The smartphone is changing how we shop. From showrooming to hitting the January sales in a more convenient way, smartphones have placed shoppers ahead of retailers and brands in the race to master digital. This gap is set to widen as retailers struggle to keep up with the expectations of the increasingly demanding digital shopper. Smartphones are creating a bridge between physical products and digital worlds, but retailers and brands are failing to grasp the nettle.
To quote Deloitte: “around 6% of in-store retail sales are being influenced by smartphone use, equivalent to £15.2bn of sales in 2012”. And it’s a trend that’s set to grow: “By 2016, more than 80% of consumers are expected to own a smartphone and Deloitte estimates that between 15% and 18% of in-store sales will be smartphone-influenced, equivalent to £35-43bn”.
It’s already well-entrenched that digital shoppers use their smartphones for practical searches such as locating stores, checking deals, comparing prices and researching products – all top motivations. But the smartphone’s potential as a shopping tool goes way beyond these relatively prosaic functions.
Smartphones have seamlessly integrated into our lives like a multipurpose Swiss army knife. This creates a golden opportunity for brands and retailers to reach their shoppers in new, value-added ways whilst building brand equity. So why aren’t retailers and brands doing more to connect and influence their shoppers through smartphones?
Some are trying, but few – if any – are scoring full marks. I came across a QR code in Tesco’s spirits aisle the other day. Shopping for a party, I was on the hunt for spirits and mixers to make cocktails. I scanned said QR code in the hope of finding inspiration. But imagine my disappointment to find myself being directed straight to Tesco’s m-commerce page.
Tesco was essentially showing me another way to purchase what was directly in front of me… and I wasn’t even showrooming. Sadly, this is typical and shows that retailers aren’t fully embracing smartphones. In fact, it feels like they’re playing catch-up with the expectations of digital shoppers.
Looking back at how retail has evolved over the past 5 to 10 years, it doesn’t come as a surprise to find it’s the shoppers who are ahead of the game. Shoppers, with their busy and demanding lives, have required more convenience. And it’s this that has driven the shift from high street and neighbourhood stores to online shopping, ‘grocery plus’ stores and an evolution of on-the-go retail; think Tesco Extra and BP + M&S Simply Food.
In line with this need for enhanced convenience, shoppers also want to maximise their free time. They now expect quality shopping experiences. This has led to better destination retail in retail parks and shopping malls, with Westfield being a case in point. Retailers that didn’t pay close attention to shopper’s demands and expectations have disappeared. Similarly, if retailers ignore the digital shopper’s need for smartphone plug-ins, they may also find themselves going the way of HMV and Comet.
It’s understandable that retailers and brands may feel the fear about investing in this largely unchartered territory, but it’s soon going to be impossible to ignore the role that smartphones play in shopping. Trendwatching’s ‘Point-Know-Buy’ report shows that consumers’ expectations of what smartphones can achieve is high and search will no longer be limited to text.
Next generation apps create an expectation that we can point our smartphone at anything and have information fed back to us in a relevant and personalised way. Every brand must now consider how their physical product can link to the digital brand world.
The question that retailers and brands need to consider is: how can the smartphone optimise the path to purchase? Identifying barriers to purchase is great place to start. If only that Tesco QR code had taken me to a place where I could get cocktail recommendations.
The creative opportunities are manifold. I could have been guided by the type of party I wanted, or the nature of the occasion could have been matched to the right mixers. These simple ideas foster a much richer experience and, most importantly, can help trigger purchase.
In fact, smartphones are an ideal vehicle for triggering purchase. But, again, retailers and brands are being woefully slow to realise its potential. There are, however, a few exceptions. The Emmi Murmeli app features an animal, Murmeli, from the Swiss milk processing brand’s ATL campaign. Murmeli is a Tamagotchi and when the animal becomes hungry, he must be fed by using the app to scan codes on real Emmi products.
This is a great way of getting product in hand and creating purchase triggers. If retailers and brands were more open to using smartphones as a tool to drive purchase, they would feel the benefits in more than one way. Not only would they be satisfying the expectations of digital shoppers, they could also increase revenue.
There’s no doubt that the digital shopper offers brands and retailers huge and untapped potential. As a marketer and a shopper, I personally cannot wait to use my smartphone to pre-order and pay for my coffee so it’s waiting for me at Kings Cross – a nice and convenient way to perk up the daily march to work.
