Darko Pavic, Founder & CEO of Fiscal Solutions, Retail Technology & Global Fiscalization Expert with 28+ Years of Experience.
For more than 25 years, I’ve worked in retail and retail technology, from international projects to fiscalization and POS compliance. That experience has taught me one lesson: Retail rarely moves in the simple direction predicted by headlines.
Every few years, the industry declares that a new channel will replace everything before it. E-commerce would kill the store. Mobile would kill the desktop. Social commerce would change the customer journey. Now, AI agents are expected to become the next shopping interface. Each shift matters. But none fully explains the future of retail.
Most people are wondering whether retail will become fully digital or remain physical. But I think it will be neither. Instead, it will be intelligent, connected and experiential.
I can see this not only from market analysis, but from direct conversations with retailers. Global retailers often come to us before launching new concepts because they need to understand whether their ideas can be implemented legally and operationally in different countries. They may want to test new checkout models, online-to-offline flows, cross-border commerce, mobile ordering, live shopping, fiscalization logic, receipt handling or data-driven store experiences. These discussions give me a direct view of what retailers are preparing before these ideas become visible to consumers.
The Store Is Becoming A Medium
What I see isn’t the disappearance of the store. I see the reinvention of its role.
The paradox of modern retail is easy to describe. Almost everyone agrees that digital commerce will continue to grow. E-commerce, social commerce, live commerce, mobile apps, AI shopping assistants and agentic commerce are changing how customers discover, compare and buy products. At the same time, most serious retail leaders don’t believe that physical stores will disappear. The customer buys a product only once. If more purchases move online, fewer purchases should happen in stores. So, why does the store still matter?
The answer is that the store is no longer only a place of distribution.
In the past, a store was primarily a location where goods arrived, were displayed and were purchased. That logic still exists, but it’s no longer enough. The store is becoming a medium. It communicates the brand. It shapes perception. It creates emotion. Architecture, lighting, sound, materials, presentation, employees and movement all send a message.
This matters in a world where products can be bought almost anywhere. If every competitor can sell a similar product online, the differentiator is meaning. The best stores won’t merely present products. They’ll present a worldview. They’ll become media channels that customers experience and remember.
The second role of the store is intelligence.
The Store As An Intelligence Platform
When people hear “smart store,” they often think about screens, sensors, cameras, AI, self-checkout and automation. These tools are useful, but they aren’t the essence of intelligence. A smart store isn’t the store with the most technology. It’s the store that knows what to do with the signals it receives.
Retailers can collect movement data, product interaction data, local demand signals, membership behavior, payment data and inventory data. But if these signals don’t lead to better decisions—they’re only data. Intelligence begins when the store can adapt its layout, assortment, staffing, communication and customer experience based on what’s happening in and around it.
This is where physical retail becomes part of a larger intelligent system. The store is no longer static. It learns. It responds. It connects local context with operational decisions. Successful retailers will be able to translate those signals into action.
The third role of the store is experience.
The Store As An Experience Hub
Digital commerce is excellent at speed and convenience. But the more digital shopping accelerates, the more physical retail must deepen meaning. A store can’t justify its existence only by having products on shelves. Access to products is no longer rare. What’s rare is a memorable experience.
Customers won’t visit stores only because they have to. They’ll visit because they want to feel something. They want confirmation, trust, inspiration, belonging, human contact and emotional connection. They want the brand to become real. They want the purchase to be more than a transaction.
This doesn’t mean every store needs spectacular entertainment. It means the store must understand the customer’s situation. Sometimes, a customer wants to walk slowly, explore and enjoy. Sometimes, the same customer wants the fastest possible solution. The customer doesn’t choose a channel ideologically. The customer chooses based on context.
That’s why the old debate between online and offline is too narrow. We need to look at how retail can connect space, data, technology and emotion into one coherent experience.
For retail leaders, this creates a new set of strategic questions: How does the store communicate? How does it learn? How does it remain in memory? The most valuable stores won’t be only the most efficient ones but the ones customers remember.
Brands Need Presence, Trust And Emotion
One clear signal is that even digital-first products are moving into physical space. When a digital audio-book company opens a store without physical books, the logic isn’t distribution. The product doesn’t need a shelf. The brand needs presence, trust and emotion.
That’s the larger lesson. Physical retail won’t survive simply because it’s physical. It will survive if it becomes more intelligent, connected and emotionally relevant than a conventional place of sale.
Retail isn’t only technology. It isn’t only space. It isn’t only transactions. Retail is how a brand enters people’s lives. Successful retailers will combine the physical and the digital to create something more powerful.
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