The insight: Consumers are divided on dynamic pricing.
Digging deeper: Price-sensitive shoppers are pushing back against even the slightest hint that retailers may be thinking of implementing dynamic pricing. That’s due to concerns that the practice is merely an attempt to pad companies’ bottom lines, as well as the sense that tactics like digital price labels exacerbate price volatility and make it difficult for consumers to know what things actually cost.
But shoppers aren’t convinced: Forty percent believe that replacing traditional price tags with digital ones would have a negative impact on their grocery or overall shopping experience, compared with just 14% who think the move would have a positive effect, per CivicScience.
Uncertain times: Retailers’ embrace of digital labels is adding to consumers’ feelings of instability—particularly their fears over inflation, which have yet to ease despite the CPI’s downward trajectory.
The big takeaway: Given shoppers’ extreme sensitivity, retailers have to move carefully when making any changes related to price, even if it’s a seemingly simple shift from paper labels to digital ones.
Companies need to make clear what the advantages are for consumers—such as the ability to lower prices for food items as they approach their expiration dates—and do so proactively, before fears over surge pricing take hold.
You've read 0 of 2 free articles this month.
One Liberty Plaza9th FloorNew York, NY 100061-800-405-0844
1-800-405-0844sales@emarketer.com