Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
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Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
Social marketing, PR insight & thought leadership - from The PR Coach
Curated by Jeff Domansky
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In the Future of Retail, We’re Never Not Shopping

In the Future of Retail, We’re Never Not Shopping | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Most retail outlets — whether conventional brick-and-mortar shops, digitally enhanced stores like Macy’s in the U.S. or Burberry in the UK, or online stores — assume a traditional three-stage consumption model. The customer experiences a need, shops to satisfy the need, and then consumes or uses the product purchased (I need shoes, I buy shoes, I wear them).


TThe vocabulary of retailing reflects this model, assuming in particular that shopping is the central component of this model. Marketers will talk about shopping trips, shopping missions, shopping baskets, shopping lists, and destination trips. What’s more, current practice for the most part still rests on the idea that many decisions on which particular product to buy are made in the store — whether physical or online.


Hence, brands engage in an arms race of persuasion and hard-sell tactics (prices, promos, presence) at the point-of-sale order to sway the customer when she is ready to transact.


But winning in retailing today is less and less about control of the shopping experience because there is no longer a clearly defined shopping stage. The model is changing as new technologies allow people to bring the purchase of the product that satisfies their need closer to their first perception of it. And this makes the perception of the need — rather than the shop — the stage that marketers need to control.


This paradigm shift — and it really is that — is apparent in three ways....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

And the outcome? We’ll rely on stores less and less. Think about the impact that is already having and how retail must respond in the future?

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Here's Everything You Need To Know About Apple's New Payments System, Apple Pay

Here's Everything You Need To Know About Apple's New Payments System, Apple Pay | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Apple just announced a new mobile payments system called Apple Pay.


Apple Pay will work with an NFC (near field communication) antenna that will be built into every new iPhone as well as the new Apple Watch


To get started with Apple Pay, you can simply add a credit card from your iTunes account. You'll also be able to add new credit cards to Apple Pay just by using the iSight camera on your phone — no need to type in card numbers. Each card will get a device-only account number, so the actual credit card number is never stored on either your phone or Apple's servers.


The service is starting in the U.S. and will work with American Express, Mastercard, and Visa, as well as several major banks, like Capital One, PNC, and Chase....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Of all the Apple hoopla, this Apple Pay system is going to have the biggest impact now and in the future.

Amber McGuirk's curator insight, September 11, 2014 10:45 PM

Obviously, Apple has come up with some plan to make our lives easier or possibly harder with the Apple Pay. I personally think its a great idea.. I NEVER leave home without my phone however, I've left without my wallet many times. I already own Apple, so when this get's released in October I think that they have revolutionized the future of payment.