Categories: Headlines

The Truth About Millennials and Brick-and-Mortar Retail Might Surprise You

A common belief turns out to be a myth.

Despite fears that millennials are abandoning brick-and-mortar retail in favor of e-commerce, they actually go to stores more than other generations do, a new survey suggests.

More than 50 percent said they visit a store once a week or more, Greg Zakowicz of Oracle Bronto writes in an article for Total Retail. The findings don’t include grocery or convenience stores.

Only 44 percent of Generation Xers and a 27 percent of baby boomers head to a store that frequently, according to Oracle Bronto’s survey of 1,000 U.S. consumers.

Among the most popular reasons that millennials gave for shopping at stores, rather than online, were not having to wait for product delivery and being able to see and touch the products before buying.

That’s not to say your online presence isn’t important. For more than 60 percent of millennials, social media is an important source for learning about new products, Zakowicz. That’s much higher than for Generations Xers (45 percent) or baby boomers (25 percent).

Read more at Total Retail

INVISION Staff

Since launching in 2014, INVISION has won 23 international journalism awards for its publication and website. Contact INVISION's editors at editor@invisionmag.com.

Recent Posts

Economy Is Slowing but Remains Resilient

Prices for services still rising, while goods level off: NRF economist.

2 days ago

The Pros and Cons of Virtual Assistants and More of Your Questions Answered

Plus, what’s the secret to an employee review that’s actually effective?

2 days ago

Mastering Sales & Style: 6 Lessons Learned from TV

Art may imitate life but that doesn’t mean it still can’t teach us a few…

2 days ago

A 30-Year Optical Veteran Who Grew Up Within 30 Miles of the Community She Serves With 3 Generations of Women

And little gets this 30-year cancer survivor down but cleaning the 1,500 frames on their…

3 days ago

87% of You Don’t Use Employment Contracts

Often citing the employee handbook is enough. Guess our next question will be “Do You…

3 days ago

This website uses cookies.