Armani Exchange outlines mobile strategy
In an exclusive interview, an Armani Exchange executive discussed the retailerâs strategy of using mobile as a channel for marketing and merchandising activities intended to drive cross-channel sales.
Armani Exchangeâs target demographic centers on the 18-28 range and is focused on city-dwellers.
âOur mobile strategy is based on being customer-focused, offering our customers a seamless brand experience whether they are shopping shop in store, online or on the go while theyâre out on the street,â said Tom Jarrold, senior vice president of global marketing and communications at Armani Exchange, New York.
âWe have a young, forward-thinking, wired demographic,â he said. âLast year we found that 40 percent of our customers had an iPhone or BlackBerry, and Iâm sure thatâs even higher now.
âItâs ultimately about responding to our customers wherever they are so they can touch the brand in a lot of different ways.â
A|X Armani Exchange was launched in 1991 aimed at a new generation of young, fast-fashion consumersâa collection from Georgio Armani offering urban, individual style.
Tech-savvy demo
âThe core group weâre targeting is pretty urban-centric young people in college or right out of college, working their first job, living a social life in the city, gregarious,â Mr. Jarrold said. âThey like to go out, listen to music and be social, and their digital lifestyle helps foster that.
After the success the brand has had with online advertising, Armani Exchange decided to try mobile advertising as a key tactic to driving traffic to its mobile site.
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In June of last year, A|X promoted the launch of its mobile shopping site with a campaign across AdMobâs mobile ad network.
âIt was a big mobile advertising campaign, and it was really, really successful,â Mr. Jarrold said. âWe got a ton of click-throughs and some pretty good engagement.
âThe No. 1Â focus of the campaign was getting consumers to click to view videos,â he said. âThat kicked it off, and now a lot of the traffic comes from people searching for us on their smartphones and being redirected to the mobile site.
âNow they get a site thatâs a lot more navigable.â
Multichannel marketing
Armani Exchangeâs goal is seamless integration of its various consumer touch points. The retailer has continued to promote its mobile site at the store level via handouts and other materials to remind customers that they can buy online and via their phone.
âWe want to encourage the cross-pollination of different channels,â Mr. Jarrold said.
In 2008, Armani Exchange tapped Distributive Networks for the launch of an SMS program to build a mobile database of its tech-savvy demographic. The text-messaging club currently has more than 60,000 subscribers.
âWeâve got a great text programâitâs been something weâve marketed online and in-store, and itâs been enormously successful,â Mr. Jarrold said. âWe use it to promote new collection announcements, specials products like a new A|X music CD and special offers.
âConversion rates are fantastic, because it is a super-engaged, brand-loyal demographic,â he said. âWe can localize events and blast out promotions at, say, our New York City store, and run contests, for example, the first 20 people to text back get a free A|X totebag.
âWe get thousands of texts back immediately, which is astonishing.â
To sign up, consumers can text the keyword AX to the short code ARMANI (276264), although the retailer uses different keywords as well.
Consumers can show the mobile coupon at the cash register to redeem it, and that lets A|X track how many people responded to the offer.
A|X executives are also considering a mobile application for one or more smartphone platforms, but no plans have been finalized as of yet.
The center piece of its mobile initiatives continues to be the mobile commerce Web site.
âThe ecommerce aspect really launched during the holidays, and weâre very happy with itâweâve seen a lot of traffic on the mobile site, and sales have been quite strong,â Mr. Jarrold said. âAlso, we get the non-quantifiable aspect of customers interacting with the brand on the go, which may lead to a sale in store or on the go.
âItâs been successful from a number different perspectives,â he said.
The luxury apparel retailer tapped the MarketLive Mobile to power its mobile commerce Web site that is optimized for viewing on all smartphones with a focus on Appleâs iPhone (see story). Armani Exchange recently upgraded its mobile commerce Web site to bring more immediate service and style to on-the-go customers (see story).
This past holiday season, A|X launched an in-store pickup feature letting consumers enter their ZIP code and hold an item and click a button to pay with a credit card or cash.
âWeâre responding to customersâ needs and how they want to shop, and mobile is integral to our overall marketing strategy, as itâs the future,â Mr. Jarrold said. âItâs the way A|X customers want to interact with the brandâthe days of the traditional stand-along bricks-and-mortar retailer are over.
âWeâre making the brand accessible via mobile whenever and wherever they want it,â he said. âThey can use the mobile site to save time, try to find whatâs available, shop efficiently or maybe theyâre waiting in line and want to waste some time.
âWhatever the reason, they can interact with the brand in a way thatâs engaging and that otherwise they wouldnât have the opportunity to partake in.â