The ideal way to lower return rates. With the rise of online shopping, retailers face an unwanted issue: returns. While many retail brands have enjoyed higher sales due to online shopping, a large portion of these sales is impacted by high return rates. In the U.S. last year, consumers returned $351 billion worth of online and offline purchases. Return rates for online purchases also see a significant spike during the holiday season.
The effects of this are significant. Too many returns from shopping can severely cut into profit margins and often need more resources, like staff and space, to handle the large number of returns. But how frequent are online shopping returns? Why do customers make them? And what can retailers do to lower the return rates?
Online shopping returns are widespread.
Years ago, free shipping or returns were more of a nice-to-have. Nowadays, free shipping and easy or free returns are increasingly expected by consumers. The latest data shows that almost 3 in 5 people in the U.S. and UK have returned a product they purchased online in the past 12 months.
People aged between 25-44 are more likely to have returned a product to the seller in the past year. However, older generations are also returning products at a notable rate, with over 40% of people aged 45-64 doing so in the past year. Information around online shopping returns is something that consumers actively seek.
This behaviour is quite consistent across generations. This shows that online shopping returns are an issue that consumers carefully consider before they commit to buying a product, across all age brackets. As a result, a well-thought-out returns policy is a key part of a brand’s value proposition and essential in remaining competitive.
Online shopping returns are more prevalent than in-store returns.
Our data shows over half of online consumers are more likely to return a product they bought online than a product they bought in in-store. This behaviour is more common among younger audiences and is likely partly due to online retailers’ generous delivery services and the ease with which consumers can return products online.
Returning a product in-store also tends to require more effort from consumers as they need to travel to the store and face the stress of queues. There’s also the potential embarrassment factor of making lots of in-store returns. Generous delivery services play a significant role in the surge of online shopping returns. Our data shows that 70% of people in the U.S. and the UK pay for a free delivery subscription provided by online retailers, like Amazon Prime.
Retailers can help reduce faulty or damaged products reaching consumers by using good-quality packaging and partnering with reputable shipping companies. Incorrect sizing and fit is a big problem for clothing brands in particular. The big drawback is that consumers can’t try on an item before making a purchase, and therefore don’t know if it’s right until they receive it. A serious cost driver for retailers is consumers buying from retailers while knowing in advance they’re likely to return the item.
Online retailers have made it so easy for people to return products that consumers are increasingly taking advantage of it. To top it off, The National Retail Federation reported that fraudulent returns cost retailers as much as $15 billion in the U.S. in 2017. A common example of return fraud is when consumers buy an item, wear it and then return it to the seller.
Brands like Amazon are stamping down on consumers who they feel are making excessive online shopping returns and are closing users’ accounts. It’s likely other companies will follow suit. Online shopping returns is part and parcel of doing business online, and consumers say free returns (56%) is a key feature that would motivate them to make a repeat purchase online.
Clearly, if brands don’t offer free returns, they risk being shunned by consumers. After all, the availability of free returns is a big incentive to buy, and there’s plenty of alternatives out there for consumers to choose from. However, not all brands are willing or have the financial capacity, to offer free returns. We already know Amazon has had a seismic effect on the retail industry, and the company often faces heavy criticism for its impact on small businesses.
Lately, Amazon has paid specific attention to smaller businesses. It recently announced Storefronts, a new section on Amazon’s marketplace where consumers can shop for products exclusively from small and medium-sized businesses. This presents opportunities for small businesses to work with Amazon and make use of its extensive distribution channels and global exposure. Amazon will pick, package and ship the products and will also take care of customer service and returns.
The good news for brands is free returns isn’t the only motivator for consumers to make a repeat purchase online.
Predictive personalisation of product selection becomes mission-critical
While all the surveys in the world identify obvious solutions, all of which have been known and appreciated for quite a few years, the new darling of ecommerce – personalisation, has a less understood or appreciated benefit – minuscule return rates. But it is biding its time, and mark our words – the next few years will see increasing appreciation and euphoria on this specific issue. If you offer predictive personalisation of product selection you are showing the consumer products that have already been identified as those they want to buy, by hundreds of times more than items merely sitting on a shelf or ecommerce page, or social commerce site.
This isn’t a fad choice. This isn’t an “I’ll bung it on at the end of my selection as I can always send it back, anyway“. These are products already identified by impressions and purchase history of that individual consumer, therefore thousands of times more likely that they’ll love and want, as dictated by their own prior actions. Who returns a puppy?
Personalised product selection solutions, using predictive analytics technologies, identify consumer’s future behaviour ranking every SKU by greatest likelihood of that individual consumer to purchase from all the SKUs listed, in order of greatest propensity. It presents them to that individual at exactly the right moment, thereby maximising that individual’s customer lifetime value CLV potential. (i.e. Likelihood to Purchase, Discount Affinity, Likelihood to Churn, etc).