第 272 号A 级 "前进之路

tierapathforward.jpg

The worst thing to happen to the American mall is the boom of online-first modern luxury companies. And it’s also the best thing to happen to the American mall.

There are 1,100+ malls in America and approximately 320 are graded Tier A. We have an oversupply of malls but that does not mean that traditional, anchored shopping centers no longer have a place in consumerism. We’d argue that Tier A malls have yet to see their best years. We expect their footfall traffic KPIs to grow, while B and C tiered malls continue their trends toward repurposed real estate and other methods to maintain footfall traffic KPIs (mall opportunity, sales opportunity, and store performance).

Suzanne Mulvee, director of research at CoStar, cites that “lower-quality malls in markets with smaller populations and lower incomes will continue to close” —a trend that persists today. And here’s a data based position:

Green Street Advisors, a research firm, forecast a 6.0 percent drop in market revenue per available foot (RevPaF) for class-B and -C malls from 2018 to 2022, versus a 0.5 percent increase for class-A malls during the same period. 

Private market values of class-B and -C malls have also dropped the most since January 2017, according to Green Street, plunging 27.0 percent and 25.0 percent, respectively, year-over-year. Meanwhile, the values of class-A malls declined by 14.0 percent year-over-year.

National Real Estate Investor

So what does this mean for digitally vertical native brands (DNVB), old and new? In short, online-first brands should be positioning their product offering for inclusion in Tier A malls. First, let’s look at the established. A retail presence for DNVBs varies, as such:

  • Harry’s has a prominent position in J. Crew shops (Tier A)
  • Shinola has marquee positioning as stand alone stores (Tier A)
  • Mizzen + Main has prominent position at Nordstrom (Tier A)
  • Bevel has showroom real estate at Macys (Tier A / B)
  • Warby Parker has great stand alone stores (Tier A)
  • Greats has marquee positioning at Nordstrom (Tier A)
  • Ministry of Supply has great stand alone stores in Tier A areas
  • Homage has great stand alone stores (Tier A)
  • Bonobos has stand alone stores and Nordstrom positioning (Tier A)
  • MeUndies has positioning at Nordstrom (Tier A)
  • Goop is opening sponsored pop ups (Tier A)

There are very few presences in Tier B malls and virtually no DNVB presence in Tier C malls. These brands have done a wonderful job positioning themselves as modern luxury companies. They’ve been incubated online for five to ten years and they’ve become prominent enough to live as lifestyle brands in traditional retail spaces. It’s a forgone conclusion that omni-channel operations should be a focus for DNVBs; retail real estate analysis is a skill that is becoming more and more important. And DNVB’s are well-positioned to benefit from the Tier A adoption of the online brands. Recall this quote from Issue No. 265:


2PM’s Meghan Terwilliger had this to say:

Luxury, however you define it, is a brand’s embodiment of characteristics that make it desirable. Historically, those characteristics have been more ‘What’ features like quality, exclusivity, and cost. You can still define luxury as characteristics that make a brand desirable, but those characteristics have shifted. Quality is table stakes.

The characteristics that make brands more desirable are ‘how’ features like excellent customer experience (how do I experience the brand), meaningful brand mission (how do they give back/make a difference), and community engagement. Is it artist-created and excessively expensive? Maybe not. But if it is a product, or even an entire experience that is highly desirable, it can be considered a luxurious brand. DNVBs just so happen to possess a great infrastructure to support the characteristics that define modern luxury.


There are DNVBs that are launching daily. It is important that these brands understand that online retail mechanics has its limits. For these brands to expand into $30 million or more in annual revenue, omni-channel strategy can provide longterm growth. Additionally, this can reinvigorate top funnel sales through online channels.

Here are the top five suggestions for DNVBs launching today:

  • Master the first product. Bonobos began with pants, Mizzen + Main with a single white dress shirt, and Bevel with one blade.
  • Develop a strong sense of product ambassadorship. Mizzen + Main targets millennials, but the most capable buyers are between the age of 34-45. Developing a sense of loyalty with them can pay dividends. For their peers that don’t shop online, they’ll become a top funnel driver of them to your brick and mortar locations.
  • Avoid discount promotion, even at the beginning. Price stability over time is crucial. The moment that a brand is seen as a discounter, the Tier A mall demographic loses interest (with few exceptions).
  • Emphasize advertising to Tier A mall consumers. When DNVB’s grow online, they need to focus on the customers that possess the greatest LTV (lifetime value) potential. This correlates with Tier A mall shoppers.
  • Establish relationships with non-competitive retailers. It can be a powerful signal of longterm viability when existing brands co-sign your early product. This is most often seen by way of product collaborations, cross-promotion, or merchandising your products in their flagship stores.

