<em>Source: SafeGraph</em>
The Signal: SafeGraph, an analytics firm that tracks store visit data, released a tool showing how foot traffic across US commerce is being affected by coronavirus.
For the most part, the patterns drawn from the data are consistent with our basic intuitions. Compared to March 2019, foot traffic year-on-year (YoY) is down for airports, bars, restaurants, hotels, theaters, and malls; conversely, foot traffic up sharply for general merchandise stores and supermarkets.
Discretionary retail goods are being forced exclusively online while essentials and consumer staples retain a physical option.
More granular data around this shift will come with Amazon’s next earnings release (end of April) and the Census Bureau’s Q1 2020 e-commerce sales report (May).
The Opportunity: As social distancing measures continue to force people at home for long periods, how might consumer behavior change in a post-corona world? To tease out some answers, we spoke with Gabriela Baiter, founder of Wherabout Studio, an experiential retail studio that helps online brands move into physical retail through pop-ups and concept stores.
Baiter believes there are retail trends on the front-end (storefronts) and the back-end (logistics) that could be accelerated during and after the crisis.
Firms like Dark Store -- which came out of R/GA's Connected Commerce Accelerator -- are uniquely positioned to step into vacated leases of the worst-affected brick ‘n mortar stores during the current crisis.
Another R/GA firm solving the urban fulfillment problem is Happy Returns, a service that streamlines the customer return process and creates a seamless method for in-store returns or exchanges (we previously covered here).
According to Appriss Retail, merchandise returns cost retailers more than $300B and the opportunity should only grow in a post-corona world.
A firm like Happy Returns addresses a very clear pain point and provides value to all players involved in the return process: