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AEO EXPRESS,

Fashion to go

TLDR:

Role:

Project Manager, Service Designer, Experience Prototyper

Team:

Tiffany Z., Elizabeth F., Zixuan L., Griffin T., Yingli S.

Duration:

2 months (2018)

Methods:

Customer Journey Mapping

Semi-structured Interviews 

Observational Research

Competitive Analysis

Personas

Service Blueprints

Value Flow Modeling 

Storyboarding/Speed-dating

Co-design Sessions

Experience Prototyping

Client

American Eagle Outfitters

Our client tasked us with identifying a high market value opportunity to improve their overall service offering (i.e. does not involve changing their product) and creating a redesigned solution.

Problem Space

AEO has 26 minutes to get young men to buy things.

American Eagle has a limited amount of time to get men to buy things, and men are not diversifying their purchases at the store.

Solution

AEO Express is a curated, private showroom experience, seamlessly incorporated into existing AEO properties.

Our solution guarantees you walk away with a fashionable outfit. Grab and go. 

The Service Solution

Enter your own private showroom with clothes curated by experts so you’re guaranteed to walk away with a fashionable outfit.

 

AEO Express creates an “on the go” shopping experience for men, where you can skip the browsing and grab what you need with confidence. Rather than go into the larger store, you can go into the AEO Express showroom, try on outfits curated by AEO service specialists and purchase on the spot.

The Features
1. Private showroom setting so you can shop and try on in one space.
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2. Hand curated outfits are displayed so you don’t have to think about what are fashionable combinations.
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3. Displayed clothes are stocked in various sizes so you don’t have to ask associates to find them for you.
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3D Concept Video

ThE goals

 
Create a shopping experience that is fast and trustworthy (fashionably speaking).

 

These were our guiding principles for designing AEO Express:

  • It needed to target a market that could generate significant new sales;

  • Make the selection and purchasing process frictionless (25 minutes or less);

  • Instill confidence in shoppers that they are making fashionable choices;

  • Create an experience that off-loads redundant AEO associate work and allows them to focus on strategic initiatives.

The Process

At the start, the Innovation and User Experience team at AEO had given us some seeds to begin our research. We opted to explore In-Store Personalization because we saw an opportunity to innovate on a space that was traditionally stagnant and relatively untouched.

 

We started with some basic hypotheses we had about different demographics and their in-store shopping habits. In particular, we explored the journeys of teens shopping for themselves and parents shopping for their kids using customer journey maps.

Generative Research
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Customer Journey Map

At the advice of our clients, we wanted to narrow our solution towards something that would most meaningfully generate new sales for AEO. Based on research in the market, we believed we had an opportunity to expand the young men’s share of wallet in AEO purchases much wider than we could with young women.

 

From interviewing young men about their shopping habits and creating a value flow model, we knew they didn't like to spend time shopping, but still wanted to feel confident that the clothes they were wearing were fashionable.

In this vein, we changed our problem statement to be: “Young men want to dress fashionably, but often find the in-store shopping experience to be stressful, confusing, and inefficient. They just want to make quick, confident outfit choices."

Design Iteration
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"I just want to focus on the clothes."

 

We created a Value Flow model that helped us identify an area where we could empower young men and, as a bonus, shift associate work to strategic stocking initiatives.

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"Just tell me what to buy and leave me alone."

 

We  learned from a number of storyboarding sessions that men really gravitated towards design solutions that gave them tools to shop for themselves with minimal intervention from associates.

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"Show me AEO's best clothes. Not all of it."

 

Our co-design sessions and experience prototyping revealed that men really wanted stores to take more initiative in telling them exactly what to buy.

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Co-Design Sessions

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Experience Prototyping

Design Decisions

1. AEO Express as a store within a store.

 

This was a big design decision we made shortly after pivoting to young men as our target market. Our client asked whether we could have AEO Expresses independent of the AEO store and set up in unique places, such as music festivals or in malls without an AEO presence. We certainly wanted AEO Express to have modularity, and therefore ultimate flexibility in implementation in the future, but we believed that AEO Express would have the most meaningful impact as part of the larger store because men are not likely to just shop on a whim, so if they came across an AEO Express during a music festival (for example), they would not be in the mindset to go shopping. Instead, we wanted to put the AEO Expresses in places men were already familiar with so it would be there waiting for them when they arrived.

2. AEO Express stocked by associates.

 

The added benefit of our model is that we foresee our solution creating spaces for associates to grow into more strategic roles. What we had identified from our PSS model was that associates spend a large amount of their time hand-holding customers and giving them advice on things to purchase. Instead of doing that work, they could be influencing what AEO stocks their shelves with through AEO Express. They could expertly curate items for the showcase, based on their knowledge and predictions of trends and AEO’s own business goals.

The Results

 

Based on the final rounds of Experience Prototyping we did with our target demographic, we found young men very receptive to the concept and were generally able to browse through the showroom quickly, identifying items they liked and outfits that matched. Based on the warm reception, we felt confident in our solution.

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In our final pitch to the clients, we made a mock fitting room with a medium wash set of outfits. The highlights of our exhibit included showing a 3D video rendition of the Express rooms, and debuting a new persona, Alex, who represented our preferred future for men shopping at AEO.

AEO Express was met with general enthusiastic approval by our clients. Several commented on the cost advantage of creating modular, curated AEO shops. 

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