Beyond the Scroll: How Physical Spaces Capture Attention in a Digital-First World

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The average human attention span has fallen by a third since 2008 – now just 8 seconds long. At the same time, 81% of Gen Z and 78% of millennials wish they could disconnect from digital devices more easily. In a world flooded with AI-generated content, consumers are eager to take a break from their screens and find authentic, in-person experiences with brands.

As digital fatigue grows, physical spaces are capturing the attention of engaged shoppers. According to a recent McKinsey report, in person experiences command the highest level of focus, and where attention is strongest, spending follows. Consumers still seek real-life experiences and, even in a digital first world, live experiences and experiential retail are capturing imagination. Always home to an audience prepared to be captivated, retail destinations are uniquely positioned to facilitate engagement.

URW CANDICE MAYER GILLET 1
Candice Mayer-Gillet, Managing Director at Westfield Rise

Evidently, physical experiences drive attention in ways digital channels cannot replicate. Real-world environments are reawakening consumer focus, emotion, and memory, creating more meaningful consumer-brand interactions.

Meaningful Attention

Attention has become a real form of currency, and, in physical environments, it is earned through meaning rather than noise. Our research with LUMEN shows in physical spaces, attention is a currency earned through meaning, not noise. At Westfield Rise, our Out-of-Home (OOH) D6 formats command 36% more attention than the average roadside D6, and 17% more than competitor internal formats. Results also showed the value of experiential, generating significantly more attention than LUMEN cross-media attention norms. With average viewing time scores putting experiential at Westfield in the same bracket as cinema at the top of the attention funnel, it is clear to see how shopping destinations remain key cultural spaces where people discover, connect, and are entertained.

Good Friction

Observing dwell patterns, movement, and interaction with greater accuracy, we are elevating attention to become a practical dataset, helping brands refine their experiences to best suit the consumer. One of the most exciting trends we’re seeing is the rise of what MIT Sloan Executive Education calls ‘good friction’. ‘Good friction’ refers to the small moments of anticipation, play or reward that invite engagement and give experiences more character. These moments turn passersby into participants, and often into loyal customers, by creating memorable brand interactions.

This year, good friction came to life at the Wicked: For Good experience in Westfield London. The activation engaged with audiences at multiple touchpoints, using captivating immersive sets, themed costumes, and interactive photo opportunities. The experience had nearly over 60k visitors within 6 weeks and reached more than 6m visitors on Westfield’s social platforms. These intentional pauses transformed casual passersby into participants, increasing footfall and social media engagement while creating memorable brand interactions that went beyond typical cinema ticket sales.

As retail continues to evolve, good friction is becoming a guiding principle for designing engagement. In a world obsessed with speed and convenience, these intentional pauses remind consumers that the most valuable experiences are the ones worth slowing down for.

The Year Ahead

As we move into 2026, experiential campaigns will only succeed if they earn attention with purpose. At Westfield Rise, we fuse insight‑driven strategy with measurable impact and dynamic physical spaces to create experiences that stay with visitors. When brands prioritise meaningful engagement, attention doesn’t just spark interest, it builds lasting loyalty.

The post Beyond the Scroll: How Physical Spaces Capture Attention in a Digital-First World appeared first on 365 Retail – Retail News and Events.

Terry Clark
Terry Clarkhttps://365fashion.co.uk
Publisher of 365 Fashion, 365 Retail and Hospitality and Leisure News. Organiser of the Creative Retail Awards.

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