Target-Facebook discount program Cartwheel tries to
lure shoppers back to stores
May 8, 2013 by REUTERS
Target Corp is rolling out Cartwheel, a service that
combines social networking and discounts, the latest attempt by a U.S. retailer
to lure shoppers into its physical stores rather that seeing them buy from
online rivals.
Target said its new program relies
on shoppers using their Facebook accounts. However, shoppers can only redeem
the offers they choose in Target's U.S. stores, not online.
With Cartwheel, shoppers select the
deals they want online and then bring a barcode - either on paper or on a
mobile phone - to a Target store to get the discounts. Shoppers can see what
offers their Facebook friends have chosen, and earn more offers by having their
Facebook friends sign up.
This service comes as traditional
retailers try to keep shoppers buying from them rather than from Amazon.com
Inc. and other online-only retailers, especially as shoppers use
their smartphones to compare prices.
Twenty percent of cellphone owners research products using their
phones before they buy, and 18 percent of them compare prices on their phones
before making a purchase, according to Bill Tancer, general manager of global
research for Experian Marketing Services.
Cartwheel follows efforts such as Wal-Mart
Stores Inc letting shoppers in some of its U.S. stores scan their
goods with their iPhones while they shop and then more quickly proceed through
a self-checkout lane. Sears Holdings Corp's "Member Assist"
program gives its loyal shoppers the ability to get personalized shopping
advice from in-store personnel without even stepping foot in a Sears or Kmart
store.
"It is very fascinating to see
the very different approaches that retailers are taking to achieve the same
goals," said Carol Spieckerman, president of newmarketbuilders, a retail
strategy firm.
Retailers are using digital tools to
better cater to shoppers who love to comparison shop while in their stores.
Target and other retailers offer free WiFi, and at one of its Minnesota
stores Best Buy Co Inc has tested its "Page a Blue
Shirt" service that lets customers summon a store associate with a click
on a store iPad.
For chains such as Kmart,
Target and Walmart, such issues are increasingly important
as their businesses have evolved since each opened its doors in 1962. Their
stores used to be one-stop shops for everything from books and movies to photo
developing. As such services have waned in popularity with the rise of digital
books, movies and photo sharing sites, the chains are doing what they can to
figure out new ways to make their stores more attractive to shoppers and,
ultimately, more profitable.
CARTWHEEL'S BETA ROLLOUT
Starting on May 8, Target is opening
Cartwheel to the public in a beta test, and asking for feedback as it makes
changes. The service will initially be advertised on Target's website, through
Facebook and in emails to Target's best shoppers and card holders.
Target did not rule out the
possibility of allowing Cartwheel offers to be redeemed on its website someday.
Target said it worked in a close
partnership with Facebook Inc for about a year. While Facebook has
worked on the project, Cartwheel is owned by Target. For now, Target has no
plans to extend it to other social sites such as Pinterest.
Linking offers through Facebook will
let the retailer know exactly what Facebook can or cannot accomplish for it.
While Twitter can be useful to promote timely, limited
offers, Facebook is "the dominant platform" for connecting with
shoppers and, in turn, with their connections, Spieckerman said.
Target sees the program as a way to
extend the trips shoppers take into parts of the store they might normally
skip, in order to pick up a promoted item.
An app coming in June will let
shoppers scan a photo of an item's barcode to quickly see if an offer is
available on that item.
Shoppers using Cartwheel can choose
from hundreds of deals on items such as Target's own Threshold home goods and
name brand goods such as M&Ms candy and Coca-Cola soft drinks. The weekly, monthly and
quarterly deals include discounts from 5 percent off to as much as 40 percent
off of certain goods, and differ from other Target offers in circulars or
coupon booklets.
Shoppers can share the deals they
are picking with their Facebook friends, but offers on more discreet items -
from bras to Tums - will not be visible to others.
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