Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Retail Mobility - Potential Impediments to Success

Retail Mobility
Potential Impediments to Success  

by: Scott Pearson


A general discussion document on the direction of mobility in retail and the potential barriers to rapid adoption of point-of-decision solutions.


Author's note: This was originally written in 2005, but in revisiting it recently I couldn't help but compare it to the state of the world in 2013. While serious progress has been made, it is surprising to see that we are faced with many of the same problems today - although perhaps to a much lesser degree. 


  


Introduction

With the advent of wireless mobility in retail, the knowledge of the enterprise can now be leveraged at the point of decision in real time. With real-time information on the sales floor, retailers can now assist in increasing service to customers as well as in raising the productivity of associates, one of the most difficult costs to control in retail.

Retail is at a point of flux as many retailers are only now preparing for the logical adoption of these sales floor technologies. It may be years before all retailers see the true advantages of enterprise mobility, and many will be caught playing catch up just to align themselves with their changing strategic direction. 



Stages of Information Technology

Information Technology management has gone through a series of stages. Richard Nolan describes the stages as initiation, contagion, control, integration and ultimately mastery of a dominant design.[1] He further describes these stages as having followed an “S-shaped” curve where broad acceptance, competition and efficiencies ultimately reduce the benefits over time. This sets the stage for the next stage, which ultimately supplants the previous. The dominant designs in this process have included mainframes, minicomputers, microcomputers, and network client servers. These dominant designs are further defined as the Data Processing Era, the Micro Era and the Network Era.[2] 

In a similar fashion Bill Nuti of Symbol Technology speaks of five Ages of technology: The age of centralized computing, the age of distributed computing, the age of personal computing, the age of networked computing, and ultimately the age of mobility. It is his belief that the impact of mobility will usher in a new age that will harnesses the technological developments of previous ages in productivity and advances them to all areas of an organization, including factories, warehouses, distribution centers and in the field. [3]

As described by Nolan, “the fundamental difference between Industrial Age companies and Information Age companies was the formal recognition of information as an important resource, and the incorporation of new management principles to manage information effectively and explicitly as a resource.” It is this realization that has allowed IT-enabled network organizations to begin to focus on their surroundings, and react and respond to the outside worlds, rather than simply make and sell products.[4] With the ability to provide this information at the point of contact, even on the move, mobility is the next logical extension of the Information Age.

Nearly every technology demonstrates spillover effects – new ways of using the technology that had not been anticipated. Early stages of spillover tend to be improvements in how things are currently done, but later stages can often change environments in fundamental ways. As highlighted in a review from the Boston Consulting Group titled Competitive Advantage from Mobile Applications, “As consumer companies embrace wireless applications three significant stages will occur. First, communication between organizations and their employees, customers, and suppliers will be radically enhanced, in effect mobilizing business operations. Second, companies will use new data from consumers and equipment to reshape business models. And third, previously untapped data will be processed in ways that will change the rules of competition and even redefine industries.”[5]

The above effects are fully anticipated, and are in fact what has been seen by the adoption of each of the various stages of IT development. What is ultimately unknown is exactly what changes in business models will occur, as well as what rules of competition will prevail. It is a safe bet to assume that technology at the point of decision will help to increase retail productivity on the sales floor, and quite likely help to increase productivity of the shopper as well.


Point-of-contact Solutions

With new standards of CDMA, GPRS and 802.XX, distributed computing and the Internet have converged to provide the necessary foundation to support enterprise mobility. Enterprises are now capable of moving the knowledge and power of the organization to the point of contact. The standard of choice for retail is currently Wi-Fi however the specific standard is less important than the ability of the technology in bringing information to the sales floor. 

The lack of information at the point of decision is extremely prevalent in retail. In fact, the retail sales floor has remained largely unchanged through the entire Information Age with the one exception of the cash register evolving into the point-of-sale terminal. The productivity of a vast majority of retail personnel has been virtually unchanged by technology. As retailers continue to focus on ways to keep sales staff on the selling floor and away from inventory stocking duties, the productivity of the associate becomes even more critical.