I’d also like to get genuine inspiration in complex categories… like spirits at Tesco. Even better, how about using my smartphone to find products, like the ever-elusive mustard, without traipsing around numerous supermarket aisles and bothering harassed staff? Or scanning a pile of jeans and instantly finding my size? Or streamlining my wallet by getting receipts sent straight to my mobile?
Shoppers are digital already and they have great expectations from smartphones. It’s up to brands and retailers to stop lagging behind.
This article was written by John Viccars, Shopper Strategist here at RPM, and first appeared on The Wall: http://wallblog.co.uk/2013/01/30/get-smart-about-smartphones-to-appease-digital-shoppers/

Monday, 4 February 2013
Friday, 18 January 2013
RPM take third place in the IG City Challenge
The big news in cycling is Lance Armstrong's admission to Oprah Winfrey. The bigger news in cycling is last night's London Bike Show showcasing of the world's first indoor criterium, a 600 metre specially developed track with two long straights and several challenging turns (as one of our riders painfully found out).
During the evening the track held media and industry races over twenty laps but the main event was the IG City Challenge, which saw twelve city firms ranging from law, entertainment and marketing battle it out over four events. A rider from each team participated in either a two-lap time trial, 500 metre sprint, eight-minute hill climb or a twenty-lap criterium race. Finishing proceedings off would be a highly-anticipated team relay.
After four events and with just the team relay to go, RPM were lying in fifth place with our main rivals, Team Sky, just two points ahead. But… with incredible bravery from Matt Convery (who raced on despite severe road rash from a crash on the Crit) the boys from RPM pulled it out the bag with perfect changeovers and blistering pace, finishing in third and giving us enough points to overtake Team Sky.
With solid performances from the whole team and a stage win from Joe Dizon, RPM ended up third overall and enjoyed the glory of a podium finish!
People say its not the winning that matters, but the podium finish felt pretty good. And a brilliant night was had by all at this well-run and unique event.
Head down to the London Nocturne and check it out when you get the chance.
Tuesday, 15 January 2013
Inspiration Information #2.
Time for part two of those things we expect to grab both our attention and excitement in 2013...
The high street as window to mobile shops
As the high street continues to take a beating (RIP HMV) we expect to see an increasing trend towards stores as experiences, hand-in-hand with this development will be the increasing role of mobile in-store. Presently, mobile is delivering only 0.5% of total retail spend; about £2 billion. Research from Barclays Corporate suggests this will rise to 5% by 2021.
As where we spend our retail pounds (whether this is the high street or office in front of our laptop) becomes less and less significant in a world of always-on mobile shopping opportunities, so we expect the physical experience of brands to become richer and a much greater point of differentiation for the best. Superfast 4G mobile operator EE, for example, has conceived of its in-store experience as a brand encounter rather than a handset showroom.
So, the shop becomes ever more focused on delivering an immersive, experiential brand experience. With this will come experiential campaign executions like Westfield’s ‘Future Fashion’ events, into which the personal mobile experience is integrated and shopping is always just a click-away.
Real-time personalisation
Examples abound throughout 2012 of this exciting trend, from the coffee cup sleeve with the latest Twitter headlines printed on it courtesy of a national daily newspaper, to Hellmann’s Recipe Receipt which custom-prints recipes onto your till receipt at the supermarket based on the content of your basket. Then there’s Google’s brilliant Chrome Web Lab at London’s Science Museum (a Willy Wonka wonderland of machines powered by web and social technology).
Personalisation is, of course, the primary currency of the best Facebook campaigns whether that’s the high polish personalised videos like the celebrated Intel Museum of Me and Take This Lollipop or those now well-worn executions that integrate your street into films via Google Street View, the latest from Stella Artois.
We like the trend towards social media activity that elevates and celebrates the audience either by placing their content at the heart of media, like Samsung’s Valentine’s campaign in Piccadilly Circus which displayed lovers’ messages via Facebook to the giant advertising screens, or with responsive Facebook creative released real-time to fuel active community participation. This was followed through into TV advertising by Costa Coffee whose Coffee Heads advert gathered singing heads from their Facebook audience and then unleashed them onto primetime on the final ad of their campaign.
