Why aren't your marketing investments yet translating into store traffic?
The real problem isn't the budget nor the strategy.
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Key takeaways from this article:
- It isn't a lack of budget or marketing strategy that blocks the increase in store traffic, it's the scale of drive-to-store campaigns
- Local personalization, AI visibility and physical traffic measurement: three omnichannel problems that most retailers have not yet solved together
- Without a centralized local infrastructure, each marketing action operates in a silo and does not allow maximizing overall efficiency
Your digital campaigns are no longer enough to increase in‑store traffic …
Your network does digital marketing. You publish, you target, you measure. And yet, when you ask the question directly, does all that really attract customers in the store? The answer makes you hesitate.
It's not a matter of will. Retailers know what should be done. The problem is that what works in one store falls apart at a hundred. And that's precisely where the difference between networks that progress and others is played.
Who exactly do your local digital campaigns speak to?
A network is never a single audience. Consumers of the same brand expect messages, offers and contact points adapted to their daily lives, not a national average.
The real question is therefore not whether your advertising campaigns should target locally and personalize the experience between digital and store, but how to do it without breaking your organization.
What the field knows about your points of sale, the headquarters doesn't hear it
Mono-brand communication, top-down and homogène, is working less and less. Each point of sale lives in an environment that is its own: immediate competition, consumption habits, local saisonnalité, consumer expectations. Your équipes on the ground know this. But this knowledge does not get back up, or not quickly enough to influence the digital campaigns censées to attract people to the store.
Result: you broadcast messages built for everyone, that really speak to no one. And effective strategies on paper end up breaking when they hit the field.
Flexilocal without digital infrastructure is chaos
Campaigns that are rolled out store by store, the "flexilocal", have become the demand of the moment. However, without the right infrastructure, customizing at this scale comes at a cost: either your field teams spend their time adapting content rather than delivering a true customer experience, or each store goes its own way and dilutes the brand image.
A shared framework, a guided freedom to boost foot traffic at the point of sale
What works, it's a hybrid model. The headquarters sets the framework, themes, visuals, offers, and local teams adapt what deserves to be. A promotion on a popular product in the area, a local event, a service opening. It's not revolutionary. But it requires tools that allow doing it at scale without multiplying back-and-forths.
Are your points of sale still easy to discover where your customers are looking?
Local visibility is no longer just an SEO topic. It's become the primary condition to get discovered, long before the website, long before advertising. If your prospects don't find you at the moment they are searching, the rest of your acquisition strategy falls flat.
Local discovery no longer goes through a single place, and it's essential for retailers
It is no longer only Google that directs your customers to your stores. A study conducted among 6,000 consumers shows that the purchase decision is increasingly built upstream of merchant sites, via ChatGPT, Gemini, Perplexity, TikTok or voice search. These tools do not list links. They synthesize a direct response. And for that, they rely on what they find reliable.
In retail, structured local pages represent just under 60% of the citations generated by AI engines on non‑branded queries. Not product pages, not the homepage, the listings of your points of sale.
At 200 stores, each error multiplies
Google records 1.5 billion "near me" searches per month. À each time, what determines if your store appears in local SEO results is the quality and consistency of your local data. A store that has changed its hours without updating all platforms? Invisible. Or worse: visible but wrong, which generates frustration and negative reviews.
At the scale of a network, manual updating is not an option. It's a centralized presence management, automatically propagated across all platforms, which ensures that each point of sale is findable, everywhere, all the time.
Are you managing your drive-to-store campaigns with the right metrics?
A campaign can generate thousands of clicks without moving a single person to your stores. Measuring the real impact of a campaign, from the first click to the in‑store purchase, is what separates networks that steer from those that suffer. Without this direct link between digital action and physical visit, this strategy remains a belief, not a decision.
Full dashboards, empty answers on the real conversion
The dashboards are full. Click-through rate, impressions, engagement, cost per click. These numbers reassure, but they do not allow you to truly measure the success of a local campaign.
Évaluate a drive-to-store campaign at CTR in 2026, ça no longer makes sense. An excellent click rate can coexist with zéro visite en magasin incrémentale, zéro conversion réelle côté consumers.
Here is what really matters: cost per visit, incremental return on investment, measurable impact on physical traffic. These are the only indicators that allow d'arbitrate and d'optimize to increase in‑store traffic.
From reporting to real‑time control
Brands that have solved this problem have turned their reporting into a decision-making tool, not an accounting one. Detect when a store loses local visibility before it weighs on sales. Identify an area that generates searches without conversion. Compare performance between stores to transfer what works.
Brands like Färm have been able to measure the direct impact of their local campaigns on in-store traffic, and adjust accordingly.
→ Discover how Färm amplified its local actions thanks to Google campaigns
But what is the common denominator that blocks traffic in your points of sale?
Three different problems. One common root: without a centralized local infrastructure, your marketing actions work in silos.
Well-designed content will not be seen if your point of sale is invisible on search engines. A well-targeted campaign will not convert if your local data is incorrect. Honest reporting cannot do anything if the information it aggregates is fragmented.
AI engines do not have sentiment. They cite what they understand and what they can verify. A brand with 300 points of sale but a neglected local data will be beaten by a smaller, better-structured competitor.
The question n'est no longer whether you should do local marketing. You already do it. The question, c'est: is everything you do holding together? Let's talk.
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