Indoor Location: Combatting the Billions Lost in Retail Walk-Out Sales

With an estimated $608 billion lost in retail walk-out sales in 2014, retailers are utilizing technology to help encourage customer loyalty and engagement and facilitate sales. Driven by the mobile device, the indoor location space is at the forefront of this movement.

During last week’s webinar, Nathan Pettyjohn, CEO of Aisle411, defined the indoor location space as the meeting place of product location data, positioning technology and contextual content management. He provided a comprehensive overview of the space and shared real world examples of stores that are leveraging this technology today.

Here are some of the takeaways from the webinar:

  • On average people check their mobile device 200 times per day (i.e. “mobile moments”).
  • Engaged shoppers locally and in-store will drive more visits and bigger baskets.
  • 73% of smartphone shoppers prefer to use their mobile for assistance in-store vs. an associate.
  • $10B in consumer spending will be touched or directly affected by indoor location by 2018.
  • Indoor location’s KPIs include: foot traffic, conversion rates, basket size, customer satisfaction and the impact of digital media/marketing on sales.

Check out the entire presentation below:

For access to all of our past webinars, visit https://bit.ly/LSAwebinars.

Share Article...

Follow Us...

Stay ahead of the curve and get the latest on Local straight to your inbox.

By submitting this form, you agree to receive communications from Localogy. You can unsubscribe at any time.

Leave a Reply

Related Resources

Thryv Grows SaaS Revenue 50 Percent in Q1 Localogy

Thryv Grows SaaS Revenue 50 Percent in Q1

Thryv holdings announced Q1 earnings and the story is similar to Q4: SaaS continues to be the growth engine as it manages planned declines in its legacy print directories business.

Tiger Pistol Games Out a Post-TikTok World Localogy

Tiger Pistol Games Out a Post-TikTok World

As TikTok’s fate as a U.S. operation continues to fluctuate at the whims of geopolitical favor, one hypothetical continues to tickle our speculative interest: What does a post-TikTok world look like? Tiger Pistol gives us its take.