The high street as window to mobile shops
As the high street continues to take a beating (RIP HMV) we expect to see an increasing trend towards stores as experiences, hand-in-hand with this development will be the increasing role of mobile in-store. Presently, mobile is delivering only 0.5% of total retail spend; about £2 billion. Research from Barclays Corporate suggests this will rise to 5% by 2021.
As where we spend our retail pounds (whether this is the high street or office in front of our laptop) becomes less and less significant in a world of always-on mobile shopping opportunities, so we expect the physical experience of brands to become richer and a much greater point of differentiation for the best. Superfast 4G mobile operator EE, for example, has conceived of its in-store experience as a brand encounter rather than a handset showroom.
So, the shop becomes ever more focused on delivering an immersive, experiential brand experience. With this will come experiential campaign executions like Westfield’s ‘Future Fashion’ events, into which the personal mobile experience is integrated and shopping is always just a click-away.
Real-time personalisation
Examples abound throughout 2012 of this exciting trend, from the coffee cup sleeve with the latest Twitter headlines printed on it courtesy of a national daily newspaper, to Hellmann’s Recipe Receipt which custom-prints recipes onto your till receipt at the supermarket based on the content of your basket. Then there’s Google’s brilliant Chrome Web Lab at London’s Science Museum (a Willy Wonka wonderland of machines powered by web and social technology).
Personalisation is, of course, the primary currency of the best Facebook campaigns whether that’s the high polish personalised videos like the celebrated Intel Museum of Me and Take This Lollipop or those now well-worn executions that integrate your street into films via Google Street View, the latest from Stella Artois.
We like the trend towards social media activity that elevates and celebrates the audience either by placing their content at the heart of media, like Samsung’s Valentine’s campaign in Piccadilly Circus which displayed lovers’ messages via Facebook to the giant advertising screens, or with responsive Facebook creative released real-time to fuel active community participation. This was followed through into TV advertising by Costa Coffee whose Coffee Heads advert gathered singing heads from their Facebook audience and then unleashed them onto primetime on the final ad of their campaign.
Friday, 11 January 2013
RPM turns 20!
This week we celebrate our 20th Birthday and say goodbye to our teenage years. It’s hard to believe the journey we have been on, from our humble beginnings in a converted cowshed outside Wokingham with no clients, three not particularly mobile phones but a huge sense of excitement and belief in what we could achieve.
We’ve had an extraordinary time building RPM up to where it is today, working with incredible clients, their businesses and some of the brightest and most ambitious people in the industry.
Some interesting milestones over the 20 years…
1993 RPM founded with £15,000 in a cowshed on a farm outside Wokingham
1994 RPM launches Staffing division and wins M&S, WM Grant and Unilever as clients. RPM launches Production and Creative divisions
1996 RPM embarks upon three year launch of PG Tips’ pyramid bag. RPM buys LFP Photography and launches RPM Photography
1997 RPM moves to new office in Station Rd, Hampton
1998 RPM creates one of the first festival Brand Experiences for Strongbow (still going strong 14 years later!)
1999 RPM completes three year regional launch of PG Tips’ pyramid bag & wins Unilever’s Global Effectiveness Award
2000 RPM survives Millennium Bug & wins first £1m account with Camelot
2001 RPM wins Agency of the Year from both Marketing Magazine and The Grocer Awards GRAMIA
2002 RPM moves into The Old Treacle Factory, London, wins Deloitte Touche Indy 100 Fastest Growing Companies and begins our longstanding relationship with Diageo
2003 RPM wins Marketing Agency of the Year for the second time
2005 RPM sets up a specialist Planning & Concept Team and launches the RPM grad scheme (over 40 grads to date and counting)
2006 RPM goes global, securing its first global client – FIFA (activating FIFA Interactive World Cup) launching Blackberry Bold in 22 countries and delivering The Sky Festival (36 events for 31 channels over one weekend in Manchester)
2007 RPM is No. 1 in Marketing Magazine’s Experiential League Tables and remains the largest independent agency
2008 Winner at the MCCA Awards, Development of Agency Talent. RPM Digital comes to life
2010 RPM wins Sports Industry Award for Mass Participation (Skyride) and Diageo's European Innovation Agency of The Year for Smirnoff Global Brand Activation. RPM begins working with E.ON and ECB
2011 Over 20,500 Promotional People staffing days. RPM wins Agency Leadership Award at Field Marketing & Brand Experience Awards and Blade for Sky at The O2, is in Sunday Times Best Small Companies to Work For, for the sixth consecutive year
2012 In the Olympic year and summer of cycling, RPM succeeds in getting 1m people to cycle more regularly and 15 RPM cyclists ride London to Paris to witness "Wiggo" secure victory in Tour De France. RPM sweep the Awards Board with two Diageo Marketing Brilliance Awards, Platinum, Grand Prix and Gold Wins at Eventia, Brand Event Awards and FM&BE Awards respectively.
