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Online to offline

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Online to offline, commonly abbreviated to O2O,[1] is a phrase that is used in digital marketing to describe systems enticing consumers within a digital environment to make purchases of goods or services from physical businesses.

The significance of O2O is noteworthy, as, despite the surge in e-commerce, over 80% of retail transactions still occur offline.[2][3] This indicates the continued significance of physical retail locations, particularly for industries like Consumer Packaged Goods (CPG), where many products require in-store purchase or consumption.[3]

What's O2O

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O2O means "Online To Offline" but also "Offline to Online", indicating the two-way flow between the online and the physical world, especially retail and ecommerce, but also between brand marketing and shopper or point-of-sale marketing efforts to influence purchase decisions. For example, consumers could see an ad online and be driven to visit the store, or be in a physical store but ultimately purchase online for a variety of reasons (selection, price, convenience, etc.). There are many aspects to O2O, and businesses are increasingly challenged to satisfy consumers' expectations of a frictionless flow.

Initially, the term was applied to QR code marketing efforts, but has since evolved. It is often confused with omni-channel, which refers to companies with an online store as well as physical retail locations.

Often, O2O implies an online trigger which prompts the customer to go to a physical location to complete their purchase, but it can also be the other way around: One aspect of newer O2O initiatives is the ability to pay online and then pick up a product in an offline place, such as the retailers' physical store or 3rd party locations. Another O2O feature is returning items purchased online to the retailers' offline location.

In the startup world, we are used to hearing about "Offline to Online" strategies as investors do not usually adhere to any other business models such as Online to Offline.

Criticism

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In its early use, the phrase received criticism as illogical. However, its mass adoption has dulled much of this criticism.

Additionally, much criticism has been made of the privacy impact of technologies in digital marketing that enable online to offline measurement. For instance, the widespread use of SDKs, or Software Development Kits, readily enable location-based tracking of mobile phone users. Online to offline measurement often works to "match" an online user - which may be logged-in to a non-mobile device like laptop or desktop computer, and "matching" that profile or identify to the real world movement of users on mobile devices. This matching of online (exposure on laptop) to offline, real-world foot traffic is the target of privacy advocates, however adtech companies enabling this tracking would argue the "offline" conversion recorded is stripped of PII, or Personally Identifiable Information.

New Reality since March 2020

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During COVID-19, industries that were enabled to take online orders and provide "offline" goods and to lesser degree services were advantaged over those that relied on "offline" distribution alone. Worldwide, in-person businesses were shuttered or restricted to stop the spread of the COVID-19 virus. An example of rampant success in online-to-offline was rapid-delivery grocery shopping apps. Such apps were a nascent technology prior to the global pandemic, however, with millions of customers unable to access grocery stores, or unwilling to risk infection through exposure, delivery apps grew in popularity. One online to offline grocer, Gorillas, grew from its primary market of Berlin by delivering 16M+ orders in less than 9 months, launching in 50+ global cities – including Amsterdam, London, Paris, Madrid, New York, Milan and Munich, and ultimately its US market expansion - and within 18 months of its founding, sold for $1.2B.[4]

Post-pandemic, online to offline commerce has continued to grow, however at a pace unmatched by that of the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic. Additionally, in the US, where Apple iPhones have the majority of mobile phone marketshare, privacy features within Apple's iOS14.5 update severely impacted the cross-device tracking necessary to match online ad exposures to offline visitation activity. Online to offline is still a critical part of marketing measurement by large advertisers like brick-and-mortar retailers, car dealership networks, healthcare facilities, grocery retailers, and QSRs (Quick Service Restaurants), however measurement methodology is more reliant on presumptive, estimated, probabilistic models of attribution, often using Artificial Intelligence.

The new reality that forced users around the world to adopt this model. Here are industries that adopted this new way of thinking

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Biswajit Sarkar; Mitali Sarkar (23 April 2020). Application of Optimization in Production, Logistics, Inventory, Supply Chain Management and Block Chain. MDPI. pp. 367–. ISBN 978-3-03928-522-8.
  2. ^ "U.S. Retail sales share by sales channel 2028". Statista. Retrieved 2024-11-04.
  3. ^ a b "Online To Offline Advertising: The Fight For Footfall + New 2025 Data". criterionglobal.com/. Retrieved 2024-11-04.
  4. ^ "Growth Marketing Agency Case Study: Europe's Fastest Unicorn". criterionglobal.com/. Retrieved 2024-11-04.