money

High street shopping logs on

Online shopping now accounts for 15 per cent of all retail, but security threats could harm growth

Written by Phil Muncaster

The latest figures from e-commerce industry body the Interactive Media in Retail Group (IMRG) have shown the increasing importance to retailers of the online channel. But other research has again highlighted the potential for fraud to disrupt efforts by online traders to boost profits and improve customer relations.

The latest IMRG e-retail index, which is carried out by consultancy Capgemini and charts online retail spending, showed that £15.2bn was spent online in the 12 weeks before Christmas 2007. This equates to 15 per cent of all retail spend now online, with December’s sales almost 50 per cent higher than in the previous year, despite a slight tailing off towards the end of the year.

The largest sales growth came in the electrical sector, with 60 per cent, while the clothing sector showed a 28 per cent increase over December 2006. Marks & Spencer, which reported poor high street sales, showed a 78 per cent growth in its online channel.

“If you look at availability, capacity and familiarity, it’s clear that there is huge potential for further growth in this area,” said IMRG chief executive James Roper. “If it continues like this, in five year’s time, half of all retail will be online.”

Anthoula Madden, vice president of Capgemini’s consumer products and retail team, argued that retailers must still work to meet heightened customer expectations of service, particularly in delivery.

“Those with good results have addressed the front-end web site as well as the supply chain and warehousing,” Madden added. “The full value chain is important here.”

In addition, a separate study by online market research firm eDigital Research found that 22 per cent of respondents went online on Christmas Day and 31 per cent on Boxing Day, for pre-purchase research into products and prices.

The research highlights the increasing sophistication of consumer shopping behaviour and the need to integrate offline and online channels more efficiently to meet customer requirements, according to eDigital Research director Chris Russell.

Capgemini’s Madden agreed, arguing that retailers with an online and offline presence often do better than pureplays, because of issues such as brand loyalty. “This shows the importance of integrating the two [channels] and offering a unified experience to the customer,” she added.

Further research by the European Interactive Advertising Association (EIAA) released last month confirmed the importance of integrating sales channels. It found that the British are more likely than any other European shoppers to change their minds about which brands to buy after researching on the internet.

In addition, 59 per cent of online shoppers said that websites of well-known brands are an important source of information when researching a product or service, according to the survey.

David Walmsley, head of web selling for John Lewis Direct, said, “Customers are sophisticated multi-channel shoppers who research online and buy in-store and vice versa ­ our challenge is to understand that and help our customers.”

But delivery was still seen by many to be the weak link in the e-commerce chain, potentially even restricting the growth of the channel. “It has improved enormously, but it still boils down to the idea of trust and fulfilment and knowing when and where you will get your product,” said Tesco Direct’s Trevor Datson. “Although as consumers learn how to shop online that will help them ­ knowing they can vary delivery addresses and getting savvier about cut-off dates.”

Elsewhere, new research from payment solution provider CyberSource found that the growing incidence of identity fraud is causing retailers significant headaches. The CyberSource Fraud Report 2008 found that nearly half of large online merchants recorded losses up more than 10 per cent on the previous year, with online fraud perceived as the most critical technical threat to their enterprise.

“Merchants are demanding cross-industry co-ordination,” said managing director of CyberSource, Simon Stokes. “There are lots of tools and deterrents but it’s a case of what’s best practice for a merchant and how they can share [information] in real time.”

Lu Zurawfki, director of cards and consumer payments at IT services firm LogicaCMG, argued that merchants should invest adequately in their own anti-fraud systems.

“It still amazes me that the industry is quite lackadaisical with this type of fraud,” he said. “Merchants are quite a demanding lot but they have their own responsibility to protect data too.”

The research also found a significant increase in adoption of the 3-D Secure Verified by Visa and MasterCard SecureCode schemes, with uptake now at 71 per cent among respondents, but half felt these schemes were not entirely effective at preventing fraud.

Somewhat surprisingly, only 39 per cent felt that PCI compliance would improve their payment security processes. CyberSource’s Stokes warned that no merchant can afford to ignore the standard. He recommended businesses install web-based automated fraud screening capabilities, alongside the 3-D Secure scheme, and address and card verification number services.

“There are a lot of sophisticated tools on the market but the challenge for merchants is the continually changing patterns of fraud occurring on an hourly or daily basis,” Stokes explained.

Tags:

reader comments

related articles

high street

Consumers trust big name brands online

New research shows that firms must display security measures more clearly on their sites 30 Jan 2008

 

Retailers lagging behind in security

New Deloitte survey shows consumer businesses are still implementing PCI 01 Feb 2008

Christmas cracker for e-commerce

New research shows 15 pence in every pound now spent online 18 Jan 2008

Online merchants call for greater co-operation

New research higlights fraud as number one technical concern for online retailers 15 Jan 2008

Christmas cracker for e-commerce

New research shows 15 pence in every pound now spent online 18 Jan 2008

Online merchants call for greater co-operation

New research higlights fraud as number one technical concern for online retailers 15 Jan 2008

UK online spending hits all-time high

15 per cent of all retail spending now online 18 Jan 2008

related whitepapers

today's top stories

CIOs must embrace collaboration tools

Author Don Tapscott gives Angelica Mari his reasons for promoting social networking tools and says transparency is the key to security 04 Dec 2008

On a quest to build a connected society

BT Design’s JP Rangaswami talks to Gareth Morgan about his pivotal role in the telecoms giant’s efforts to deliver universal broadband and his plans to tap into the creativity of the open source community 04 Dec 2008

IT leaders must stand by India

A sense of perspective is the most important response from IT leaders to the attacks in Mumbai 04 Dec 2008

Case study: Clifford Chance

Law firm implements Sun platform and reduces datacentres to gain efficiency and cost synergies 03 Dec 2008

Should CRM be more sociable?

As vendors rush to add more social networking bells and whistles to their CRM products, some experts warn that users must tread carefully when venturing into online communities 03 Dec 2008

Advertisement

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Advertisement

Jobs

Related jobs

Job of the week

Job alerts

Sign up here

Find your next job

IT Salary Checker

Check salary here

Advertisement

White papers

Search white papers

Top categories

VPN, Extranet and Intranet Solutions

WAN/ LAN Solutions

Network Security

Interoperability-Connectivity

Grid/ Utility Computing

Latest poll

Will the terrorist attacks in Mumbai affect your offshoring plans?

Will the terrorist attacks in Mumbai affect your offshoring plans?

Is India becoming a risky destination?

Previous poll results

Latest audio and video articles

Padlocked CDVideo

Technology and privacy

Watch the final video in a two-part Computing roundtable debate on the importance of putting data privacy issues at the heart of your IT plans 02 Dec 2008

Podcast imageAudio

Computing podcast - Standard Life's offshoring plans; and the prospects for government IT

The insurance giant outlines its new outsourcing strategy; and we ask if the government's economic bailout will affect its IT plans 28 Nov 2008

Latest in-depth articles

Doctors looking at a computerAnalysis

Watchdog wants IT to cure privacy woes

Information Commissioner Richard Thomas is urging organisations to put privacy protection at the top of their procurement and development criteria 04 Dec 2008

Colin McDonaldComment

Web 2.0 has potential to transform staff training

Employees can sharpen their IT skills through using the latest interactive training tools, writes Colin McDonald 04 Dec 2008

Advertisement

Primary Navigation