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December 14th, 2011 by neilrobertson

The high street is dead! Long live the high street!

In case it might have slipped past you, it’s Christmas. A time of goodwill to all man-kind, peace and harmony on Earth, masses of nostalgia-inducing adverts and substantial expenditure on gifts. It’s the time of year that many people look forward to and perhaps none more so than those in charge of high street retailers. Or at least that used to be the case.

 

Christmas used to be  a time of year that retailers were ‘buoyed by record high street spending’, but the consumer momentum behind online retailers, coupled with the idea that a better deal can be found online, has had significant knock on effects for those on the high street.

 

When eCommmerce emerged in the mid-late 90′s, high street retailers were slow to get involved and because of this, it’s allowed the likes of Amazon to become one of the world’s largest retailers. It’s fair to say that the high street missed out…big time. Today, Matt Warman from The Daily Telegraph has written a piece from some data released from Ofcom, on the fact that Britain has become an nation of online shoppers, with 79% of internet users having made an online purchase, compared to just 27% of Italians. There’s another growing trend that Matt has also addressed in his piece.  The number of people in the UK surfing the web on their phones is higher than any other country (17 countries surveyed), with 46% of users browsing on their mobile.

 

UK smartphone penetration is expected to tip over 50% by the end of the year and there’s no doubt that today, the world of retail is on the cusp of a mobile revolution. There’s been a lot of talk from retailers about the recognition of the importance of mobile as part of the shopping experience, as I’ve written about before, but it’s yet to have been followed up by any real action.

 

There are exceptions though. Argos has been one of the early high street adopters of mobile, creating a click-to-collect service, allowing customers to reserve products on their mobile, to collect in store. It’s a simple service that still drives footfall to stores and integrates the legendary Argos catalogue. Consumers can be a sceptical bunch and often need a little guidance to try new things, especially if they’re not used to making purchases online or on their mobile, which is why what I saw this morning caught my interest.

 

Argos pop-up store

Walking through Waterloo station this morning, like thousands of other commuters, I saw that Argos had set up a pop-up store, well, more like a back-lit box with images of some of the top selling catalogue items accompanied by QR codes. Instructions were posted on each side of the cube, telling people how they can use the service and if anything, it served as a great educational exercise, allowing customers to test out the mobile ordering service on small items, or items such as cameras or games consoles.

 

Arguably Argos had perhaps been prompted in to action by eBay’s pop up shop in the West End at the start of December, a cash-less store that allowed people to come by and purchase some of the top-selling items on eBay and get them delivered to your home. While many consumers out there may still be wary of eBay, Argos realised that their brand is trusted by consumers and by doing something similar it could not only help educate consumers on how they can make a purchase on their phone but also get more people using their mobile service. A great move by Argos and as I said, something that was seen by thousands of commuters and undoubtedly tried out by a few.

 

Argos aside, the action from the rest of the high-street has been disappointing this year and if high street retailers are serious about the opportunity mobile presents they need to get their act together and quickly.

 

PayPal, an online payments service established in 2000 (and now owned by eBay) announced recently it processes more than $10,000 per minute in mobile payments and that it expects to see more than $3.5bn in mobile payment volume by the end of the year. So aside from the sheer volume, why is this relevant to high street retailers? Well, despite being about 12 years old, PayPal is still acting like a start-up.

 

The Next Web recently posted a video with John Lunn, Director of Platform and Integration at PayPal X (an eBay initiative to build ‘comprehensive commerce products and services for merchants of all sizes’), demonstrating something that makes use of a high street retailer’s biggest asset: The physical store. A physical store can only serve the retailer between opening hours. For the rest of the time the store just sits there with people walking past it. PayPal has taken the idea of window shopping one step further, allowing customers to interact with a store’s window and purchase items from the store via their phone. Brilliant! It’s something that stores spend significant budget on, to make sure window displays are as alluring as possible to draw people in to the store – but what about when the store’s closed?

 

John Lunn explains that he thought of the idea when walking down Oxford Street around midnight and all the shops were all obviously closed. You can see a small problem with putting this in to practice though – the fact that it’s only possible for one person to interact with one window at a time. Although having people queue up outside a store after it’s closed to get to the front of the window would be a priceless PR opportunity, in all reality it probably wouldn’t happen. I’m not going to queue in a store when it’s open so I’ll be damned if I’m going to queue for a window.

 

Needless to say it’s an important step for PayPal and retailers. PayPal is definitely one to watch for 2012 as the company looks to progress in the retail sector, while also moving in to the deals/coupon market.

 

Innovation isn’t just about new technology; it’s also about using what already exists but in a different way. For high street retailers, trying to keep up with the latest technology is going to be a losing battle. Instead they need to look at the assets they already have and how, coupled with technology and partners, these can be enhanced to bring in more customers.