As proud as I am of everything that has been achieved, it is utterly eclipsed by the sense of debt and gratitude I owe to those who have played their part in making our original vision a reality. I would like to take this opportunity to say thank you to each and every one of you.
As humbling as the achievements to date are, in truth, we’re just getting into our stride and I remain incredibly excited about what lies ahead for RPM and the wider industry..
Hugh Robertson
We’ve had an extraordinary time building RPM up to where it is today, working with incredible clients, their businesses and some of the brightest and most ambitious people in the industry.
Some interesting milestones over the 20 years…
1993 RPM founded with £15,000 in a cowshed on a farm outside Wokingham
1994 RPM launches Staffing division and wins M&S, WM Grant and Unilever as clients. RPM launches Production and Creative divisions
1996 RPM embarks upon three year launch of PG Tips’ pyramid bag. RPM buys LFP Photography and launches RPM Photography
1997 RPM moves to new office in Station Rd, Hampton
1998 RPM creates one of the first festival Brand Experiences for Strongbow (still going strong 14 years later!)
1999 RPM completes three year regional launch of PG Tips’ pyramid bag & wins Unilever’s Global Effectiveness Award
2000 RPM survives Millennium Bug & wins first £1m account with Camelot
2001 RPM wins Agency of the Year from both Marketing Magazine and The Grocer Awards GRAMIA
2002 RPM moves into The Old Treacle Factory, London, wins Deloitte Touche Indy 100 Fastest Growing Companies and begins our longstanding relationship with Diageo
2003 RPM wins Marketing Agency of the Year for the second time
2005 RPM sets up a specialist Planning & Concept Team and launches the RPM grad scheme (over 40 grads to date and counting)
2006 RPM goes global, securing its first global client – FIFA (activating FIFA Interactive World Cup) launching Blackberry Bold in 22 countries and delivering The Sky Festival (36 events for 31 channels over one weekend in Manchester)
2007 RPM is No. 1 in Marketing Magazine’s Experiential League Tables and remains the largest independent agency
2008 Winner at the MCCA Awards, Development of Agency Talent. RPM Digital comes to life
2010 RPM wins Sports Industry Award for Mass Participation (Skyride) and Diageo's European Innovation Agency of The Year for Smirnoff Global Brand Activation. RPM begins working with E.ON and ECB
2011 Over 20,500 Promotional People staffing days. RPM wins Agency Leadership Award at Field Marketing & Brand Experience Awards and Blade for Sky at The O2, is in Sunday Times Best Small Companies to Work For, for the sixth consecutive year
2012 In the Olympic year and summer of cycling, RPM succeeds in getting 1m people to cycle more regularly and 15 RPM cyclists ride London to Paris to witness "Wiggo" secure victory in Tour De France. RPM sweep the Awards Board with two Diageo Marketing Brilliance Awards, Platinum, Grand Prix and Gold Wins at Eventia, Brand Event Awards and FM&BE Awards respectively.
As proud as I am of everything that has been achieved, it is utterly eclipsed by the sense of debt and gratitude I owe to those who have played their part in making our original vision a reality. I would like to take this opportunity to say thank you to each and every one of you.
As humbling as the achievements to date are, in truth, we’re just getting into our stride and I remain incredibly excited about what lies ahead for RPM and the wider industry..
Hugh Robertson
Friday, 4 January 2013
Inspiration Information #1.
January Blues. What January Blues? We're raring to go here at the Old Treacle Factory and to usher in a year we expect to bring exciting innovations to our work and the industry in general we'll be blogging some of the trends, technology, cultural and business developments pushing things forward throughout January.
