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Artificial Intelligence

  • Future-ready retail and the role of technology, data and analytics

    I left Walmart to pursue what I saw as the future of retail. In my exit interview with Mike Duke (at that time president and CEO of Walmart International) he asked me what I meant by the future of retail. Having worked in the international division, Sam’s Club and Costco prior to that, the future I saw at the time revolved around leveraging data and managing technology to understand customers in a granular fashion and speaking to them directly as individuals with highly lifestyle relevant products and services.

  • What Best Buy will be looking for at CES

    The massive consumer technology show known as CES is underway in Las Vegas and retailers in attendance will trolling an area of the 2.4 million-sq.-ft. show floor called Eureka Park in hopes of finding the next big thing.

  • Three New Year’s Resolutions for Retail IT

    The New Year is here, and it’s time to make annual resolutions. When it comes to their IT activities, retailers should resolve to make improvements in the following three areas.

    Innovation
    The days of IT being responsible for “keeping the lights on” are long over. Enterprise systems are still required to perform basic but crucial tasks such as finance and HR, but any retailer looking to compete in 2016 needs to look far past the boundaries of simple task automation.

  • Tech Bytes: Three New Year’s Resolutions for Retail IT

    The New Year is here, and it’s time to make annual resolutions. When it comes to their IT activities, retailers should resolve to make improvements in the following three areas.

    Innovation
    The days of IT being responsible for “keeping the lights on” are long over. Enterprise systems are still required to perform basic but crucial tasks such as finance and HR, but any retailer looking to compete in 2016 needs to look far past the boundaries of simple task automation.

  • Pitney Bowes: The top five e-commerce drivers for 2016 are …

    In the coming year, seamless technologies that blend physical and digital channels will have a major impact on e-commerce.

    According to Pitney Bowes, five key developments will primarily drive e-commerce in 2016. These are:

    1. Internet of Things (IoT) technologies will drive better business outcomes

  • IBM: Holiday shoppers go high-tech

    Retailers just went through an increasingly digital and mobile holiday season.

    According to analysis performed by the IBM Watson business intelligence platform, the average order value for the mobile and desktop shopper combined was $127.49, up 2.5% from 2014 ($124.33).

    Consumers also shopped via their mobile devices in growing numbers. Mobile traffic exceeded desktop, traffic, accounting for 52% of all online traffic. This was a 17% increase in mobile traffic from 2014.

  • Tech Bytes: Looking Ahead: Top Three Customer Engagement Trends of 2016

    Last week, I looked at the top three trends that disrupted how retailers engage their customers during 2015. This week, I predict the top three trends that will set the course for customer engagement in 2016.

    As Seen on TV

  • Start-up offers retailers new ways to resell, recycle, donate returned goods

    A new start-up, Optoro, is offering retailers alternative ways to sell their returned goods via a software platform that tracks returns, assesses, which channel is the most effective for each returned item, and routes products to those channels. While most retailers typically recover only about 20% to 40% of the retail cost of returned goods, Optoro helps companies recoup 50% to 70% of the cost, according to a report by the New York Times.

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