Marketing tool attracts
shoppers
HCM CITY (VNS)- "Shopper marketing", a technical
term meaning using any marketing stimuli to build brand equity, engage
shoppers, and lead them tobuy, is helping European and Asian companies
increase income by 20 – 25 per cent, even during the global financial crisis,
international delegates heard at a conference in HCM City yesterday.
"Shopper
marketing is the new definition on how to directly approach and sell goods to
shoppers, not to general customers," Phan Thi Tuyet Mai, deputy
chairwoman of the Sai Gon Entrepreneur Club, said.
Speaking at the
conference on shopper marketing in
"It is the
best solution to help enterprises during recession. It is very useful for
making plans in 2014," said Trieu Ton Phong, general director of MSV
company.
Shopper marketing
finds out how customers buy and why they choose certain brands. Many shoppers
buy unconsciously, without calculation.
"So, bring
your brand name into the customers' unconsciousness. One shopper will decide
because of the family, for example. A lot of companies have done well in the
general market, but still have lost because they did not do well in the
retail sector," Richard Burrage, Cimigo's executive director, said.
In the retail
industry, more commodities are being sold based on two factors: the first, on
how to connect with shoppers, and the second on how to lead them from being a
shopper to a buyer.
For both retailers
and brand suppliers, these two factors have become goals in order to increase
their income.
"There are
seven principles for retail that can lead shoppers to becoming buyers,
including reasonable price, convenience, available goods, benefits, services,
surprise and the senses," Vu The Du, development director of MSV Group,
said.
According to MSV
Group statistics, budgets allocated for shopper marketing have increased 21
per cent annually, and 73 per cent of brand suppliers and 86 per cent of
retailers said shopper marketing was effective.
At least 55 per
cent of enterprises said they would increase budgets for shopper marketing
within the next three years. And 59 per cent of consumers and 85 per cent of
buyers confirmed that this would affect their decisions rather than outside
factors. According to studies, consumers only trust advertisements 25 per
cent of the time, while 70 per cent trust strangers who have knowledge of the
products. Ninety per cent believe in relatives or friends who have used the
products. - VNS
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Thứ Năm, 21 tháng 11, 2013
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