Crystal ball gazing is a mug’s game, so we’re not going to set ourselves up as marketing soothsayers but we do want to share what's exciting us as we enter into the most exciting year yet at RPM. These are the things putting a spring in our step every morning. Please share yours with us here or on Twitter, and check the Pinterest boards for daily inspiration.
'Social content', not social media
Content Marketing was the buzz phrase of 2012 for digital marketers and looks set to dominate the agenda this year for the Econsultancy crowd. For us, the important revelation the marketing world woke up to here was that a social strategy is not about what platform your brand should be on (Facebook? Pinterest?) but what content your brand’s audience wants from you. The platforms, of course, follow.
Writing in Marketing Magazine in December, Gordon MacMillan claimed that 2013 would be about throwing your social media strategy out the window and starting again. His point was just this; that brands should start with what they are going to say whether that’s called branded content, brand journalism or content marketing.
Too many brands know this all too well from Burberry to Bodyform (who both executed great work in this space last year) for it to be a revelation. We look forward to more coming around to the idea of entertaining, adding value, supporting customer passions and opening up their relationship with their audience through the power of content.
One note of caution on ‘content marketing’ though, watch out for the digital marketers who will turn this into another branch of the more dubious aspects of SEO, creating list article after list article as catnip for social sharers.
Real World Digital
From devices like the Twine box, which can be wired to Tweet when your washing is done or when the kids have their fingers in the chocolate cupboard, to the Nest thermostat which is controlled from your phone and learns your schedule to control the heat in your home accordingly, the ‘Internet of Things’ is going mainstream this year.
We love the applications that we’re already seeing in the marketing world – Bubblegum dispensers controlled by Twitter hashtags, city-centre snowstorms triggered by Foursquare checkins.
Take a look at our ‘Real World Digital’ board on Pinterest for more inspiration.
Start-ups go B2B
It’s getting harder and harder for the slew of consumer apps to cut-through amidst all the noise and that troublesome requirement for meaningful revenue models. Cynical tech scene commentator ReadWriteWeb reckons this will be the year when we take the axe to all those unused apps ‘with filters’ that have flooded our smartphones.
Some smart maneuverers have already sidestepped their original consumer proposition and gone B2B in search of meaningful revenue – take a look at Percolate who started out as a content digest for the time-poor culled from your social feeds but is now using its technology to power dashboard software that combines insight with content publishing for brand clients.
As it becomes more and more important for the tech innovators to make money we foresee more and more opportunities for brands to collaborate and bring value to their audiences in partnerships with tech’s best minds.
More next week and if you'd like to bring something to our attention, hit us @rpmltd on Twitter.
Crystal ball gazing is a mug’s game, so we’re not going to set ourselves up as marketing soothsayers but we do want to share what's exciting us as we enter into the most exciting year yet at RPM. These are the things putting a spring in our step every morning. Please share yours with us here or on Twitter, and check the Pinterest boards for daily inspiration.
'Social content', not social media
Content Marketing was the buzz phrase of 2012 for digital marketers and looks set to dominate the agenda this year for the Econsultancy crowd. For us, the important revelation the marketing world woke up to here was that a social strategy is not about what platform your brand should be on (Facebook? Pinterest?) but what content your brand’s audience wants from you. The platforms, of course, follow.
Writing in Marketing Magazine in December, Gordon MacMillan claimed that 2013 would be about throwing your social media strategy out the window and starting again. His point was just this; that brands should start with what they are going to say whether that’s called branded content, brand journalism or content marketing.
Too many brands know this all too well from Burberry to Bodyform (who both executed great work in this space last year) for it to be a revelation. We look forward to more coming around to the idea of entertaining, adding value, supporting customer passions and opening up their relationship with their audience through the power of content.
One note of caution on ‘content marketing’ though, watch out for the digital marketers who will turn this into another branch of the more dubious aspects of SEO, creating list article after list article as catnip for social sharers.
Real World Digital
From devices like the Twine box, which can be wired to Tweet when your washing is done or when the kids have their fingers in the chocolate cupboard, to the Nest thermostat which is controlled from your phone and learns your schedule to control the heat in your home accordingly, the ‘Internet of Things’ is going mainstream this year.
