News

16.05.2026, 12:00
50% of Gen Z discovers products offline — here is what that means for retail strategy in Moldova

The omnichannel data is sharper than the headlines suggest, and the distribution implications run deeper than any single market.

Half of Gen Z discovers new products through friends, family, or colleagues — not through a feed. A 2025 YouGov study punctures the assumption that younger consumers have abandoned physical retail entirely. While 69% of Gen Z began their decision-making process online, 53% still browsed in stores. And 29% spotted an item online but completed the purchase in-store, while 21% did the reverse. The channel split is not a contradiction — it is the actual shopping architecture of this generation.

The deeper insight is structural. Social media remains the dominant discovery tool for Gen Z, used by 64% compared to 44% of older American adults. But discovery and purchase are not the same event. The YouGov data makes clear that physical presence is not a legacy cost — it is an active conversion layer. Retailers who cut stores to fund digital, or who built digital to avoid stores, are now managing the consequences of that binary logic.

For a retail or distribution operator in Moldova, the omnichannel argument lands differently depending on how the channel mix is currently structured. Most domestic retail formats — grocery, apparel, electronics, personal care — are built around a store-first model with a digital presence that functions more as a catalog than a commerce engine. The YouGov finding that 29% of Gen Z purchases are initiated online but closed in-store suggests that the weakest point in the local chain is often the handoff: a product seen on social media or a website that cannot be located, confirmed, or reserved in a physical outlet.

The capital requirement for genuine omnichannel is not trivial. Inventory synchronization, staff trained to handle cross-channel queries, and a logistics backend capable of same-day or next-day fulfillment are costs that compress margins quickly at Moldova's scale. The businesses best positioned to navigate this are those where the store network already exists and the digital layer can be added incrementally — not those attempting to build both from scratch simultaneously. A retailer operating five or more physical locations, for instance, has a credible foundation; a single-store operator faces a different equation entirely.

The 31% of Gen Z who prefer email for customer service — versus 21% of older generations — points to a secondary pressure point: post-purchase infrastructure. In categories like electronics or fashion accessories distributed in Moldova, the after-sale experience is often the most underdeveloped part of the chain, and it is increasingly where channel preference gets formed.

These mechanics raise specific questions worth sitting with. Does your current digital presence function as a discovery surface or only as a brochure? If a customer sees your product online, how many steps separate that moment from a confirmed in-store transaction? And is your inventory visible enough across channels to support the journey the data describes?

The omnichannel era does not reward those who simply have both a website and a store — it rewards those whose channels actively hand customers to each other.

Most operators here treat digital and physical as parallel but separate investments. The more deliberate path is treating them as a single funnel with two entry points — and building the backend to match.

Source