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Argentina Retail: why some stores are no longer designed to sell

Belen Espindola • 4/20/2026

Retail is no longer measured by sales alone. Brands are increasingly using their physical stores to create experiences, strengthen brand positioning, and build deeper connections with consumers.


In Argentina's retail market, not all stores serve the same purpose—even though they have long been measured by the same standards. For decades, the square meter was the benchmark of performance: a store's success was defined by the revenue it generated. Today, that perspective is becoming increasingly outdated as brands organize their store networks not only to drive sales, but to fulfill different strategic roles within their broader retail strategy.

In cities like Buenos Aires—the country's largest consumer market, with more than 15 million people across its metropolitan area and a dense network of high streets and shopping centers—retail is no longer a one-size-fits-all business. Different locations now serve different strategic purposes: some stores are designed to maximize sales, others to expand market presence, and an increasing number to strengthen brand identity.

This shift is already visible in the way brands are choosing their locations across Buenos Aires' leading retail corridors. While avenues such as Santa Fe and Cabildo continue to function as high-volume shopping destinations, driven by strong pedestrian traffic and mass-market demand, areas like Palermo and parts of Recoleta have taken on a different role—one where brand identity matters more than operational efficiency.

This is where flagship stores have emerged as one of the clearest expressions of this new approach. Unlike a traditional store, a flagship is not designed to maximize sales per square meter. Instead, its primary purpose is to strengthen brand positioning through a physical environment. The space is no longer organized around inventory—it is designed around the customer experience.

This represents a deeper shift than it may first appear. The store is no longer just a sales channel—it has become a communication platform. Every decision, from architecture to product presentation, conveys a message. The store no longer simply sells products; it tells the story of the brand.

This transformation is also changing how retail performance is measured. Traditional metrics are now being complemented by indicators once associated primarily with the digital world: dwell time, product interaction, and in-store engagement. Just as digital marketing has evolved beyond measuring conversion alone to evaluating the quality of customer engagement, physical retail is following a similar path.

In Argentina, this trend is already becoming evident. Brands such as Adidas, Nike, and Samsung have developed stores in Palermo that prioritize customer experience, design, and product interaction over immediate sales. These locations function as living brand showcases. At the same time, concepts such as the NBA Store in Martínez, near Unicenter, demonstrate that this strategy can also succeed beyond traditional retail corridors by leveraging high-traffic commercial destinations.

In this context, location is no longer simply an operational decision. It has become a strategic positioning tool. Square meters no longer serve a single purpose, and retail corridors no longer play the same role. Some drive conversion, others amplify brand visibility, and others help build lasting brand equity.

This shift is also redefining real estate strategy. Lease costs are no longer viewed solely as an operating expense but, increasingly, as an investment in brand building. It also requires companies to take a more strategic approach to their store portfolios, recognizing that not every location should be evaluated using the same performance metrics.

Physical retail is being reorganized accordingly—not as a uniform network of sales outlets, but as a portfolio of locations serving different business objectives. Some are designed for conversion, others for expansion, and others for brand building. Each plays a distinct role within the broader retail strategy.

In a market where consumers continue to value in-person experiences—not only as opportunities to purchase, but also to validate, interact with, and connect with brands—this shift is far from insignificant. In many cases, it is what separates simply occupying a location from building a brand.

Some stores are built to sell. Others are built to shape how people remember a brand.


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