 

PayPal window shopping from The Next Web

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September 1st, 2011 by Marie Efthymiou

Sister Power!

Another day, another ‘must-have’ miracle cream hits the shelves of the UK’s beauty aisles. This time it’s Visionnaire LR2412 by beauty giant, Lancôme Paris, whose scientists claim is the product they’re most proud of to date. Why? Well, after 12 years of research and 2412 molecules later (hence the name) they created a new molecule – LR2412, which can self-propel through the layers of epidermis to set off a series of micro-transformations to the surrounding tissue. In layman’s terms it diminishes the appearance of wrinkles, enlarged pores and combats uneven skin tone, by helping skin to self-repair and heal – hmm sounds all too familiar?!

So why is this particular new miracle cream selling out above all others? Three words, ‘The Middleton Effect’.

Kate and younger sister Pippa were amongst the lucky few to get their hands on the desired product, prior to its launch. The two sisters were sent complimentary samples of the serum, prompting an insider at the brand to confirm that as ‘loyal customers’ of Lancôme, they would have been sent the product to try as a ‘goodwill gesture’. This has sparked a frenzy – Lancôme beauty counters have been inundated with customers signing-up and pre-paying, waiting lists are well into the thousands, filled with signatures from women wanting a tiny slice of the Royal life at a mere £57 (for 30mls).

After all, Lancôme had previously spent hundreds of thousands of pounds on celeb endorsements with the likes of Kate Winslet, Uma Thurman and more recently, Emma Watson, and yet a short, well-crafted comment with a Royal name-drop has led to mass sales beyond their expectations. It doesn’t look like the Middleton’s influence on female shoppers will be waning anytime soon, nor will brands’ desire to be associated with them.

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February 18th, 2011 by sarahapps

Wake n’ Bacon

For the past week my alarm has gone off, as usual, at 5.30am. Words cannot describe how much the monotonous digital sound that infiltrates my ears every morning upsets me.

I’ve tried my fair share of alarm clocks from the old fashioned bell that kept me awake with its incessant ticking to a radio alarm that made me jump out of my skin when it blared out in the morning.

Now, dependent on a sponsor, there may be a new alarm clock coming on the market.

My search for a new alarm clock flagged up a piece in the Metro which revealed the ‘Wake n’ Bacon’ alarm clock created by Matty Sallin from New York.

Turning itself on 10mins before you’re due to wake up it slowly cooks bacon and wafts the scent around your room.

Can you imagine waking up to the scent of bacon every day. The delicious scent of sizzling bacon emulating from a wooden, piggy looking, bread bin with a tiny digital clock.

My first thought was that it was an ingenious idea. Waking up to cooked bacon every day would be amazing. And then I realised that waking up to cooked bacon every morning would not be amazing at all. The same smell everyday as you wake, slowly clinging on to your bed covers n seeping into the walls…gross.

Personally I cannot see how a scent alarm would work, but then again I couldn’t see how the light alarm clock would work, even though reports show it does.

I can always be guaranteed to sleep through until midday and breakfast at the weekend. The thought of having to sniff bacon at 5.30 every morning already wants to make me gag.

Bacon lovers knock yourselves out. Unfortunately bacon flavoured sweat is not something I have ever aspired to achieve. Mornings may not be as filling, but then again, who wants to eat bacon every day anyway?!

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November 8th, 2010 by Helen Beavis

BEAUTY AND THE BEAST

So, when you undertake to create the biggest online conversation about beauty amongst the nation’s women you’ve got to be able to handle the response. And boy what a response we got when we undertook the task on behalf of Tesco Beauty.

Journalists, bloggers and women who just love beauty came along to our Tesco Your Beauty event last Thursday where we revealed what 30,000 women really want from their beauty regimes and products.  And herein lay the beast – taking over the last 2 weeks of our lives pulling all of the insights together into one comprehensive report and 5 weeks prior to that running the campaign.

Key highlights included the fact that dark circles and wrinkles round the eyes are women’s biggest issue, eyelash curlers are the number one beauty tool, legs, not bums, are the thing we’d most like to alter and the beauty products that don’t rid us of our beauty demons-even though they claim they can.

It’s been huge but breakthrough.  Not only has it opened up a dialogue for Tesco with women, it’s provided invaluable insight that has the potential to steer the development of the Tesco beauty offering in terms of new ranges, pricing and promotions.

The vision is to build on this year on year so that Tesco ensures it is continually striving to really deliver.  Essentially, a great intelligence tool that can provide long-term insight to create successful strategies and a very true reflection to its own promise of: ‘Every Little Helps’.

The work continues this week to seed highlights from the report so a big thank you to everyone who participated in the conversation.

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September 15th, 2010 by Estelle Douine

Feel like getting into bed with JLS?

If you have any taste in music or men, then the answer to this question is no, but if you are a hopeless fan, well now you can.

In a clever move, the band has teamed up with Durex to launch a range of extra safe condoms – Just Love Sex – JLS.  The band’s initials.  Get it?

Although numerous penis/JLS related puns come to mind, the initiative has been labelled ‘the latex factor’.  Due to the quartet’s involvement in ITV1’s show, the X Factor.  Still following?

Four different packs will launch later on this year, each branded with a band member’s individual colour, and face.  Yes.  Not for fan collectables or laughter, just for extra pleasure.


Still feeling in mood?

While a heartless PR consultant at times, I actually didn’t find anything bad to say about the original concept: a talentless yet popular band seen as role models teaming up with condom giant to encourage safe sex and help keep their fans STD and pregnancy free as they get it on, most probably to one of their songs.

All the ingredients are here, yet in practice the partnership feels a little bit like the morning after the night before: surprise soon followed by incredulity and awkwardness.  And no breakfast.

I may be too old or not cool enough (rhetorical questions, thanks) but can anyone above the age of 16 confirm that this won’t put them or their partner off at the crucial time?

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August 26th, 2010 by Clare English

'Speeps' Profiles – Marie Efthymiou

This week, Marie Efthymiou (phonetic spelling available on request) entertains us with holiday anecdotes and suggestions as to how one might explain ‘PR’ to a four year old.

You’ve just got back from your holiday. Where did you go?

I had the most amazing two weeks! We started in not so sunny San Francisco (the best bit was visiting Alcatraz). And then onto Vegas which was out of this world and one massive party! And ended up in LA, which was all about soaking up the sun and celeb hunting (I didn’t see any, but I do have some very interesting snaps of Jennifer Aniston, Simon Cowell and Orlando Bloom’s front gates if you’re interested?)

What was your best meal?

I’m embarrassed to say but it was actually in a Greek restaurant on Long Beach – you see we’re not to dissimilar to you Brits, us Greeks will always sniff out the lamb kebabs.

I also became a little obsessed with their pancakes for breakfast. Everyday I ordered a short stack buttermilk pancake with maple syrup and bacon (very yummy, but thank goodness I don’t live there as I would be HUGE, it was near to impossible to find anything that resembled fresh fruit or veg).

What’s the one thing you have done on a holiday that would most shock us?

Being the good Greek girl that I am, I didn’t do anything that risqué or shocking. But I did take a liking to Harley’s and spent most of the time travelling around LA on one (on the back that is, there’s no ways I could control one of those big, bad boys).

How would you explain PR in three sentences to Steve Earls’ 4-year old?

We tell stories. And we try to make them as exciting as possible (which can sometimes be hard) so when we tell all the big bosses who work at the newspapers, magazines, TV and with computers they like them so much that they tell the whole wide world (well not always the whole world, sometimes just Basingstoke).

If someone wrote a biography about you, what do you think the title would be?

Good Greek Girls Don’t Exist

Why are manholes round?

Well it’s pretty common knowledge that round tubes are the strongest and most material-efficient shape against the compression of the earth around them. And obviously we all already know that it also needs to be round as human beings have a roughly circular cross-section.

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August 5th, 2010 by Clare English

'Speeps' Profiles – Chris McCrudden

This week, Speed’s revered creative director, Chris McCrudden, talks rainbow socks, the definition of ‘fugly’ and why the best ideas in life often crop up in the bog.  (Some parts of this profile may have been edited to protect the guilty)

How is the leg?

Broken.

You head up the Creative Team here at Speed. Any pointers for those faced with a seemingly boring/conservative client and want to inject a bit of creativity and pizzazz into the account?

Mind-bending drugs. Seriously, did you know the ‘work’ and ‘play’ bits of your brain are diametrically opposed? You’re not going to come up with a wonderful idea staring at a screen – that’s why we always do brainstorms in the creative area. If you’re stuck, go for a walk, or the loo. You always have the best ideas in the bog.

What is the weirdest suggestion you have had in a brainstorm that a client has considered or gone ahead with?

A very early experiment with social media that involved blogging about office ‘ghost stories’, way back in the days when we still thought Livejournal was a good idea. Like its subject matter, it disappeared in a puff of smoke.

What would you consider to be your biggest achievement so far in your PR career?

Winning Symantec was pretty awesome. I wanted that account for years. Oh, and persuading Sir Ian McKellan, Michael Caine and Anna Ford to part with ties for a charity auction.

What is the most irritating consumer trend you are seeing today?

