Tesis de Miembro: El centro comercial conectado

017L5uL4

Mucho antes de que el comercio minorista se viera afectado por el distanciamiento social, el centro comercial estadounidense luchaba por sobrevivir. Las primeras señales de ello estaban en todas partes: descuentos y promociones perpetuas, personal insuficiente, inventario obsoleto y escaparates anticuados. Varios de estos minoristas son activos muy apalancados, un culpable que hasta un analista financiero principiante podría identificar. El resultado fue una avalancha de despidos y cierres a las dos semanas de la caída del tráfico. ¿Cómo será un ecosistema minorista sano cuando vuelva la normalidad?

Este informe está destinado exclusivamente a Miembros ejecutivos, para facilitarle la afiliación, puede hacer clic a continuación y acceder a cientos de informes, a nuestra lista DTC Power List y a otras herramientas que le ayudarán a tomar decisiones de alto nivel.

Únete aquí

Memo: The Gruen Transfer

A new note. His ideas have become popular once again, as indoor-outdoor malls, multi-use retail communities, and experiential retail have become top of mind.

The Gruen Transfer is the generalized desire to shop. It’s the effect of feeling lost in a mall, amplifying the likelihood of impulse purchase. In the macro, the concept is synonymous with a consumer’s desire to spend time in a mall or walk a street of storefronts. It’s shopping for the sake of shopping. Except, Gruen didn’t want it this way at all.

This mind-trick, this consumerism for consumerism’s sake, was the brain child of an architect named Victor Gruen. He’s the one who turned American day-to-day life into something that could be parodied in a zombie film. The entire trick bears his name, after all. [Gizmodo, 2013]

The original mall concept that bears his name is a perversion of what he’d really intended. What got in the way? American sociology. Gruen has reentered the American conscious after decades of being forgotten by everyone outside of architectural pockets. This 2019 essay explained how our own cultural woes contributed to the over-retail of American and the zombie-fication of retail.

While largely ignored, what you will read below remains my favorite work at 2PM. The retail industrial complex’s decision to do away with Gruen’s original vision and multiply the concept of indoor acreage of retail haunts the American retail industry today. You will be able to better infer as to why that decision was made below.

This is where retail meets sociology, economics, and American politics.

Continue reading “Memo: The Gruen Transfer”