With the advent of the Internet backbone, and wireless technologies, retailers are now able to implement solutions that put information at the point of contact. These point-of-contact solutions are all designed to increase the productivity of the associate, manager or customer. The solutions range in functionality from mobile POS for queue busting, to merchandise location systems designed to ease the process on the floor and stockroom, to manager’s dashboards designed to keep the manager on the selling floor and out of the back office and finally to clienteling, where customer information is leveraged to enhance the relationship between the customer and deliver unique value propositions to each customer. It is a logical step toward a customer-centric organization that is highlighted in the implementation of these service oriented applications.

An additional benefit of point-of-contact applications is the ability to promote a two-way communication with the enterprise. There is now a structured way to gather additional information, as well as feed information. By allowing an associate to gather previously unavailable information about a customer, the organization begins to learn. If handled correctly, this learning becomes the beginning of a relationship where the customer has trained the retailer in how to best service their needs, and the switching costs associated with re-training a new retailer become very high. Additionally, best practices of the organization may be driven to associates guaranteeing a consistent experience, and a possible reduction of associate training. Training is a critical issue with retailers, as the turnover rate for most retailers is quite high.

A recent Gartner study concluded that “increasingly, retailers in this century want to replicate the personalized customer buying experience of years past, so they need to develop a more personalized relationship with the customer. It was the technology that initially took the retailer away from the customer because the information was digitized, thereby breaking the personalized relationship between the retailer and customer. In the future, it is the technology that will be used to reconstruct this personalized retailer/customer relationship.” [6]


Real Benefits and Impediments

Enterprise mobility may well become the mantra of the decade, promising to empower users with more information than ever before, at the most critical time—the point of decision. Providers of mobility solutions cite myriad advantages, and amazing ROI potential. They paint a picture of a world where every employee has access to all of their information in real-time, when they need it. 

It is often assumed that the ultimate value of mobility is a given. The following quote form Puneet Gupta of CNETAsia highlights the sentiment “The value that mobility brings to an enterprise is well known. It’s difficult to imagine how an enterprise can not benefit from real-time or near real-time access to information. The question is not whether enterprise mobility is desired, but when, where, and how it should be rolled out. Using a mobile strategy, an enterprise can expect regular and significant benefits in terms of productivity, response time, and accuracy of operation.”[7]

It is assumed that enterprise mobility will help to increase human productivity, as well as hardware productivity. Human productivity includes the gains seen by the associate or customer by using the technology. Hardware productivity refers to the previous dollars invested in data centers and networks. Enterprise mobility makes this information available to a new set of people, extending the investment – increasing the ROI on the dollars spent yesterday.

While both of these productivity gains would prove beneficial to any retail organization, the real picture cannot be painted so easily. Retail is faced with a number of issues that are assured to slow down the acceptance of wireless applications, and the subsequent benefits derived from those that are implemented.


Initial investment

Perhaps most daunting to many retailers is the initial cost of the needed applications, hardware and infrastructure. While investment in technology is never inexpensive, it is multiplied many times over for the typical retail enterprise. While a retailer may have multiple distribution centers that require infrastructure, they pale in comparison to the number of stores the retailer has. A retailer with 200 outlets would need to consider the additional cost of infrastructure, hardware and software for 200 doorways, and multiple touch-points within each doorway. This can prove to be extremely costly to an enterprise. For many retailers this has been sufficient justification to hold off on updating for as long as possible. Because of slim margins, retail has historically been slow to adopt most technologies. The added pressures of a slow economy further exacerbate this issue.

Despite these concerns, retail is beginning to show signs that many realize a need to update infrastructure. In a recent Gartner study 54% of respondents said they had begun or completed efforts to improve network infrastructure, and an additional 27% said they would do so within the next two years. In addition 55% of respondents had begun broadband initiatives, with an additional 21% hoping to complete these efforts inside of two years. Perhaps most telling, 35% have begun or completed wireless access to the stores with an additional 33% hoping to complete access in two years.[8] While the shift is significant, it is clear that the retail industry has a tremendous way to go. While 80% of retailers are adding, or will have added, network infrastructure a marked 20% have no intention of doing so in the near future.


