Too many choices in the digital world can create confusion during decision-making
When one takes a closer look at a purchase process in the world of brick-and-mortar, one realises that there are many strong factors at play which operate at a sub-conscious level. In the case of a physical-format store, the average consumer must put in much more effort. The consumer must travel to the location, physically go through various items and maybe try out or even touch and feel some of them. Digital shopping, on the other hand, allows consumers to step into a similar virtual space at the click of a button and step out with another click. This requires little effort on the part of the shopper.
In the case of a digital transaction, there is no such human interface. Too many choices in the digital world could and many times do create confusion during decision-making.
In recent times, particularly in the world of fashion and garments, shoppers have been displaying new behaviours. In a recent article written by Biju Dominic, chief evangelist, Fractal Analytics, an interesting phenomenon called ‘bracketing’ is on the rise. “Bracketing” is a tendency of a consumer to buy multiple versions of a product, such as different sizes of a shirt, with the intent of sending back the ones they don’t want to keep. According to a study by Narvar, more than 58 per cent of shoppers in the US resort to bracketing behaviour. Another practice among a few shoppers is ‘wardrobing.’ That is, wearing an item of apparel once, maybe even for an event, and then returning it. According to industry reports, a whopping 16.5 per cent of the goods sold in the US in 2022, valued at nearly $817 billion, have been returned. In 2019, the return rate was only eight per cent. As per data from Indian retailers, returns in the Indian online shopping market stand at around 25-40 per cent. This high and increasing rate of returns is a serious problem for many an online retailer.
According to a Wall Street Journal report, it costs a retailer $27 to handle the return of an online order worth $100. Many of the returned goods are not in a condition to be resold. Some of them get re-routed to charities. Much of the burden of this return behavior is borne by the environment. In the US alone, 2.6 million tons of returned clothes wound up in landfills in 2020. Fashion is the third-most-polluting industry in the world after construction and food.
Making it easy for customers to return items at no cost started as a retail strategy to entice more people to shop online. But it’s getting expensive for retailers and irreversibly expensive for our planet.
High-priced electronics, such as laptops and tablets, have short product life cycles and lose value quickly, sometimes at a rate of almost 1 per cent per fortnight. Seasonal items, such as back-to-school supplies or winter coats, become more difficult to resell if retailers get them back on shelves after demand has bottomed out.
The interesting part is that once the returned goods are back in the hands of a retailer, a fairly large portion may need to be sold below full price, according to Gartner Research. According to US consumers, the most returned items were clothing (26 per cent), bags (19 per cent), shoes (18 per cent) and accessories (13 per cent), consumer electronics (11 per cent), and food and beverages (11 per cent).
While returns are a big problem for retail, large number of online retailers do not quantify its full cost and an equally large number do not use some kind of technology or software to better manage it. In regard to packaging, while online shopping generates 4.8 times more packaging waste than brick-and-mortar stores, returned products often require extra plastic or cardboard that contribute more waste.
While all of us are very happy with the advent of ecommerce and online shopping, this planet of ours is surely going to face adverse consequences unless every part of the chain handles the returns process the right way. In this area, my assessment says, surely the start must be with the end consumer.