While the hybrid—or phygital—shopping experience has many more followers today, consumers don't seem ready to turn their backs on their favorite bricks-and-mortar stores
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Right now, everyone seems to be talking about the digital experience, largely seen as the future of shopping. But what do consumers really think? Since retail stores reopened, consumers actually appear to be very happy to rediscover the experiences—touching, trying on, social interactions—that they missed during the various lockdowns. This doesn't mean that they're giving up shopping online, but that they now count on enjoying the best of both worlds.
No less than 80% of consumers around the world (United States, France, United Kingdom, China) say they "feel comfortable" visiting physical stores now, according to a report released by the Mood Media agency*. And while they're still worried about catching covid-19 from visiting stores (48%)—Chinese consumers being the most concerned (50%)va majority of consumers say that shopping in physical stores feels good (54%). Consumers in the US are most at ease with the idea of returning to stores (86%). Shoppers in the UK are more confident than in 2020 (just 62%), but still remain the least confident (76%).
Getting back to normal
For now, consumer shopping habits have not yet returned to how they were before the pandemic, but there's every indication things are changing, and in a positive sense. Nearly two-thirds of global shoppers say they still don't visit stores as often as they did before covid, but nearly three in 10 (29%) say that they spend more per visit. Note that almost half the consumers polled (46%) say they spend "more or less the same" as before.