Need to prove a defensible ROI

Because of the financial pressures of the economic downturn, and what might be characterized as a general disregard for IT in the retail sector, most IT spending must now go through a rigorous approval process. By holding investments to a higher standard retailers believe they can reduce the investment dollars needed for IT initiatives, and guarantee positive benefits from each. Through the 1980’s and 1990’s, most retail technology was aimed at reducing costs in the supply chain, or in optimizing the flow and quantities of merchandise to the stores. While having the right merchandise at the right store can increase sales, these initiatives have largely been viewed as cost reductions. Applying ROI models to cost reduction can be fairly straight forward, so these technologies were somewhat easy to justify for many retail organizations. 

As retailers begin a more customer-centric focus the assessment of solutions begins to shift from cost reductions to increasing top-line sales growth. Applying ROI models to these solutions has proven to be more difficult. It can be rather tricky to quantify customer intimacy. As described in 6 Steps to a Customer Intelligence Advantage by Mark Frantz with Jim Dion, “It takes a leap of faith by the CEO and CFO to believe that knowing customers better in stores can be tied to a sales increase. Moreover, public companies look for quarterly payback periods, and much of this involves paybacks that are 2-3 years out. Customer intelligence is a strategic move to create a compelling value proposition. It entails lots of detailed grunt work, but it will eventually become the price of admission into the retail game.”[9]

This has put a lot of authority for IT spending in the hands of the CFO, as it is often difficult to defend an ROI on a service related initiative. Even in a situation where a pilot rollout has been used, it is often difficult to point directly to the initiative as being responsible for any improvement. While most retailers may define Key Performance Indicators to study as metrics to support an ROI, it is still nearly impossible to isolate a store to a level that can guarantee the results are from the initiative. If sales increase, it could be due to an early cold spell, a new collection that arrived in the store, a recent sale, or a new marketing campaign.

All hope is not lost in this arena however. With the recent acceptance of CRM across the industry, there is a renewed focus on customer-centric initiatives and a template of sorts. CRM has brought about a shift from a transaction based approach toward a customer view, where the focus ultimately becomes lifetime value of the customer, and a share of their wallet, rather than a share of the market. By leveraging the success of many of these CRM initiatives, retailers have begun to loosen the purse strings regarding some of these initiatives. As described below, however, this can often create larger problems than many retailers imagined.


Infrastructure issues

Many retail organizations have begun to see the need to redefine their value proposition, and are looking for technology to help align them with their chosen strategic approach. With a realization that not all retailers can be low-cost leaders, retailers are looking at a variety of differentiating activities. As described by Joe Skorupa in Wal-Mart Nation, retailers must “focus on refining their business models and carving out profitable niches in the multi-trillion dollar retail pie. Wal-Mart may be the business leader of our time, but retailers who follow its lead do so at their own peril.”[10] For these reasons, many retail enterprises have shifted their focus to the customer, and toward solutions aimed at increasing service at various levels. In a recent Gartner study, over 70% of retailers responded that in two years they will have completed work in centralizing customer intelligence, while 64% will have increased efforts to segment customers based on needs, behaviors or economic value.[11] While this concept may seem obvious, it requires a monumental shift in how retail technology is applied. 

The current mix of technologies in the typical retail environment is comprised of a tremendous number of legacy systems. The primary form of technology in the store, the POS system, is typically some of the oldest technology in the enterprise, and is usually based on old and sometimes proprietary platforms. In addition to old systems, there are numerous databases storing information in the typical retail enterprise. POS systems generate a transaction log file which stores the transaction data, while merchandising systems track the SKU and UPC information. CRM systems contain personal customer data on some customers and additional databases, such as proprietary credit cards, may contain still other pieces of personal data. When there is a common view of the customer, the data is still often unclean as the initial data entry is often duplicated between stores, and often within stores. Since scrubbing data can be a very tedious and time-consuming process, it can prove to be a decision point whether to move forward on initiatives.