We love the applications that we’re already seeing in the marketing world – Bubblegum dispensers controlled by Twitter hashtags, city-centre snowstorms triggered by Foursquare checkins.
Take a look at our ‘Real World Digital’ board on Pinterest for more inspiration.
Start-ups go B2B
It’s getting harder and harder for the slew of consumer apps to cut-through amidst all the noise and that troublesome requirement for meaningful revenue models. Cynical tech scene commentator ReadWriteWeb reckons this will be the year when we take the axe to all those unused apps ‘with filters’ that have flooded our smartphones.
Some smart maneuverers have already sidestepped their original consumer proposition and gone B2B in search of meaningful revenue – take a look at Percolate who started out as a content digest for the time-poor culled from your social feeds but is now using its technology to power dashboard software that combines insight with content publishing for brand clients.
As it becomes more and more important for the tech innovators to make money we foresee more and more opportunities for brands to collaborate and bring value to their audiences in partnerships with tech’s best minds.
More next week and if you'd like to bring something to our attention, hit us @rpmltd on Twitter.
Thursday, 6 December 2012
Luxe Box London by Lucy
On the 10th - 23rd December one of are very own, Lucy Heale, is showcasing Luxe Box London at the Start-Up Britain Christmas Shop in Richmond. PopUp Britain was created to give new British brands a rare opportunity to get their products onto the British High Street.
So pop down to meet Lucy and see her bold, iconic boxes packed with exquisite, hand-picked treats. The Urban Goddess Box will be on show; the perfect Christmas gift for those who appreciate quality and style.
The box includes the beautiful Wild Planet lavender scented candle ideal for long soaks in the bath, mouth-watering Rococo rose-pink champagne truffles for cheeky indulgent moments, a deliciously soft Tweedmill Textiles throw, a vintage collectable edition of classic love story Sense and Sensibility, a Thornback and Peel pigeon and jelly notebook and an elegant Reiko Kaneko lipstick mug.
Check out www.luxeboxlondon.com for more information.
Tuesday, 4 December 2012
The Brand Event and Eventia Awards
It's been a truly award winning week here at RPM, after incredible evenings at both the Brand Event and Eventia Awards.
The Brand Event Awards celebrate the event marketing strategies of the globe's biggest brands. On Thursday, RPM won the GRAND PRIX award for 'Best Alcoholic Drinks Event Strategy' for Smirnoff Presents Sensations, a one-of-a-kind dance event for 10,000 people at The O2. The M&S Agricultural show 2012 also won 'Best FMCG Event Strategy'.
Next we were off to the 2012 Eventia Awards, where RPM were awarded PLATINUM, the evening's most prestigious accolade, which recognises the agency that scored consistently high across all of its entries.
The following wins contributed to the score…
GOLD 'Best Public Event' - Talisker Sail-in Cinema
SILVER 'Best Public Event' - Smirnoff Presents Sensations
GOLD 'Best Brand Experience' - Talisker Sail-in Cinema
SILVER 'Best Brand Experience' - M&S Agricultural Shows 2012
And finally, RPM Promotional People won gold for 'Event Services Supplier of the Year' for our work with Coca Cola and Sky.
What a fantastic end to 2012! Well done everyone.
The Brand Event Awards celebrate the event marketing strategies of the globe's biggest brands. On Thursday, RPM won the GRAND PRIX award for 'Best Alcoholic Drinks Event Strategy' for Smirnoff Presents Sensations, a one-of-a-kind dance event for 10,000 people at The O2. The M&S Agricultural show 2012 also won 'Best FMCG Event Strategy'.
Next we were off to the 2012 Eventia Awards, where RPM were awarded PLATINUM, the evening's most prestigious accolade, which recognises the agency that scored consistently high across all of its entries.
The following wins contributed to the score…
GOLD 'Best Public Event' - Talisker Sail-in Cinema
SILVER 'Best Public Event' - Smirnoff Presents Sensations
GOLD 'Best Brand Experience' - Talisker Sail-in Cinema
SILVER 'Best Brand Experience' - M&S Agricultural Shows 2012
And finally, RPM Promotional People won gold for 'Event Services Supplier of the Year' for our work with Coca Cola and Sky.
What a fantastic end to 2012! Well done everyone.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)