Retailers make daily decisions that significantly impact customer experience. Some choices improve convenience, loyalty, and satisfaction, while others introduce friction and frustration, ultimately leading to customer churn. A recent comparison between Tesco and IKEA vividly illustrates this contrast: one company made a change that delighted its customers, while the other removed a feature that frustrated them. The key takeaway? Every decision in retail should be evaluated from the customer's perspective.
Tesco recently announced that it will remove the ‘Pay In-Store’ feature from its Clubcard app, effective March 7. This feature allowed customers to pay and collect Clubcard points in a single, seamless step. Now, they must complete payment separately, adding unnecessary friction to a process they had come to value.
The response? Frustration. Customers feel inconvenienced, and worse, they perceive this change as a move away from customer-centricity. When shoppers build habits around a particular experience, any disruption needs a strong justification, one that Tesco has not provided.
The problem with Tesco’s approach:
The result? Unhappy customers who feel their loyalty is being taken for granted.
In contrast, IKEA recently enhanced its customer experience by making it easier to book furniture assembly services. Recognising that many customers struggle to assemble flat-pack furniture, IKEA integrated TaskRabbit’s services into its checkout process. The results? A 50% increase in assembly bookings, a boost in average order values, and reduced product returns.
Why IKEA’s move worked:
Customers aren’t just satisfied with IKEA’s decision; they’re willing to spend more because of it. That’s the hallmark of a great retail move.
The Takeaway for Retailers
Every change a retailer makes should pass the “Customer Impact Test.” Ask:
IKEA solved a customer pain point, while Tesco removed customer convenience. The difference? One delighted customers, while the other frustrated them.
Retailers who want to stay competitive must follow IKEA's example: reduce friction, solve real problems, and make life easier for customers. When customers win, so does your bottom line.