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It’s both valuable and fun to analyze and debate what’s next in retail. New things come and go and stay. Old things are dismissed and then celebrated for actually never leaving.
Miller Zell associates have been busy in 2026 with trade shows, from California to Düsseldorf, Germany, walking the floor and making presentations, taking in the latest technology and understanding that inside operating profits are still the foundation of brick-and-mortar retail, now and into the future.
Still, we live, shop and shopfit in the present. So, what are retailers prioritizing right now? Here are six areas that top the discussion and solution-need list.
1. Retail design leads with scalability
2. Speed to market is fundamental
3. Pursue flexibility in your branded spaces
4. Solving operational challenges
6. Retailers are prioritizing measurable performance
Store and branded environment designs often start with cool concepts, impressive technology and artistic sensibilities. And that’s fine. But for most retailers, it’s not about one fancy store. It’s about hundreds or thousands of locations across large regions of the country.
Smart retail executives, designers and marketers know that scalability is where a store design takes off. Or crashes.
The key is starting with the end in mind. Retail design concepts should be developed and engineered through a rollout lens from day one. There are flagships and large suburban stores as well as pop-ups and smaller, big-city locations and myriad footprints in between throughout a store fleet. Each should be on-brand and on-purpose for meeting customers where they are.
Retailers know that large refresh, remodel and rebrand programs should be efficiently and productively executed at scale. This process starts before the first drawings are made and even continues after installation, as new programs gather granular process and customer data and make edits to meet the never-ending demands of optimized customer experiences.
A plan for ensuring a retail design is scalable for an entire store fleet includes a need for efficiency during rollout. Executing new programs quickly means you’re keeping up with customers’ wants and needs, instead of merely following behind.
That’s achieved by fine-tuning your process so you provide faster refresh cycles and streamline approval processes. Creating this efficiency also involves clear communication with your vendor partners.
Key points:
All of this circles back to great program management, which is about an end-to-end understanding of projects and rollouts, meaning you get better planning, fewer surprises and more opportunities for savings.
Flexible retail environments upgrade the customer experience and provide cost savings over the long term.
You start by creating modular, scalable fixture systems and templates that allow for variation within clear branding and rollout guardrails. These become your stores’ skeletal systems, providing opportunities to meet diverse seasonal needs, new product launches and environmental adjustments that please customers.
This includes adaptable graphic zones and defined “local moments” within the store where market-specific content can live without disrupting operations or brand consistency.
Retailers want to lower costs for themselves and their customers, as both track as ways to win in a competitive marketplace.
This includes lean staffing models and reducing shrink, as well as high-quality, durable fixture systems that look great and last longer and installation simplicity that reduces store downtime.
During retail rollouts, make sure to create specific KPIs to track install efficiency/accuracy rate, store readiness and post-launch performance. These integrate new learnings into solving operational challenges into your rollout process.
Customer experience typically leads retail priorities, but design decisions that improve operational efficiency in the front and back of the house also are prime focuses for present and future benefits.
Clarity matters in a value-driven market. Shoppers want to know the right path for their trip mission as quickly as possible, whether they are in a rush for a small number of products or eager for unhurried browsing on a Sunday afternoon.
In-store experience design therefore should prioritize wayfinding by creating simplified messaging, clear communication hierarchies and intuitive navigation.
Great design can present simplicity and engagement rather than confusing or frustrating visual noise. This helps convert sales and increase basket size, no matter the trip mission.
Seeking value, efficiency, ROI and growth… crazy, right?
Amid the smoke and fire of the new, it’s possible to be creative and pragmatic, aspirational and practical, as you address immediate design, refresh, branding and execution needs for your store fleet.
Retail environments ultimately are successful based on conversion, engagement and brand elevation. Customers get what they want from your stores and consciously and unconsciously intertwine your brand with consistently great experiences.
Want to discuss your most pressing store experience priorities? Let’s chat.