The realization that retailers have to get a handle on their data is perhaps best highlighted by the statistic that 52% of retailers have begun or completed initiatives in creating data warehouses or data marts. In addition, 23% plan to update their data storage procedures in the next two years.[12] A quote from this Gartner study describes the situation aptly “Business experts believe no industry stores and tracks more data than retailing, so it’s not surprising that the data warehouse figures tell a strong story in the study.”[13]

While it is clear that retailers recognize the need to move toward an integrated system, most face an uphill battle with the disparate systems throughout the enterprise. With the advent of Web Services enterprises are more able to pass information from one system to the next, however it is a daunting task to determine the appropriate data, protocols to follow and read/write permissions for the various data. With a lack of a basic foundation, many retail organizations are just taking their first steps in the direction of a fully integrated enterprise.


Fear of Customer Reaction

Many retailers have found themselves questioning the premise of customer data on the floor out of fear of what the customer reaction might be. With the backlash of various initiatives such as DoubleClick[14], an increase in advocacy groups and a general growth of customer awareness of data privacy, many retailers fear the customer’s wrath if they perceive privacy threats. To complicate the point even further, there is a real issue of how to identify the customer in the first place. Clearly the POS terminal is too late to use data in a meaningful fashion. With the fear of how customers might react at the forefront, it can clearly be an uphill battle to gather the information in a meaningful manner. Mark Franz said it quite succinctly in a recent RED brief “As retailers discovered the value of customer data, consumers discovered the witness protection program.” [15]

While these concerns are as real as any impediment mentioned above, they are perhaps the easiest to address for the retailer moving toward service. Retailers that offer compelling reasons for the customer to participate and identify themselves will typically allay fears and receive consumer acceptance. In fact, while consumers and advocacy groups may make noise about these issues, their actions contradict their protests. Seventy-nine percent of consumers responding to a Forrester survey had responded to none of the opt-out notices they received from financial companies.[16] Furthermore, most demonstrated that privacy was for sale, for the right price.

Most consider the record of their technology behaviors – like what they watch on TV, which sites they visit online, and where they use their mobile phones – to be private. Yet between one-third and one-half are willing to share this data with providers for a $5 discount off their monthly service fee. [17]

While drawing the conclusion that customers don’t really care that much about their data could be dangerous, it is clear that they are willing to give data when they feel they will receive some real benefit in doing so. Many high-end retail sales associates have been doing just that in the form of a client book since the inception of retail, and the recent surge in loyalty programs supports the premise equally well. By allowing the retail organization to now control this data, there is actually a greater level of security, where customer data doesn't walk out of the door when a sales associate leaves a retailer. When customers are aware of the benefits, they have shown a broad acceptance. One lesson learned is that the benefits and policies should be clearly explained to a customer up front.


Inability to analyze data real-time

One final impediment to the effective use of point-of-contact solutions in the retail environment is the lack of processes capable of analyzing and delivering meaningful data real-time. While CRM applications have helped to slice and dice customer data to a point where customers can be segmented in myriad forms, it still approaches the task from a “one to many” perspective in that it identifies a condition (or set of conditions) and finds a group of customers that meet the search criteria. A customer-centric model needs to approach the interaction from a “one to one” or “one to many” perspective. A customer must be identified and an offer, or offers, must be determined based on unique customer data at or near real-time.

The ability to do this sort of analysis does not exist in the typical retail environment. As discussed by Mark Franz, “This is hard to do with 24,000 SKUs and 120,000 customers. Normal systems don’t do it well.”[18]

While present in some form on the web, the ability to apply extensive intelligent agents against the various retail data sources poses a real issue of real-time functionality. Basic functionality, similar to what has become popular on the web, will likely be the retailers first foray into real-time intelligence and suggestion engines, however most of the current applications rely heavily on inference engines. While inference works well for general merchandise and hard goods, it does not work well for fashion or soft goods. While it would be easy to infer that a customer buying baby formula may also need diapers it is less easy to infer that a customer that bought a blue shirt needs tan chino pleated pants. It is far more likely that a merchandiser might wish to suggest coordinating items, or group collections for this sort of detailed suggestive selling.


