10

The event’s success was reflected in its widespread support from the retail industry at every level: sponsors, partners, retailers, brands, designers, charities, REITs (real estate investment trusts), influencers and consumers. The event was created to provide consumers with a fun shopping experience and an opportunity to give back this holiday season.

The 10.10 Shopping Festival was inspired by the success of Alibaba’s Singles’ Day, the largest global shopping festival, and so incorporated innovation, influencers, gamification, multichannel retail, promotions, celebrations, and industry partners and sponsors.

The 10.10 Shopping Festival partnered with REITs, physical retailers and brands, and online brands and retailers. Over 200 social media influencers promoted the event throughout the festival weekend.

Figure 1. The 10.10 Shopping Festival 2020
Source: Coresight Research

 

We think that 10.10 jumpstarted holiday shopping by getting consumers in the spirt of the holidays—including through charitable giving, as we discuss later. Coresight Research would like to thank everyone that participated and contributed to the success of the 10.10 Shopping Festival.

2. The Event Adopts a Multifaceted, Multichannel Approach

A multichannel approach enabled consumers to shop the 10.10 festival promotions both online and in-store for four full days. It also offered flexibility, giving shoppers the choice of venturing outside to visit stores or making purchases digitally from home: In the US, consumers turned to online shopping as the weather transitioned to rainier conditions throughout the weekend—it was the wettest second weekend in October for over 25 years, according to retail weather analytics firm Planalytics. The weather on Columbus Day, October 12, was warmer and wetter on a national level compared to last year. However, regionally, New York City had its coldest Columbus Day since 2012, but San Diego and Seattle experienced the warmest weather that they have had on that day since 2015.

Figure 2. Weather Maps for Week Ending October 13, 2020 vs Prior Year; Temperature and Precipitation
Source: Planalytics

 

3. 10.10 Jumpstarts Retailers’ and Brands’ Interest in Shopping Festival Opportunities

In the US, retailers are catching on to the power of festivals. Shopping festivals present immense opportunities for retailers and brands to not just grow their sales but also to increase their brand visibility in existing markets, as well as enter new markets. The 10.10 event was conceived as a way to bring these opportunities to the US, to help retailers amid the disruption of the Covid-19 crisis.

The 10.10 Shopping Holiday drove excitement and awareness about shopping festivals beyond Amazon’s Prime Day (October 13–14 this year), Target Deal Days (October 13–14) and Walmart’s “The Big Save” sale (October 11–15), all of which followed 10.10.

We expect that the scale of shopping festivals will continue to increase and attract more consumers as brands and retailers recognize and leverage the value of festivalization in retail.

4. Participating Retailers and Brands Report Increased Traffic, Brand Awareness and Revenue

The 10.10 Shopping Festival featured almost 100 physical and online retailers, brands and designers—spanning apparel (including adaptive apparel), accessories, baby products, beauty, electronics, footwear, home goods and products featuring sustainable design elements.

Retailers, brands and designers reported that the 10.10 Shopping Festival helped to increase brand awareness and traffic throughout the festival weekend. For example, participating retail partner Tanger Outlets reported that the 10.10 Shopping Festival helped to drive customer traffic to its shopping outlets, with more consumers shopping during the festival weekend.

Consumers waiting in line
Consumers waiting in line
Source: Tanger Outlet, Saks Off Fifth

 

Grocery retailer Kroger participated in 10.10 to “encourage consumer confidence during unprecedented times and to launch the holiday season.” Through Ship, its online ordering service, Kroger offered promotions and discounts on toys, cooking essentials and home goods, all of which were available with free shipping. The company reported that it received strong consumer inbound traffic during 10.10.

Many of our other partners and participating retailers reported lifts in traffic and conversion rates during the festival weekend.

Figure 3. The 10.10 Shopping Festival 2020: Participating Retailers, Brands and Designers

 

5. Charitable Giveback Is a Central Theme of 10.10

The 10.10 Shopping Festival involved the participation of 12 charity partners. Coresight Research’s two collaborators actioned the event’s central theme of charitable giveback: Shopkick allowed consumers to decide if their additional “kicks” (reward points) were spent as donations to charity; and Fashwire donated $0.50 of every app download to charity.

