E-commerce News

Return of the Highstreet? 40% Of Ecommerce Businesses in Europe Plan to Open a Physical Store

Return of the Highstreet? 40% of ecommerce businesses in Europe plan to open a physical store
New research from Tribe Payments shows two in five (40%) ecommerce businesses in Europe plan to open a physical store in the next three years.
Around a third of online merchants also expect to launch their own branded store cards, mobile apps and add payment options to better compete.
But half of ecommerce brands struggle to compete with large chains that offer an innovative customer experience at the checkout.

A new report launched by payments technology provider Tribe Payments today reveals that two in five (40%) ecommerce businesses in Europe plan to open a physical store in the next three years. With governments across the continent backing initiatives to save and promote high streets, a reversal of fortunes for brick-and-mortar stores could be on the cards.

Latest Fintech News: Trofi Introduces Its Innovative Structured Product Solutions for Users

The move to open physical stores is being driven by a number of consumer and payment trends that merchants will need to adapt to in the next five years. The report, which surveyed bot online and multi-channel merchants across Germany, Lithuania, Spain, the Netherlands and the UK found that the majority of merchants believe there is an increased desire from shoppers for a better customer experience (84%), cross-border shopping (81%), to pay using multiple device types (80%) and for greater personalisation (79%).

To meet these demands, merchants recognise they must overcome some challenges. Overall, 50% of merchants say that they struggle to compete with larger chains who offer an innovative customer experience at the checkout. 46% of all merchants say regulatory compliance is a challenge, 46% struggle to navigate consumer trends such as BNPL, multicurrency and contactless. For 27% a challenge lies with reducing fraud, with these issues being more acute for ecommerce merchants.

Latest Fintech News: TerraPay Partners With SendMN to Pave the Way for Seamless Cross-Border Payments for Mongolian Residents and Diaspora Across the World

34% of merchants across Europe plan to overcome these challenges by offering consumers more ways to pay. Surprisingly, physical stores (13%) are leading the charge on payment methods with ecommerce (10%) players playing catch up. Just under a third of merchants expect to launch their own branded store cards, mobile apps and increase range of payment options to better compete. Expanding geographically is another tactic being considered (59%), mostly by British (88%) and Spanish (80%) brands.

“Reports of the high street’s death may be premature… or even just wrong,” said Alex Reddish Managing Director of Tribe Payments. “Merchants are responding to consumer demand and want to deliver a multi-channel, highly personalised shopping experience. This includes launching their own financial offerings via cards and embedded finance options. It’s up to acquirers and infrastructure partners to provide the technology and innovation to enable merchants to compete with their rivals, both online and in-store and keep up with consumer demand.”

Latest Fintech News: Nickel Digital Arbitrage Fund Cuts Crypto Volatility by More Than 20X

[To share your insights with us, please write to sghosh@martechseries.com]

Related posts

Discover and Serbia’s DinaCard Establish Strategic Agreement to Increase Payment Acceptance

Fintech News Desk

Kasikorn Securities Selects ICE for Enhanced Portfolio Analytics and Risk Management for Derivatives

Business Wire

Alacriti Partners with Socure to Provide Instant Payments Fraud Prevention

Business Wire
1