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Westfield free wifi. Who pays??

The retail landscape in Australia is practically unrecognisable to what it was a few years ago.

The potent combination of technology, the rapid changes in consumer behaviour, opening up of online and multiple channels to market, and the continual encroachment from overseas brands (in both a virtual and physical sense), has transformed our entire retail scene.

Source: BRW

And while I don’t pretend to be an expert on technology, I certainly understand the rapid advancements that technology is having on consumers and their purchasing behaviour. I can also see what retailers need to do to stay on top of these changes.

Some major retailers have been carefully dipping their toe in the new-look waters; aware that the classic lineal path to purchase doesn’t exist anymore. But by the looks of it, many more don’t even have a clue where the watering hole is.

I’m watching on as retailers try and reach out to consumers in what’s often a random series of touch points in the hope that one of their attempts will result in a purchase.

But instead, retailers should be trying to take consumers through an inspirational, educational journey of discovery through their brand. There’s no doubt that this takes a calculated blend of art and science to achieve.

Retailers can now also track consumers as they move through the physical and virtual world. This means bricks and mortar retailers are virtually moving toward being ‘clicks and mortar retailers’ by using this information to create hyper-localised targeted marketing and personalised offers as people walk in and out of their stores.

Consumers wouldn’t be aware of it, but retailers are utilising the analytics that come out of the free Wi-Fi networks that power shopping centres to plan their marketing attack.

This has shifted retailers’ marketing efforts from a herd to a hunter mentality, giving them opportunity to be far more targeted and strategic in their approach.

For example, Westfield just announced they’re offering free Wi-Fi across 21 Westfield malls for shoppers, providing 1GB of data free over a three hour period each day, with the network accessible across the entire mall area. It signals a powerful move that’s reminiscent of other Big Brother-style plays we’ve seen in the market, though this one is far more sophisticated than most. I’d be expecting far more sophisticated marketing as a result.

These powerful new technology plays give retailers the opportunity to predict what consumers might do next with incredible accuracy given they’re analysing the raw data.

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