News

38 percent digital buyers use ship-to-store services

Wednesday 19 August 2015 00:16 CET | News

35% of US digital buyers say they used ship-to-store services in 2014, and the number grew 3 percentage points for 2015, a recent survey shows.

According to a research from UPS, more than one in five respondents said they had abandoned a digital shopping cart on deciding to pick the items up in store, meaning they did not complete the purchase online, and that the retailer might have no way to associate the abandoned cart with the brick-and-mortar purchase.

According to King Retail Solutions (KRS), US internet users are most likely to buy online and pick up in-store when it comes to electronics (80%), followed by housewares (59%) and apparel (57%). KRS’s Q4 2014 survey found that urban, rural and suburban environment had no real effect on likelihood of using a ship-to-store service, while age and gender played category-specific roles. For example, men were more likely than women to say they would purchase electronics online but pick them up in a store, while women were more likely than men to say the same about apparel purchases.


Free Headlines in your E-mail

Every day we send out a free e-mail with the most important headlines of the last 24 hours.

Subscribe now

Keywords: ecommerce, online payments, retailers, sales, ship-to-store, click-and-collect, digital shopping, online purchases
Categories: Payments & Commerce
Companies:
Countries: World
This article is part of category

Payments & Commerce






Industry Events