As discretionary consumer spending took a 0.2 per cent dip[1] in the year-over-year to January 2024 and labour costs swelled, new research has revealed 50 per cent of retailers expect a slump in sales revenue and an eyewatering 91 per cent of the nation’s online retailers fear a raft of business challenges are set to strike.
The findings were derived from a survey of an independent panel of 200 Aussie retailers commissioned by Australia’s fastest-growing franchised parcel delivery service, CouriersPlease. The survey identifies the challenges facing retailers after inflation and rising interest rates infringed consumer spending, with CouriersPlease surveying owners and senior decision makers from micro retailers (1-15 employees) to large businesses with staff of more than 200. The full survey results are available here.
From the survey, CouriersPlease found that, with a drop in consumer spending, 50 per cent of retailers expect a drop in sales revenue, and 40 per cent expect their sales to stagnate. Just 10 per cent expect an increase in sales.
By business size, the data showed that small retailers are the most concerned about inflation and rising interest rates having a financial knock-on effect, with 57 per cent expecting a drop in sales. Medium-sized businesses are the least concerned, with 42 per cent saying the same.
Just 10 per cent of micro retailers expect a jump in sales revenue this year, and only 3 per cent of small businesses forecasting the same. Large businesses are the most confident about clocking a sales revenue jump, at 18 per cent of respondents.
CouriersPlease also explored further impacts to retailers that a drop in consumer spending will bring. Across all businesses, the report found cash flow availability ranks as the biggest concern among retailers, with almost 4 out of 10 (36%) of online retailers saying a drop in customer spending would exacerbate this challenge. Just over a third (33%) expect to face customer retention challenges, while 1 in 3 (29%) anticipate overhead cost struggles.
CouriersPlease CEO, Richard Thame, says: “Our research highlights some of the major pain points plaguing retailers, particularly smaller retailers. It comes after recent data confirmed inflation declined in the December quarter by slightly more than had been expected[2] which was largely due to the slight dip in non-discretionary spending – a dip that might steepen over the coming year.”
While goods price inflation was indeed weaker than expected, Richard pointed to a non-discretionary spend jump of 6.9 per cent in the year leading up to January, which was driven largely by transport, food and health spending[3]. Additional data shows online shopping continues to attract consumers with 9.52 million households (which equates to 81% of Aussie households) receiving a parcel last year – a figure that was up 1.4 per cent year on year[4].
He says: “That 10 per cent of all retailers surveyed don’t expect an increase in sales this year tells us that Aussie businesses are indeed bracing for impact; we know that appetite for online shopping remains strong and there are tools businesses can embrace to ease that strain.
“While small businesses naturally fear being hit the hardest, our research shows they in fact have a unique opportunity to more than just survive the economic rollercoaster, but thrive with the help of AI technology and a better understanding of evolving shopper habits.”
CourierPlease CEO Richard Thame’s top 5 tips for online retailers looking to fuel E-Commerce success amid economic headwinds
Richard says social media and tech will be key to retaining consumers and boosting cashflow in the coming financial year, and encourages micro and small businesses to embrace social platforms.
[1] https://www.abs.gov.au/statistics/economy/finance/monthly-household-spending-indicator/latest-release
[2] https://www.abs.gov.au/statistics/economy/price-indexes-and-inflation/consumer-price-index-australia/latest-release
[3] https://www.abs.gov.au/statistics/economy/finance/monthly-household-spending-indicator/latest-release