Create a free account, or log in

Click-and-collect: How a quick pivot helped AMR Hair and Beauty triple its e-commerce business

AMR Hair and Beauty entered the consumer market and managed to triple its e-commerce revenue during the pandemic thanks to a speedy pivot to click-and-collect.
Sophie Venz
Sophie Venz
AMR-hair-beauty
AMR Hair and Beauty stock in Victoria. Source: supplied.

At the 2004 Sydney Royal Easter Show there was a single stall selling something other than showbags, and a 14-year-old Ammar Issa was the helm.

It would be another two years until Issa could register his business name (he had to wait until he was 16 years old), and while itโ€™s no longer showground stalls Issa is competing with, the hard work has certainly paid off.

As of 2021, his business AMR Hair and Beauty has around 75 staff in its Australian operations, and more employed in the UK; four brick-and-mortar stores, with others currently being built; and it earns more than $100 million in revenue a year.

Issa attributes his business growth to โ€˜looking after the B2B moreโ€™, and disrupting the industry by supplying hair and beauty products mostly to trade customers. When asked how the business stands out compared to competitors, such as Adore Beauty and AusHair, Issa reiterates this B2B notion, saying AMR โ€œdidnโ€™t push too much into [the] consumer marketโ€.

But times are changing, and Issa admits AMR is turning more into a consumer business than it expected to.

So how did AMR suddenly enter the consumer market, and in doing so, manage to triple its e-commerce revenue during a pandemic? It all comes down to a speedy pivot to click-and-collect.

Key takeaways

  1. Donโ€™t be afraid of change, even if itโ€™s not what you first planned

  2. Adapt your business to your consumers wants and needs

  3. Learn from what others do well, and from your own mistakes

  4. Click-and-collect is here to stay, in two very different ways

Pivot to success

โ€œA huge part of [revenue] is e-commerce. But our stores are actually really, really profitable,โ€ Issa tells SmartCompany Plus.

After all, AMR started as a brick-and-mortar store first, and didnโ€™t go online until 2015. Issa says the company โ€œjumped on the wagon pretty lateโ€, because selling to their main customer โ€” hairdressers โ€” can be complex.

โ€œHairdressers donโ€™t like their prices displayed to the consumers. So it was something we sort of had to disrupt; we were the first ones to put trade pricing out there publicly and still honour it only to trade,โ€ Issa explains.

Even now, the business-to-business market is still AMRโ€™s main segment, and the consumer is โ€œjust an added bonusโ€. But AMR still wants the shopping experience to be a great one, regardless of the โ€˜typeโ€™ of customer.

โ€œWeโ€™re putting more effort into our stores, getting more stores out there and making them look beautiful with better presentation, and giving [customers] that awesome shopping experience as well,โ€ Issa says.

Providing this โ€˜awesome experienceโ€™ โ€” in store or online โ€” comes down to giving your customers what they want, and pivoting when necessary… or when a global pandemic strikes.

A two-week turnaround

AMR did have click-and-collect services pre-COVID, but it was done in a โ€œreally amateur-ishโ€ way, Issa admits.

โ€œIt was just a light one that told customers when their order was ready by email,โ€ he says. โ€œThere were no text messages or anything like that.โ€

With online shopping spiking, Issaโ€™s friends started telling him about the click-and-collect service they were experiencing โ€” and it was these comments that helped him jump on the trend.

โ€œI started putting bogus orders in โ€ฆ just to test out their click-and-collect systems,โ€ Issa says.

โ€œWe were amazed at the service you were getting.โ€

The AMR team quickly decorated the whole warehouse building and its stores across the country with click-and-collect signage. The company then launched SMS messaging and number plate recognition, using its CCTV cameras to send out an alert with the number plate thatโ€™s driving through the gate.

AMR’s click-and-collect signage outside the warehouse. Source: supplied.

โ€œBy the time they enter the door, their order is already ready for them,โ€ Issa says.

With new processes comes new people, and Issa doesnโ€™t shy away from admitting that it did cost the company โ€œa fair bitโ€ to get the โ€œout of the box solutionโ€ up and running. Despite it all, AMR had its new streamlined process ready to go within a mere two weeks.

Two trends emerging

Issa says shipping still โ€œtakes the crownโ€ as the choice for his customers when it comes to online shopping. Although he speculates that could be because AMR isnโ€™t in every major city in Australia yet, and thinks heโ€™ll see a reduction in click-and-collect once that happens.

But there are two โ€˜typesโ€™ of click-and-collect customers, heโ€™s noticed, and serving them both to the best ability is a balancing act.

The first type of customer is the click-and-collect customer who wants to pick it up from an actual store. This is โ€œthe best oneโ€, Issa says, because most customers will get stuck in the shop buying more things, which is a win for both parties.

โ€œPicking up [click-and-collect] orders in store is so much better. Youโ€™re able to walk in and pick up anything else you missed out on or forgot.โ€

Yet, Issa does admit there is going to be a growing need for โ€œclick-and-collect expressโ€.

Thatโ€™s where people want to arrive at a store or warehouse and they donโ€™t want to get out of their car; they want the employee to put the order in the boot and they can then drive off. Itโ€™s an option many retailers are leaning further towards in the pandemic โ€” especially when outbreaks occur โ€” to limit the risk of COVID-19 transmission.

โ€œI think people are stuck on that service,โ€ Issa says. โ€œPeople are going to rely on that a lot more.โ€

Issa says this means retailers should split click-and-collect into the two offerings, although he admits AMR is โ€œstill figuring that out internallyโ€.

โ€œWow factorโ€

So whatโ€™s Issaโ€™s advice to other retailers looking to enter the click-and-collect space?

โ€œGet on to it as quickly as possible, and make sure your technology is good because it gives people that โ€˜wow factorโ€™.โ€

Issa gives the example of Officeworks, where one of his recent orders was ready in two minutes.

โ€œIt worked flawlessly,โ€ he says. โ€œAnd that puts a good impression on the company, to be honest, the better โ€” and the more efficient โ€” it works.

But in terms of its biggest click-and-collect inspiration, Issa says the AMR team loved Dan Murphyโ€™s service the most. It was indeed Dan Murphyโ€™s that gave Issa the idea of number plate recognition, and became the โ€œtypical copyโ€ for what AMR would implement.

So, ultimately, it comes down to doing what 14-year-old Issa was too busy to do: your homework.