Sponsors of the 10.10 Shopping Festival helped to drive charitable donations and promotion of the event. Supporting partners—which included retail technology innovators, retail real estate industry leaders and nonprofit organizations—also made donations to charities. The festival provided consumers with an easy way to give back while they shopped.

Charitable giveback will continue beyond 10.10, as consumers are able to donate through the holidays via participating websites. Coresight Research is also receiving requests every day to add new charities.

Figure 4. The 10.10 Shopping Festival 2020: Charity Partners and Supporting Partners and Industry Leaders

 

6. 10.10 Pulls Forward Holiday Spending, Alleviating Supply Chain Pressures

The 10.10 Shopping Festival gave consumers a reason to shop holiday promotions early and so helped to alleviate concerns around holiday shopping—namely, that online orders will not arrive in time for the holidays.

The 10.10 Shopping Festival also provided a new platform for retailers to reach consumers, gain insights into their demands and desires, and ramp up holiday campaigns before November, the typical start to the holiday season: Last year, consumers spent $16.8 billion on Black Friday and Cyber Monday alone.

This year, supply chain pressures caused by Covid-19 will make it more challenging and more expensive for retailers to deliver holiday purchases on time. The 10.10 Shopping Festival helped retailers and brands to spread out holiday traffic and thus improve inventory management and timely delivery.

7. 10.10 Gamifies the Shopping Experience Using Kicks and Swipes

The festival offered consumers a gamified shopping experience, providing an incentive for them to shop with the scores of brands and retailers participating on a gamified shopping platform with an added element of charity giveback.

The 10.10 Shopping Festival aimed to make shopping fun. Through Shopkick, consumers were able to earn “kicks” when they walked into a store, scanned select products, viewed offers or made purchases, whether in-store or online. These reward points could then be redeemed for gift cards or donated to participating charitable organizations, as we outlined earlier.

Fashwire’s web- and app-based global fashion discovery platform and shopping marketplace brought many designers to the 10.10 Shopping Festival. Fashwire’s gamified experience engaged the consumer with its swipe technology; for the 10.10 Shopping Festival, consumers could swipe and vote on designers’ collections. This helped to influence tomorrow’s fashion trends, and consumers were rewarded for their time spent on the app.

8. The Entire Retail Ecosystem Benefits from Peaked Consumer Interest in Festival Shopping

The 10.10 Shopping Festival helped to support the entire retail ecosystem by building consumer excitement in shopping; the event kicked off the holiday shopping season and energized shoppers.

Retail festivals are catching consumers’ attention: Over 40% of consumers surveyed before the event reported that they intended to participate in the 10.10 Shopping Festival, with other major shopping festivals in October 2020 also garnering high interest (see Figure 5).

Figure 5. US Consumers: Whether They Expect To Make Purchases or Browse Retailers’ Promotions During Fall Holiday Shopping Promotions (Whether Online or In-Store; % of Respondents)
Base: 416 respondents aged 18+, surveyed on October 6, 2020
Source: Coresight Research

 

9. 10.10 Goes Global

The 10.10 Shopping Festival reached beyond the US. Helped by the participation of apparel retailer Guess?, Inc., Europe, the Middle East and Africa participated in the inaugural festival, making the 10.10 Shopping Festival global. Coresight Research believes that this precedent opens the door for the future expansion of 10.10 and other retail festivals.

10. What’s Next?

In the near term, we are continuing to onboard charities onto the Shopkick app ahead of the holiday season to allow consumers to participate in charitable giving; current charity links will be active through the holiday.

Coresight Research has already received interest from industry leaders across all of retail—from major retailers and brands, REITs, technology partners and charities—to host another major shopping festival. Please contact Coresight Research if you are interested in participating in our next shopping festival in any capacity: as a partner, sponsor, technology provider, retailer, brand, designer, charity or influencer. We welcome ideas and look forward to collaborating!

What We Think

The 10.10 Shopping Festival kicked off 2020 holiday shopping as the first major shopping festival of the season, running October 9–12. The festival involved almost 100 retailers, brands and designers spanning major retail categories including apparel (including adaptive apparel), accessories, baby products, beauty, electronics, footwear, home goods and products featuring sustainable design elements.

Coresight Research launched the festival in partnership with shopping rewards app Shopkick and online fashion marketplace Fashwire.

