Tuesday, June 21, 2016

5 Bankable UX Lessons from Brick &Amp; Mortar Store Design

Psychology plays a pivotal role in interaction design. In order to offer an optimal user experience, you have to empathize with the user and understand their intentions before they do. With this information, you can conveniently pave a direct path to where they want to go and insert your best content in their line of sight.

Let's discuss 5 ways that brick and mortar stores increase their sales by making (sometimes very small) changes to their store layouts, changes that can also be made to e-commerce stores.

1. Point Of Sale Add-Ons

Generally speaking, retailers will often front you with their most expensive items first (to play on your sense of comparison), making the cheaper items towards the end of your shop seem like more of a bargain. In retail stores, this is the usually confectionary stand by the checkout, or the "one-time-only" discount on selected CDs and DVDs before being asked to pay.

In e-commerce stores this is the "would you like to add [item] to your basket for only $0.99"? It may seem like trickery, but if the user walks away with what they feel is a bargain, they'll walk away satisfied - and they didn't even have to browse for it!

Fun-fact: when asked if a customer wants to upgrade (for example medium to large fries in McDonald's), 47% will say yes.

Pizza Hut Online Point of Sale

2. Store Layouts and Your Line of Sight

Many stores invest time and money in user testing, both online and offline. As a result, they're more aware of how customers tend to navigate themselves in their store; they can insert advertising between where the customer is, and where they might be going. In brick and mortar shops, advertising appears in your line of sight as you enter the shop, wait for an elevator, use an escalator or queue to checkout - this isn't by accident.

As with brick and mortar shops, ads are sometimes used near the online checkout (basket, cart, etc) interface as well, so that the user is sure to see it as they pay for their items - let's take Amazon (UK) for example.

Amazon Logo Advert

When shoppers first enter a brick and mortar shop, known as the "transition zone", they tend to start on the right-hand side (based on US research). However, with e-commerce stores, users tend to start from the top-left corner according to eye-tracking studies.

Amazon has also taken notice of this and advertised their Amazon Prime service near the basket, as well as underneath the logo.

04-amazon-checkout

3. "Look Here, Look Here! Do This, Do This!"

You can't retain a user if you never acquired them, which is why "subscribe for more" modals as soon as you enter a website, or "table for two?" before you've barely laid eyes on the menu outside a restaurant is a terrible idea. Restaurants aren't strictly a brick-and-mortar establishment (or are they?) but this example certainly makes us feel awkward and/or annoyed.

Here are two ways that you can handle this user flow:

  • No: "request" that the user subscribes, reward them with access
  • Yes: offer content first, suggest to subscribe after

You shouldn't reward users with basic web content for subscribing to your newsletter, instead you should reward users for reading the web content and reward them even more for subscribing - create incentives to engage further, offering the user free/discounted items or a higher level of subscription over time.

Let the user trust your content and see value first.

H&M Subscribe Footer

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by Daniel Schwarz via SitePoint

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