Not so much a trend as an idea that won’t die. Men wearing big cargo shorts and flip flops. Fugly. Do not do it.

That said, I’m totes hearting the shoulder padded jacket, skirt and t-shirt look that East End girls are working at the moment. It’s identical to what my Mum wore to work in the early 90s.

You are usually in close proximity of some historical tome. But what newspapers/mags/tv programmes do you regularly read/watch?

I don’t watch TV if I can help it, but have a shameful addiction to The Archers (a soap opera on Radio 4 about sheep farming, for the uninitiated). And that’s only for the gin soaked old fag hag who runs the pub. She’s amazing. Other than that I read National Geographic occasionally, and steal the consumer team’s copy of Pick Me Up (it’s only 79p) when I want handy household tips and true life features on spousal battery and incest.

We have seen your feet come in an array of colors. So what advice would you give the men at Speed when considering purchasing a pair of socks?

If you wear artificial fibres on your feet you deserve all the athlete’s foot you get. And never wear a tie and socks in the same colour – it’s too matchy-matchy.

If you could give Nick Bishop one gift what would it be?

My thanks for nagging me into actually finding out I have a broken leg.

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August 2nd, 2010 by Flora Turner

The Future of Makeup?

My makeup bag, dressing table and bathroom cabinet runneth over with the unused makeup I have purchased either through misguided necessity or impulse buy.

Why have these glorious cosmetics gone to waste when they were so obviously a must-have at the time….? While yes, a lot of the time it transpires that I have amazingly managed to duplicate a previously purchased gem, but for the most part it is because the new Arizona Tan bronzer makes me more oompa loompa than sun kissed beauty or the Raspberry Crush eye shadow gives me the sexy look of festering conjunctivitis that I hadn’t anticipated.

Now the days of clashing cosmetics with my pasty skin tone are numbered as a new technology is set to revolutionise how we buy our makeup (apparently). Cosmetics giant L’Oréal is piloting a range of digital mirrors which take a snapshot of a customers face and ‘applies’ the makeup of their choice to the image once the product barcode has been scanned. You can have a wee play to see how it will look here .

Will it put an end to those iffy beauty purchases? In an ideal world…perhaps. I love the concept and think a valid alternative to the bacteria-infested ‘testers’ is long overdue. But…do I trust Boots to not let them break after the first weekend of heavy use and to leave them taking up valuable floor space? Erm, quite frankly, no.

I would love to be proved wrong and although L’Oréal would like us to believe ‘we’re worth it’ in terms of enhancing our cosmetics shopping experience, I’m afraid this may be less one step closer to Minority Report and more one off (very expensive) gimmick. We’ll see….

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July 8th, 2010 by Flora Turner

Run, Fat Kids, Run

(Written by guest blogger, our lovely work experience girl, Emily)

Whether at the gym or the local tennis club, nobody likes to join in on exercise if they’re the only one with a bit of wobble. It doesn’t just make you feel self conscious but can make you stop wanting to do exercise completely! So it’s understandable that kids that put weight on tend to stop doing as much exercise. School is the time where you’re constantly looking at everyone around you, wondering if you look the same as them, ‘am I normal?’ Self confidence is so fragile when you’re young, one step in the wrong direction and its gone.

So, wouldn’t it be better for us to advise children in the benefits of a good nutritional diet? Well, reading the piece on the BBC’s website would suggest so. A new paper, Archives of Disease in Childhood, suggests that children stop exercising when they gain weight, not before. The paper talks of educating children in nutrition as well as exercise. After all, we’re always told that it’s both exercise AND nutrition in that leads to a healthy diet. Not just exercise.

Maybe if we educated children in nutritional values we would be able to restore some self confidence in those children that are overweight and get them feeling more comfortable within themselves and back into exercise.

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May 16th, 2010 by Caroline Allen

A model mum vs real mums

At almost five months pregnant with baby number 2, absolutely the last thing in the world I would like to do is strip off for a photoshoot and pose provocatively but it doesn’t seem to be a problem for supermodel Claudia Schiffer.  At seven months pregnant with baby number 3, she is pictured in the German issue of Vogue posing in a risqué sofa shot as well as recreating the famous Demi Moore shot for the front cover.  I know she’s a supermodel but come on!  I know it’s not just me either – research amongst Tesco Baby & Toddler Club members found that mums would happily dump the army of makeup artists and hairdressers in favour of just a simple, relaxing bath.  While Claudia has opted to get naked for the shoot, mums across the country are stripping off to relax and pamper in the tub – without the presence of a photographer!  A soak in the bath is the number one ‘beauty treat’ for mums, with time to condition your hair coming a close second.  The contrast between supermodel mums and real mums …….

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