
The key trend is connecting the physical and digital worlds. Remember the days when a shop assistant would approach you upon entering a clothing shop, eager to help you make a selection? Today, our smartphones accompany us. Generation Z knows this particularly well. They arrive at shops with smartphones in hand and use applications not only to navigate around the store but also to compare prices, search for discounts, and read reviews—right there, amongst the shelves. If brands don’t adapt to this new customer behaviour, they risk losing their attention at the crucial moment.
Omnichannel Retail Strategy: Mobile applications as a shop assistant
Mobile applications have another advantage over shop assistants: they can utilise personalisation. The guide, Digitising the In-Store Experience by EMARKETER, states that up to half of customers use applications to find the best prices. Meanwhile, more than 60% appreciate personalised discount offers.
Applications with integrated loyalty programmes have become an almost essential tool for repeat sales and customer data collection.
Nevertheless, price remains the decisive factor. For 81% of adult Americans, it’s the most important criterion when choosing a retailer. Features such as real-time price comparison or digital vouchers are no longer a benefit but a standard.

Source: Emarketer
Retail media enters the shop
Although expenditure on in-store retail media in the USA is growing rapidly, their benefit depends mainly on whether shops can use digital elements in a way that doesn’t disturb customers but rather helps them with shopping. Customers don’t want disruptive advertisements in the shop space — they expect relevant and useful information. Digital displays showing current promotions, product availability, or shop navigation represent added value.
Shops have the opportunity to establish contact with customers directly at the shelf, at the moment of decision-making. Interactive displays, audio announcements, or gamification of the shopping experience (e.g., rewards for scanning products) are tools to connect the physical environment with the digital one.

Source: Emarketer
Experience, not just efficiency
Although technologies simplify the shopping process, brick-and-mortar shops still hold their value as spaces where customers can experience inspiration and engage all their senses. The online environment cannot fully replace this, even with features like virtual fitting rooms or magic mirrors. Modern elements such as self-service checkouts or intelligent shopping trolleys can speed up and enhance the shopping experience, but only if they don’t disrupt the natural rhythm and comfort of the customer.
The future is simply neither online nor offline. It’s a combination of both – connected into an omnichannel experience so that they reinforce each other.