Do you know why your customers trust your retail business? A new study from Monash Business School reveals Australians value five key attributes in a retailer.
Employees, store presentation, product quality and innovativeness, communications and information security top the list of what Aussie consumers value in a retail business.
But while retail stores and their employees are key when it comes to trust in the overall retail industry, these weren’t necessarily influencing factors of trust in specific retail sectors.
Paolo De Leon, research consultant at the ACRS research unit with Monash Business School’s department of marketing, said “Surprisingly, despite the e-commerce and online shopping boom, the least trusted retail sector was online-only retailers who were rated well-below their retail counterparts.
“Unlike with the retail industry overall, when it comes to clothing retailers, communication and products are also key in driving trust. This differs again for supermarkets, where we saw trust in information security emerge as important.”
With current fears around computer hacking and data breaches, customers want to be reassured that the data they provide as part of their local supermarket rewards scheme is secure.
Food and beverage most trusted industry
The first annual Monash University Business School’s Australian Consumer, Retail, and Services (ACRS) Consumer Retail Trust Index 2018 surveyed more than 630 Australian consumers, asking them to indicate their faith in several retail businesses to do what is right.
Ratings of trust were also collected in automotive, food and beverage, media and entertainment, and financial services business for comparative purposes.
Dr Eloise Zoppos, senior research consultant at the ACRS research unit at Monash told Inside Franchise Business, “Food and beverage was the most trusted, and was well above the average at 6.7 out of 10.”
Retail scored 6.5, with financial services coming in with the lowest score at 4.7 ot of 10.
Zoppos said this research highlights the need for retailers to understand the factors driving consumer trust – which can then help to refine their business operations, including marketing campaigns and communications strategies.
“Our research found that trust has a strong impact on loyalty and likelihood to recommend, including the Net Promoter Score – a tool used to gauge the loyalty of a firm’s customer relationships,” she said.
“Trust varies greatly by retail sector. Brands and retailers need to know their trust drivers and which trust levers to pull, as it’s only after that point that an effective trust building strategy can be developed.”