Subscribe & Follow
Jobs
- Intermediate - Senior Full Stack .Net Developer Cape Town
- Administrator - Inbound Call centre Cape Town
- Art Director/Senior Graphic Designer Johannesburg
- Accounts Admin Assistant Stellenbosch
- QC Learnership Vereeniging
- Data Scientist - Predictive Modelling Guru Johannesburg
- Quality Engineer - Software Test Specialist Johannesburg
- Python AWS Software Engineer Midrand
- Fullstack Java DevOps Engineer Midrand
- Community Manager Johannesburg
SACSC festive season predictions
CEO Amanda Stops says, "Our research by Dr Dirk A Prinsloo of Urban Studies shows December 2011 was one of the best December months since the high growth period of 2006. In 2011, December retail trade was up 12.8% on the prior December. However, retail sales in December 2012 should increase between 7% and 9% - slightly above inflation - to levels between R80 billion and R82 billion, based on current prices."
Economic uncertainty a factor
The prevailing economic uncertainty in 2012 and non-retail consumer pressures are the main contributing factors.
"Uncertainty in international and local macro economies defines 2012. Most key indicators show no clear upward or downward trend. They are moving sideways, clearly displaying much uncertainty.
"Hefty inflationary pressures from school fees at 9%, petrol at 17%, electricity at 10% and water and services at 9%, are all placing strain on consumers. Public transport is 15% higher than a year ago, hurting the commuter market. Unsecured loans also increased by 21% during 2012."
On the other hand, she notes consumer inflation on clothing, household products and homeware is much lower than the current inflation rate, making these mostly essential products attractive to consumers. For this reason, it is likely that Christmas shopping will be focused in these categories, as well as home improvement products.
The plethora of new competing IT and electronics products will prove popular on festive shopping lists, as prices have dropped substantially in most instances. This is especially true for high-quality cameras, e-readers, smartphones and tablets.
Mall shopping still popular
Most local festive shopping will be through traditional channels - in shopping centres and central shopping districts. E-commerce and smartphone retail applications have yet to gain significant traction.
"In South Africa we are two to three years behind what is already happening in the US and Europe for smartphone shopping. In the US more than 15% of all sales are already linked to e-commerce."
However, online and smartphone shopping are gaining importance as retail channels in South Africa. Well-known US department store Macy's, and others, are making products available to South African shoppers in Rands with a six- to eight-day delivery, and local retailers, such as Mr Price, are becoming decidedly more active in e-commerce.
"With Apple and Samsung selling millions of smartphones each month, South African retailers will have to move into giving customers apps instead of expecting them to work through websites." She also anticipates shopping, driven by input through social media, will also become much more attractive in future.
"Social media in South Africa is still in its infancy stage and high growth could be expected during the next couple of years."
She sees the rise of the social media manager in South Africa's shopping centres. "They will be tasked with getting conversation going about different products in stores and for the shopping centre as a whole," concludes Stops.