  • 10.10 was created as a way to engage consumers, drive brand awareness and revitalize retail.
  • Participating retailers, brands and designers reported that they saw an increase in brand awareness, customer traffic and revenue over the 10.10 Shopping Festival weekend.
  • The event amplified charitable giving, providing a way for consumers to donate to charities using their shopping rewards.
  • 10.10’s multifaceted, multichannel approach drove its success. The festival incorporated elements of Alibaba’s Singles’ Day—innovation, influencers, gamification, multichannel retail, promotions, celebrations, and industry partners and sponsors. The 10.10 Shopping Festival even added a charitable-giving element.
  • Due to outreach from industry, Coresight Research is planning its next shopping festival. Please contact us if you are interested in participating as a partner, sponsor, charity or retailer.

Thank you to everyone who made the 10.10 Shopping Festival a success.

Thank You

 

 

Reasons to Read

Coresight Research’s monthly reports keep you up to date on US and UK retail sales, US retail traffic and in-store metrics and key global consumer indicators. Click here to view our full collection of Monthly Reports.

Complementing our monthly reports, the Coresight Research US Retail Sales Databank brings together retail sales data to help you understand the scale and trajectory of US retail.

Using data from the US Census Bureau, we look at which retail sectors saw sales surge and which did not do well in September 2020. This report covers the following:

  • US total retail sales excluding gasoline and automobiles—year-over-year change
  • US total retail sales including gasoline and automobiles—year-over-year change
  • Retail sales growth by sector
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QUESTION OF THE WEEK: Why Are Some US Shoppers Starting Holiday Shopping Earlier This Year?

Three in 10 US consumers expect to start shopping earlier for the holidays this year than they did last year, according to Coresight Research’s holiday shopper survey. This compares to just one in 10 that expects to start later. Consumers appear to be attuned to potential supply chain challenges, with early shoppers concerned about getting online orders in time and product availability.

 

Reasons to Read

This report provides select findings from Coresight Research’s October 13 survey of US consumers on their behaviors and expectations, with a focus on implications for retailers. This week, we focus on consumers’ expected shopping behaviors for the 2020 holiday season.

This report is available for free and can be accessed by registering for a free account. We highlight selected findings from our weekly survey across three key topics:

  1. Consumers’ expectations for holiday spending compared to last year
  2. When consumers expect to shop for the holiday 2020 season
  3. Whether respondents are currently avoiding public places, including shops

Our full report is available to premium subscribers and includes further findings:

  • The categories that US holiday shoppers expect to spend less on
  • How consumers expect to shop for the holiday 2020 season
  • A full list of the public areas or travel that consumers are avoiding
  • What activities respondents have done in the past two weeks and what they expect to do in the next two weeks
  • Whether respondents are buying more or less of any retail categories as a result of the Covid-19 outbreak and, if so, which types of products
  • Whether US shoppers are making more purchases online during the coronavirus outbreak and, if so, which categories
  • Whether respondents expect to retain behaviors from the coronavirus outbreak period over the long term—and if so, which behaviors

Our latest research provides an update to our previous reports, which were based on surveys undertaken on October 6, September 29September 22September 15September 9September 2August 26August 19August 12August 5July 29July 22July 15July 8July 1June 24June 17,June 10June 3May 27May 20May 13May 6April 29April 22April 15April 8April 1March 25 and March 17–18.

In addition to this survey, Coresight Research is publishing ongoing coverage on the coronavirus outbreak, which can be accessed here.

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Reasons to Read

Coresight Research’s October 13 survey provides a detailed update on US consumers’ behaviors, concerns and expectations amid the coronavirus crisis, with a focus on the implications for US retail.

This week, we focus on consumers’ expected shopping behaviors for the 2020 holiday season—comparing the results with those from our July 15, August 12 and September 14 surveys. Our findings cover the following:

  • Consumers’ expectations for holiday spending compared to last year—including the categories they expect to spend less on
  • When and how consumers expect to shop for the holiday 2020 season

We discuss a number of survey findings on consumers’ current and expected behaviors, covering the following:

  • What activities respondents have done in the past two weeks and what they expect to do in the next two weeks
  • Whether respondents are currently avoiding public places or travel—and which types of places they are avoiding

We also provide trended data for a number of our regular weekly questions on spending and shopping:

  • Whether respondents are buying more or less of any retail categories as a result of the Covid-19 outbreak and, if so, which types of products
  • Whether US shoppers are making more purchases online during the coronavirus outbreak and, if so, which categories
  • Whether respondents expect to retain behaviors from the coronavirus outbreak period over the long term—and if so, which behaviors

We discuss the implications of our findings for brands and retailers.

