TECH SOLUTIONS
ROAM APP ENCOURAGING CUSTOMERS TO SHOP LOCALLY
ROAMING BACK TO THE HIGH STREET A NEW APP DELIVERS A SUITE OF FUNCTIONALITY THAT BENEFITS RETAILERS AND SHOPPERS AND
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ENCOURAGES CUSTOMERS TO SHOP LOCALLY.
ith deserted high streets a feature of the last few months, a Durham-based former jockey and digital entrepreneur is driving customers back to the high street with a new app. Andrew Bartlett, who is just 23, has developed the ROAM app which gives users essential information about shops and services based on their GPS location. Using state of the art algorithms and data collection techniques, the app gives the user the feeling of being a “local” shopper with up to date offers, opening times and the ability to order items to collect instore or delivery direct to a home address. For retailers, the app can be used to share offers, menus, news and loyalty deals direct to their customer base via the customer’s mobile phone. “In effect, ROAM becomes a business’s own app without the expensive development costs,” says Bartlett. “The platform is free and sends customers onto the high street, a reversal from the common misconception that digital sales are ruining town centre and high street sales. “I firmly believe that the high street still has an important part in the retail economy. We’ve seen a trend towards online sales particularly during the pandemic, but nothing can beat personal customer service or the ability to see, demonstrate or try on the goods we buy. Digital is the solution
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to the decline of local shopping not the enemy and ROAM brings together app technology with bricks-and-mortar businesses. “I believe that every town and city is unique and full of potential. I want to shine a spotlight on the independent culture of those places and help businesses grow and thrive. ROAM helps evolve the digital footprint of towns and cities encouraging people to shop local, build stronger local economies and provide further opportunities for those who live and work there.” Having been a jockey and worked with some of the country’s leading horse trainers including Alan Swinbank and showjumper Harvey Smith, Bartlett became interested in the technology behind their successes. This led him to study computer coding and app development, build websites and experiment with ideas to improve business performance. The result was ROAM which was three years in development and is available on both iOS and Android devices and is free for both businesses and consumers to use. The APP now has more 80,000 users in the UK. Regenerating the High Street isn’t the only practical application of ROAM. The app can monitor where members of the public are gathering within retail outlets so that people can avoid crowds or queues while social distancing remains in place. After the pandemic, the