Retailers that appeal to…the upper class are thriving. One look at Houston’s Galleria, Columbus’ Easton Town Center, or Miami’s Bal Harbour Shops will confirm as such. This is the future that many in retail are planning for. So no, retail is not dead. But retail is leaving the middle class behind because, frankly, so are we.

2PM Member Brief No. 5

In the first sentence, I wrote that online retail is the best and worst thing to happen to malls. In many ways, this is true. The shuttering of weaker retailers and shopping centers is long overdue. Experts attribute this trend to the emergence of online retail brands (and the excessive private equity debt that these retailers accrued to compete with them).

We have more retail real estate than any developed country on earth. Malls are not dying, the bad ones are. While eCommerce efficiency is appealing to digital marketers, the brick and mortar channel is golden for brand operatives who are establishing their brands as modern luxury products. Marketing is arithmetic, whereas brand-building is more of a subjective art. If you were to ask the chief executives at each of the aforementioned brands, they would point to their brick and mortar successes as great milestones. There will be fewer malls in the coming the years, but an early bet on the ones that remain will position young DNVBs for omni-channel success.

Read the rest of the issue.

By Web Smith and Meghan Terwilliger | About 2PM 

第 257 期Snap 公司与电子商务

水印_ByTailorBrands

Snapchat 、耐克、Darkstore 和 Shopify 联手在 Snapchat 上预售 Air Jordan III "Tinker",并提供当日送达服务。这其中有一些含义值得考虑。

在美国,电子商务由消费者搜索主导。产品发现仍然滞后。亚马逊延续了一个久经考验的发现机制,该机制目前外包给数字出版商(以换取联盟收入)。但发现生态系统仍存在漏洞。因此,让这家因发现而闻名的媒体公司来尝试这一飞跃吧。

本尼迪克特-埃文斯的推特

亚马逊是产品的 Google,但我们没有产品的 Facebook。

也许 Snapchat 正试图向这一角色靠拢?也许只是产品市场的契合点。

Snapchat 进军电子商务领域由来已久,对于这家洛杉矶媒体公司($SNAP) 来说,这是再合适不过的时机了。以下是杰森-德尔雷(Jason Del Rey)对 Shopify 和 Snapchat 为耐克的乔丹品牌建立合作关系的看法:

全明星周末期间,耐克公司在比赛主办城市洛杉矶举办了一场特别音乐会。现场观众在 Snapchat 相机的引导下,扫描篮球框后板上显示的代码,即可在应用程序中看到新款 Air Jordan III "Tinker "运动鞋。

在电子商务软件公司 Shopify 的技术帮助下,客人们可以在 Snapchat 上直接购买运动鞋。得益于一家名为Darkstore 的物流初创公司,大部分运动鞋都能在当天送到顾客手中。

@DelRey,Recode在此阅读)

2016 年 5 月的 2PM第 46 期以 "Snapchat,电商巨头 "为题。之所以以此为题,是因为这期杂志刊登了玛雅-科索夫(Maya Kossoff)的一篇值得一提的文章,在这篇文章之前,你会读到关于 Snapchat 最近与 Shopify 和乔丹品牌合作的许多话题。

不用离开 Snapchat 就能买票是 Snapchat 和二十世纪福克斯公司(Twentieth Century Fox,该公司投放了广告)最大的收获,这也表明该公司正在认真地向电子商务领域拓展。

@MeKosoff,《名利场》(在此阅读)

Snapchat 将广告活动与方便购买相结合的潜力使其有别于 Instagram,后者尚未与 Stripe 或 Shopify 建立合作关系。在 Snapchat 专注于 Spectacles 广告活动之前,我就对这一方向感到兴奋。但即使有了 Spectacles,Snapchat 也开始磨练我们现在看到的创意。


这是我在 2PM第 191 期(2017 年)上写的内容: 

Snapchat 在过去两年中最成功的营销活动不是通过传统广告,而是通过传统零售和电子商务。[......] 现代数字媒体和电子商务的良性循环不容忽视。消费者想去他们受影响的地方采取行动。广告商在这些地方制作内容也是明智之举。


 

有了 Jordan,Snap 开始涉足通过整合应用的销售渠道实现货币化的可能性。Snap 公开表示自己是一家相机公司,而不是社交媒体应用。这就是为什么它要开发 Spectacles 这样的产品,把太阳镜变成摄像机。虽然现在 Snap 只通过直播活动销售乔丹的一款限量版运动鞋,但我们不难想象,Snap 会利用其 1.87 亿每日活跃用户与相机之间的密切关系,与众多第三方品牌合作。

马克-威尔逊,《快公司》(在此阅读)

Facebook 在围绕 Snapchat 的原创想法进行迭代方面做得非常出色,几乎击败了一飞冲天的 Snap 公司。只有时间才能告诉我们,这种内容 x 商务是否会成为 Instagram 的另一个新创意。

点击此处阅读更多相关内容。