EXCLUSIVE: Q&A with JCPenney's CIO on company's digital reinvention
How do you see AI affecting the retail industry in the next six to 12 months?
Retailers are currently using AI in two key ways. One is improving customer experience in areas like personalized recommendations based on accurate forecasts of product availability.
The second area is engineering and development productivity. Retailers want to make it faster for engineers to perform tasks like code reviews, building on top of base code, and testing, as well as continue to improve developer productivity without having to compromise on the quality or the data.
The beauty of AI is that it some things can happen in a matter of days, and then you can implement them and see the results, with continued evolvution and learning.
AI is not for replacement of humans. It is an augmentation to help ensure that they are obtaining efficiency improvements and getting a step up to figure out how they can focus on analysis and details, instead of having to perform manual activities like number crunching.
AI will continue to help retailers think outside the box in most cases, but it's also going to help retailers integrate different pieces of the puzzle that we might not have ever thought about, from merchandising all the way to the customers. How can you connect the dots?
Are there any future digital transformation JCPenney can discuss?
We are currently piloting next-generation store technology. This includes implementing a new POS system in our stores, and we are also changing store technology internally in the stores. About 100 to 150 stores will have this next-generation technology by the end of this year, before peak, and then the remaining stores will have it installed in the next couple of years.