How immersive technology is transforming online shopping
For you
Be part of something bigger, join the Chartered Institute for IT.
As the UK’s largest exclusively online bathroom retailer, these challenges weren’t new to Victoria Plum. But with showrooms closed during COVID-19 restrictions, bricks and mortar bathroom retailers needed to overcome these issues in a short space of time if they were to keep selling bathrooms.
Now, with all evidence pointing towards a continued and accelerated growth of online shopping, brands are increasingly looking at innovative technologies to help overcome their challenges.
The rise of immersive technologies
Our solution at Victoria Plum has been to invest in immersive technologies, helping customers to see and understand how products work in a space.
Immersive technologies are designed to ‘digitally extend or replace reality for the user’ in order to improve the overall experience. These can include: augmented reality (AR), where computer-generated images or information are added to objects and environments seen in the real world; virtual reality (VR), a simulated experience where users are placed in the computer-generated environment usually through VR headsets; and mixed reality (MR), a blend of physical and digital worlds to produce new environments.
In the context of bathroom retail, they help the customer to see and understand products work in a space, which in turn can increase confidence in the purchase. With higher value purchases such as home improvement, it’s easy to see the confidence this can instil in a customer.
Victoria Plum is currently utilising AR technology to showcase products, as well as bathroom planners which allow customers to build a 2D or 3D image of their preferred layout within their own bathroom space.
While AR has been available for a number of years, in reality it is has not been suitable for consumer retail use until recently. With more and more smartphones in circulation capable of AR technology, now is a good time to introduce it to the online retail sector.
By working with our partners to build models and apply the technology to our digital channels, we’re giving our customers the chance to view a product in-situ in their own bathroom, using their smartphone or tablet. They can see the scale of a sink, toilet or bath, move around the product, examine the fine details and see how much it works in relation to walls or windows.
AR and 3D room planning are bridging the gap between online and offline shopping. Crucially, they give customers the confidence that what they are buying will work in their space, overcoming any potential issues over sizing or details when the products arrive.
Exploring the next steps in immersive technology and shopping
For Victoria Plum, our goal now is to continue analysing the feedback from customers and expand the product range available in our AR planner. We currently have 100 products available and aim to increase that figure to 650 within the coming months.
This is still a recent introduction but the early signs are encouraging and the response from customers has been promising. We’re testing the functionality daily and getting new insights all the time, which will shape our future strategy. We’re confident that as more consumers adopt the technologies, it will help to reduce the number of returns for online bathroom purchases.
Whilst we expect AR to become commonplace in many retail sectors, the next challenge will be whether innovative brands can make VR work on a mass scale.
AR is relatively easy to implement, because the consumer only needs a smartphone or tablet to access the technology. Already you can view what different haircuts would look like, ‘try on’ different clothes before you’ve even purchased them and view any type of cushion on your sofa. It’s a natural extension to take this into higher ticket purchases.
VR, however, is further away because we need headsets to make the technology work. The challenges from a user perspective will make it more difficult to roll out, but don’t rule it out in the near future.
For now, our focus will remain on bridging the gap between online and offline purchasing using the technologies available to us. Immersive technologies are helping in providing the solution, but to deliver the same standards offline and online, they must be matched by a slick user interface and streamlined customer service right through to delivery and aftersales.