The Ipsos Consumer Health & Safety Index, launched
Wednesday
Ipsos’ inaugural Consumer Health & Safety Index uncovers gaps in store practices
Benchmarks COVID-19 health and safety at
retailers across seven industries.
Ipsos Mystery Shoppers conducted in-store visits of over 5700 retailers
across the U.S. and learned which brands are successfully implementing health
and safety measures and which ones are not.
Today, Ipsos, the global research firm, announced the launch of the Consumer
Health & Safety Index: an ongoing health and safety benchmarking study that
evaluates how retailers across seven industries are operating amid the COVID-19
pandemic.
Ipsos conducted a two-pronged study, first surveying 2,000 Americans to
understand which health and safety attributes are most important to consumers in
the current COVID-19 retail environment, followed by thousands of mystery
shops that measured brand compliance to these health and safety attributes
across 45 major U.S. brands.
“The ability to deliver on health and safety efforts is now the most
important aspect of the customer experience, and it will be for some time”,
said Nick Mercurio, executive vice president and service line head of U.S.
Channel Performance at Ipsos. “We found that 62% of
shoppers would stop shopping at a retailer not taking health and safety
seriously. Ensuring protections are in place to keep consumers safe,
healthy and loyal in the 6-foot economy is the primary driver that inspired our
inaugural Consumer Health & Safety index.”
•
Employees at 25% of the stores visited in the Index wore face coverings
improperly or not at all inside the store.
•
Employees at 51% of stores visited were not wearing gloves inside the stores.
•
77% of the stores visited did not provide any hand sanitizing or hand washing
solution inside the entrance.
•
82% of the stores visited did not provide any hand sanitizing or hand washing
solution at checkout.
•
64% of the stores visited had no staff actively cleaning interior high traffic
areas, such as carts/baskets, counters, credit card readers, doors, and demos.
•
31% of the stores visited did not have plexiglass dividers at checkout.
•
58% of the stores visited were not observed to be managing the number of
customers entering stores.
While there is definitely room for improvement, a few brands stood out among
the crowd and offered superior performance implementing the health and
safety measures of the new economy.
Whole Foods stood out
as the health and safety all-star and was the top performing retailer in the
study. Whole Foods demonstrated near universal compliance with associates
wearing face coverings inside (98%), respecting 6-foot boundaries in customer
interactions inside (91%), providing plexiglass barriers at checkout (95%), and
offering contactless payment (87%) at the stores visited.
Costco emerged as the
#2 retailer on Ipsos’ Consumer Health & Safety Index. Employees at 83% of Costco
stores visited wore face coverings properly outside the store, and employees at
95% of the stores visited wore face coverings properly inside the store. 94% of
the stores visited had social distancing markers present inside the store.
Rounding out the top three performers was
Trader Joe’s due to
their consistency and attention to the most important health and safety factors
to consumers. Consumer research conducted by Ipsos confirmed that active
monitoring of traffic and guest occupancy is something consumers value
significantly. Trader Joe’s far surpasses all the other grocery retailers in
this area, with 94% of stores visited actively managing this process at the
entrance.
As the economy continues to reopen, brands must take steps to ensure consumers
feel safe when shopping at their locations. For more information on Ipsos’
Consumer Health & Safety index, visit here.
ipsos-retailperformance.com