Conclusion

Mobility is the next logical step in the Information Age. Retail enterprises are ideal candidates to take advantage of this new platform as it finally moves information onto the sales floor, where it can best increase productivity. The retail organizations that realize the potential of this power have begun to build their organizations around this business model. They are looking at the various solutions and integrating applications that help them to provide a unique value proposition to each customer. 

Unfortunately, many retailers are faced with some form of impediment to the immediate acceptance and success of these initiatives. With concerns involving the initial investment and a need to prove a defensible ROI, retail decision makers are somewhat reluctant to place their necks on the cutting block, although the need to generate top-line increases is beginning to change this environment. With additional


complex infrastructure issues and lack of technology capable of performing real-time data analysis and delivery, there are limitations to the types of solutions retailers will look to deliver short-term. Quick wins are critical for proving the need to move in this direction strategically. For some retail organizations the fear of the customer reaction to privacy serves as just one more excuse to not move forward. While it is rarely the primary reason, it helps to support decisions based on other criteria.

Each of these arguments can be answered on an individual basis yet the sum of the total may cause pause with many retailers. It is clear that technology is moving in this direction, so the real question becomes how long they can afford to not respond.







[1] Richard Nolan, ” Information Technology Management from 1960-2000”, Harvard Business School, June 7, 2001
[2] Nolan, 2001
[3] Bill Nutti, President Symbol Technologies, “The Enterprise Mobility Company / Keynote Speech”,  January 2004
[4] Nolan , 2001
[5] Competitive Advantage from Mobile Applications, Opportunities for Action in Consumer Markets / The Boston Consulting Group, Feb 2002

[6] Quoted from a Gartner Study in internal Symbol Technology document Dec 2003
[7]Puneet Gupta, Make the move with an enterprise mobility strategy, Techrepublic / CNETAsia 10/16/2003
[8] “Networks and Infrastructure – Laying the groundwork for the real-time, multi-channel store of the future”, Retail Technology Study, Gartner Research, June 2004
[9] Mark Frantz with Jim Dion , “6Steps to a Customer Intelligence Advantage”, Retail Executive Digest, October 2003

[10] Joe Skorupa, “Wal-Mart Nation”, 14th Annual Retail Technologies Trends Study, Gartner Research June 2004
[11] “Customer-Centric Retailing, 14th Annual Retail Technologies Trends Study, Gartner Research June 2004
[12] “Building the Smart Enterprise”, 14th Annual Retail Technologies Trends Study, Gartner Research June 2004
[13] Ibid.
[14] Ken Mark and Prof. Scott Schneberger, “DoubleClick Inc.: Gathering Customer Intellegence”, Ivey Management Services, 2001
[15]Mark Frantz with Jim Dion , “6 Steps to a Customer Intelligence Advantage”, Retail Executive Digest, October 2003
[16] Jed Kolko, “Privacy For Sale: Just Pennies a Day”, Forrester WholeView Technographics Research,  June 11, 2002
[17] Jed Kolko, “Privacy For Sale: Just Pennies a Day”, Forrester WholeView Technographics Research,  June 11, 2002
[18] Mark Frantz with Jim Dion , “6 Steps to a Customer Intelligence Advantage”, Retail Executive Digest, October 2003

Monday, July 29, 2013

1:1 Customer-Centric Retailing

1:1 Customer-Centric Retailing


Customer Centricity has become a prevalent buzzword in the retail industry over the last several years. There is hardly a retail executive today that is not touting the virtues of a customer-centric corporate strategy. Is Customer Centricity simply a platitude or retail jargon expressing business as usual, or is this truly a fundamental change in the way retail is being performed today?

