A shopping centre's personality is largely dictated by the brands within it, according to the leaders of five of the world's most successful shopping centre owner and development companies.
A shopping centre's personality is largely dictated by the brands within it, according to the leaders of five of the world's most successful shopping centre owner and development companies.
Speaking at the International Council of Shopping Centers (ICSC)'s annual European Conference in Istanbul last week, Julia Calabrese of McArthurGlen, Alexander Otto of ECE Projektmanagement, Christophe Cuvillier of Unibail-Rodamco, Lim Beng Chee of CapitaMalls Asia Limited and William Taubman of US-based Taubman Centers spoke about the challenges of delivering a vibrant retail environment for shoppers while achieving strong footfall for retailers and investment returns for shareholders.
'Ultimately a shopping centre is about the brands, that's why our customers come,' said Unibail-Rodamco's Cuvillier. 'Brands existed before shopping centres. Now internet sales have changed the game and we have to be more innovative than ever before. If customers can stay at home and shop, we have to give them something they won't get elsewhere, something extraordinary or unexpected, and that means attracting the brands that others don't.'
Julia Calabrese of McArthurGlen added: 'Brand partners and brand partner relationships are critical, but the consumers are more savvy and sophisticated. We need to be more creative and intuitive to not only get the brands in but also offer a new experience to consumers when they come into our centres.'
Bill Taubman of Taubman Centers said: 'The consumer is evolving as society is evolving and that’s impacting on every area of what we do. No one really knows where the future may be, online and offline are converging in a way that we can't really predict. Will we be selling Google glasses? Will eBay make watches with Paypal embedded? The convergence will make things happen that we don't even know today, and some of what has always been true will no longer be true.'
In the fast-growing Asian shopping centre market, families expect personalised service, according to Lim Beng Chee of CapitaMalls Asia Limited. 'In Asia we tend to shop with the whole family, which could include six or seven members and three generations. Each member of the family expects to be engaged and involved, and the successful centres focus on providing something that will satisfy the needs and wants of each member of the family.'
ECE Projektmanagement's Alexander Otto emphasised the community function of shopping centres. 'Yes the key changes are electronic and mobile devices which are a means for people to compare prices and get information, and yes that has led to a change in behaviour, but for us it's also about building a relationship with the local community and we do that early in a shopping centre's development. We try to get the community involved, sometimes even to the extent of inviting them to name the centre.'
Otto also thinks that mid-sized malls, which many think have had their day in favour of the super-sized malls, do have a future - in Germany anyway. 'Germany is not a centralised market. We have many regional cities that have an attractive lifestyle and there are opportunities there for the right type of mall.'
Over 600 delegates from 40 countries attended ICSC's annual European conference in Istanbul.