The findings provide an update to our previous reports, which were based on surveys undertaken on October 6September 29, September 22September 15September 9September 2August 26August 19August 12August 5July 29July 22July 15July 8July 1June 24June 17June 10June 3May 27May 20May 13May 6April 29April 22April 15April 8April 1March 25 and March 17–18.

If you do not have a premium subscription, you can access select findings in a complimentary abridged report.

In addition to this survey, click here to view additional coverage of the coronavirus outbreak.

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Reasons to Read

In each report in the Weinswig’s Weekly series, Coresight Research CEO and Founder Deborah Weinswig reflects on a topical theme in retail. This week’s note “From the Desk of Deborah Weinswig” looks at whether US consumers are returning to spending on apparel and considers the clothing category’s prospects in the holiday season and into 2021.

Each report also includes recent retail and technology headlines from Asia, Europe and the US.

This report is available for free and can be accessed by registering for a free account.

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Reasons to Read

This report is part of our series exploring the commitments of selected major retailers to sustainability, through the lens of Coresight Research’s EnCORE framework.

In this report, we focus on Kering, a Paris-based international group specializing in luxury goods. We cover the following key content:

  • The history of environmental, social and corporate governance (ESG) at Kering
  • The company’s 2025 Sustainability Strategy
  • Kering’s sustainability initiatives—as aligned with the EnCORE framework (from “Environmental engagement” to “Excellence in reporting and communicating”) and the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals.

Click here to read an edited version of our conversation with Marie-Claire Daveu, Chief Sustainability Officer and Head of International Institutional Affairs at Kering, from a Coresight Research webinar that explored sustainability in luxury retail.

For a more detailed discussion around the development of sustainability in retail and the five components of our EnCORE framework, read our free report: “The Time for Sustainability in Retail Is Now.”

Click here to read the previous report in our Sustainability series, which focuses on Tapestry, a US-based, multinational, luxury fashion holding company.

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Our Weekly US and UK Store Openings and Closures Tracker reports on store closures, openings and bankruptcies. We cover:

  • A week-by-week comparison of store openings and closures in the US and UK year to date in 2020
  • What is happening in retail in the US and UK this week
  • Year-to-date 2020 major US and UK store openings and closures
  • 2020 major US retail bankruptcies
  • New non-store-closure news

This week, there are highlights from Dollar General and Five Below in the US and French Connection and House of Fraser in the UK. We also discuss quarterly store opening and closure settlements following the release of quarterly company filings this week, with Levi’s notably reporting plans to expand its store footprint.

Click here to view our full collection of Weekly US and UK Store Openings and Closures Trackers.

Complementing our weekly Tracker report, the Coresight Research Retail Store Databank offers our premium subscribers access to openings and closures data from 2012 to 2020 year to date, filterable by sector and year. Click here to view.

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Reasons to Read

Coresight Research’s monthly reports keep you up to date on US and UK retail sales, US retail traffic and in-store metrics, and key global consumer indicators. Click here to view our full collection of Monthly Reports.

Complementing our monthly reports, the Coresight Research US Retail Sales Databank brings together retail sales data to help you understand the scale and trajectory of US retail.

In this report, we assess US retail traffic in September 2020, covering the following:

  • Weekly shopper traffic trends
  • Traffic by retailer vertical
  • Regional traffic trends
  • Traffic by retailer location type
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Reasons to Read

We discuss the metrics that Amazon released for Prime Day 2020, following the October 13–14 event.

  • Amazon disclosed total sales by third-party sellers and reported very strong growth in third-party sales.
  • From Amazon’s data points, we provide an estimate of Amazon’s total gross merchandise volume (GMV) on Prime Day 2020.
  • Amazon reported top-selling categories for selected countries, including the US, the UK and China.

Click here to read further Coresight Research coverage of Amazon Prime Day, including from past years.

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