A third of shoppers say retailers shouldn’t ban serial returners


A third of shoppers say retailers shouldn’t ban serial returners

Consumers say retailers shouldn’t ban serial returners from shopping with them, suggesting that those who return the most are often the most valuable, highest spending customers to the retailer, according to new research from the Retail Technology Show.

Original research of over 1,000 UK shoppers by Retail Technology Show revealed that the average UK shopper now returns 15 per cent of the total number of items they buy online, rising to 20 per cent for Millennials and 22 per cent among Gen Z shoppers, as the thorny issue of returns remains a key challenge for retail businesses.

KPMG now estimates returns represent a £ 7 billion problem for retailers – an issue that is only going to escalate further as inflation increases the cost associated with reserves logistics, and the processing and labour needed to remerchandise a returned product ready for resale.  And, as the latest data from the British Fashion Council shows, this isn’t just impacting retailers’ profits, but is also having an increasing impact on the planet, with an estimated 23million returned items destroyed or sent to landfill each year in the UK, generating 750,000 tonnes of CO₂ emissions.

This has led to many retailers, including Zara, Next, boohoo, THG-owned LookFantastic and Mountain Warehouse, to start charging shoppers to send items back, prompting a consumer backlash from shoppers who have become used to free returns. Appinio’s latest study, for example, shows 71 per cent of UK shoppers won’t now shop with brands and retailers who don’t offer free returns, while Klarna’s poll showed getting rid of free returns risked lost loyalty with 86 per cent of consumers more likely to come back to online merchants who offer free returns.

Some brands, including ASOS and boohoo, have gone further in waging their war on returns and reportedly started sending warning letters to customers deemed to be ‘serial returners’, reserving the right to suspend shoppers’ accounts. However, Retail Technology Show’s research showed currently just 6 per cent of UK shoppers said they have been banned from shopping with a brand for being a serial returner, rising to 15 per cent of Gen Z.

Almost a third (32 per cent) of UK consumers say retailers shouldn’t ban serial returners, rising to 44 per cent of Gen Z, while a further three in ten (31 per cent) said retailers shouldn’t ban serial returners if they kept some of their order. Over a quarter (26 per cent) said that rather than banning a serial returner, the retailer should take responsibility for preventing the return in the first place, while a further 27 per cent said retailers should do more to understand why an item was being returned, rather than simply blaming – and in some cases banning – the shopper.

Almost a quarter (23 per cent) said that shoppers who returned the most were often the highest spenders, warning that retailers could be losing loyalty and repeat custom if they banned serial returners.  However, 35 per cent did concede retailers did have a right to ban serial returners, due to the cost of returning an item and processing a return, and 24 per cent agreed retailers should ban serial returners if they exhibit size sampling behaviours, where they buy the same item in multiple sizes.

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