The unfortunate answer is both. In many instances this Customer-Centric rhetoric serves little purpose other than to allow retail executives to paint the picture of a new and improved corporate direction; while little has changed in the actual operation or strategic direction in the enterprise.  In other organizations, however, executives are looking for ways to truly reshape their business through targeted customer centric strategies designed to foster and maintain long-term loyal relationships with their customers.  These executives recognize the true value of approaching their business from an alternate perspective, and are investing heavily in efforts to restructure their organizations around a new paradigm known as Customer Centricity.

Business jargon serves a useful purpose in condensing what is often a large idea or concept into an easily expressed and easily digested word or phrase. The jargon aids in the coalescence of ideas into a singular form that serves as a common language to a given target audience as a branding mechanism. This branding helps to differentiate an idea or concept from others, thus allowing it to gain greater recognition and critical mass.

Unfortunately, this branding of an idea can often have negative implications as well. The most common shortcoming is the lack of a thorough understanding of the entire scope of the topic. This can occurs for two reasons. First, the use is quite often very industry specific, and does not always translate to other industries easily or consistently.  Second, the extraction of this “condensed” expression of an idea is subject to personal interpretation. Without prior understanding of the scope of the initial idea or concept, the individual is left to infer as to the larger meaning – leading to varying definitions.

A perfect case in point is the use of the acronym CRM (Customer Relationship Management). While those in Sales or Marketing are quick to derive Customer Relationship Management for the acronym CRM, the larger meaning is still subject to varying interpretations. In one industry CRM may be thought of as the activities around managing prospects, accounts, and sales pipeline; while in another it may be about segmentation, campaign management, and call center activities. In fact, to many people, CRM is interpreted to mean the computer software solution used to support any or all of the activities described above.  Overall, the meaning is quite broad, while the individual definitions are often quite narrow.   

One reason for this confusion is that CRM is actually not intended to define activities or software solutions, but is in fact intended to convey a strategy. CRM is a strategy designed to foster, maintain and enhance relationships through a set of repeatable processes. It is accomplished through the development of operational practices which manage activities related to the customer interactions.  While the typical implementation of a CRM strategy involves using technology to organize, automate and synchronize the desired business processes and activities; these same activities could be performed manually (albeit far less effectively). 

Customer Centricity

The term Customer Centricity shares a similar fate as CRM. It would be hard to find a CEO today who would tell you that his or her company is not already customer-centric. But ask what makes them so and you would likely get very different answers. The reason for this is once again the individual interpretation of the meaning of Customer Centricity. At a very high level, the meaning is easy to define (putting the customer at the center of the business), but detailing exactly what this means is another thing entirely.  

Ultimately, the reason for this is that Customer Centricity is at its heart not a strategy. It is first and foremost a philosophy. Customer Centricity is a belief system whereby a business shifts their business model away from a focus where products and services are perceived as the core asset, to a focus where the customers are the core asset of the business.  It is no longer about finding customers for an organization’s products, but about finding products for an organization’s customers. This is a fundamental paradigm shift for most retail organizations.

A customer-centric strategy is borne out this customer- centric philosophy. It is defined by the goal of building long-term loyal relationships through providing solutions to customer problems – owning those problems, and the resolution to those problems. By taking on the responsibility of solving customer problems, the retail organization builds a lasting relationship with their customers; one where the customer wouldn't think of shopping anywhere else.  

While the application of a customer centric strategy may be different depending on the retail vertical (for example, a designer driven apparel retailer’s brand is driven primarily by the vision of the designer, while an electronics retailer may have more flexibility related to the products and services they offer), The primary tenet is the same --- the customer is at the center.

An effective Customer-centric strategy is accomplished through a better understanding of the customer’s needs.  Not just as they pertain to the retailer’s current products and/or services, but as they pertain to the customers overall lifestyle, and day-to-day activities. There is a requirement to understand the customer at a new level – a much broader level. It is not sufficient to focus only on a customer’s past purchases or basic demographic information. There is a need to expand the knowledge and insight related to of each individual customer in such a way as to tailor each interaction in order to solve problems that are unique to that individual. Understanding a customer’s shopping habits, on-line habits (both related and unrelated to your brand), social habits, lifestyle, sports and recreational activities, travel, aspirational goals, preferences, etc. can all come into play while executing a customer-centric strategy.

There are a number of articles and a few books on the topic of Customer Centricity; each with accounts of retail organizations use of a customer-centric strategy. While many of these examples of customer-centric retailing point to transformative changes created through the implementation of such a strategy, these examples most often focus on the customer as a group or segment. The analysis is most often done at the aggregate, not an individual. It is achieved through the combination of viewing their business through the eyes of the customer, combined with new input parameters that shed a new light on their business model.

One such example is highlighted in the book by Ranjay Gulati, called “Reorganize for Resilience: Putting Customers at the Center of Your Business”. He details a situation where grocery stores began offering pre-bagged salads through the realization that many consumers were trying to eat healthy, however grocery stores were not selling a proportionate amount of salad ingredients. By viewing the shopping experience from the “outside in” and by identifying the issues consumers were having related to the inconvenience of washing and chopping ingredients, they made a logical leap and solved the problem for the customer by pre-mixing and bagging salads.

This type of innovative thinking can help organizations to transform their business over time, and can be a key ingredient in a customer-centric strategy. It is important to note, however, that this “macro” view of Customer Centricity tends to be less operational in nature, and more tied to strategic initiatives such as new product lines, innovative service offerings, etc. On the other hand, a “micro” view of Customer Centricity can see gains in very short order, with the existing business framework – but a new perspective.

The “micro” view of Customer Centricity is even more about the individual, not about the group of similar individuals. In marketing terms, it is the segment of one. This is referred to as 1:1 Customer Centricity.  Ultimately, the benefits at the 1:1 level can be seen much more rapidly, and can impact every single interaction.     

1:1 Customer Centricity

Perhaps surprising to some (although it really shouldn't be), the in-store sales associate is most often the individual in a retail environment that is the most customer-centric in their day to day dealings with a customer. This is particularly true in a high service business, but is also true to varying degrees in virtually all retail. While more and more customers are shopping on-line, bricks and mortar retail still represents the vast majority of sales today. Online shopping provides a convenient medium, and an easy shopping experience. It also provides very simple price comparison across retail brands, so price becomes a more important factor in the buying decision.
What e-commerce still fails to provide, however, is the personal interaction; someone to provide counsel, answer questions, look for and recommend alternatives, investigate issues. It is this one-to-one relationship that strengthens loyalty and fosters long-term relationships. The interaction is most often enhanced through the gathering of information by the sales associate.

o   What is the item’s intended use?
o   When will it be used? 
o   Is there a particular look or brand you were interested in?
o   Is this for use while traveling? 
o   How often do you travel?
o   Where?
o   Oh, and based on what I now know, may I suggest the following three coordinated items that will enhance this purchase?
o   I’m also expecting a new shipment of product in a week that I think would address this other need you mentioned, do you mind if I contact you when they arrive? 
o   By what method?

It is through this 1:1 relationship that the associate is able to interpret the problems, and to take responsibility for fulfilling the customer’s needs.  It is also an opportunity to identify other needs that the customer may not have been thinking about at the time they came into the store. If done well, the customer is delighted and a relationship is born.      

The best sales associates are masters at capturing the appropriate level of customer information in order to identify needs, and then using this information to personalize their recommendations. Unfortunately, there are a finite number of “best” associates. More often than not, the average associate in an organization falls short in some critical areas, which negatively impact the relationship with the individual and with the brand.

Imagine, however, if a retailer had the capacity to learn more about their customers. To record all of the information gathered during the in-store exchange, as well as on-line interactions with their own e-commerce site and that of their competitors, know of comments being made about them on social media sites, or blogs? Imagine if they could replicate the “best practices” of their top associates, and provide personalized service to each customer across all channels, and through the contact medium preferred by the customer.      


This is what 1:1 Customer Centricity is all about.