Top five retail technology trends for 2018: next-gen engagement, flexible checkouts and reimagined AI

Mar 7, 2018 | E-commerce and E-retailing

Manhattan Associates predicts five key technology trends will influence the UK retail environment and business strategies in 2018.

Top trends include next-generation customer engagement, flexible checkouts and reimagined use of artificial intelligence

The five trends are:

  1. Increased personalisation of shopping experiences
  2. More flexible checkout experiences
  3. Accelerated automation integration
  4. Reimagined use of Artificial Intelligence (AI)-based technologies
  5. Greater implementation of employee engagement solutions

“As consumer expectations continue to rise in a fast-changing retail environment, retailers are seeking new ways to succeed,” noted Craig Summers, UK Managing Director, Manhattan Associates. “With the pace of innovation increasing, we anticipate retailers will double down on technology deployments in the year ahead.”

Increased personalisation of shopping experiences

Digitally-savvy consumers are demanding personalised shopping experiences from retailers. “Nearly 90 percent of organisations say they are focused on personalising customer experiences, yet only 40 percent of shoppers say that information they get from retailers is relevant to their tastes and interests,” according to Brendan Witcher, principal analyst at Forrester Research, as reported in The Wall Street Journal[1]. However, store staff and call centre agents historically have been unable to offer a personalised experience, lacking an omnichannel view of the customer and their behaviour.

In 2018, new technologies will enable retailers to combine unstructured customer conversation data with structured order information allowing store and call centre staff to improve service. Retailers have long struggled with multiple applications and disparate data points lacking a single, comprehensive view of the customer. Retailers are expected to harness new technologies to improve customer engagement which, alongside enterprise order management, will provide actionable insight into the omnichannel shopping experience for personalisation and optimisation across the buyer journey.

More flexible checkout experiences

Retailers are expected to move from traditional fixed POS systems to more flexible approaches as consumers increasingly adopt Apple Pay and innovative contactless payment experiences.

Consumers increasingly desire fluid approaches to seeking advice or online browsing when interacting with store associates, and no longer want to be limited to traditional purchase methods. Retailers are expected to seek standardised mobile POS systems that enable payment throughout the store and act as a one-stop shop for inventory management, browsing, recommendations and customer data, driving engagement with fast, easy to use technology applications.

Accelerated automation integration

Retailers have delivered huge service level improvements and accelerated goods flows in recent years by deploying advanced warehouse management systems (WMS) and automated equipment within their warehouses. But long-term success is dependent on striking the right balance between man and machine and using centralised software that synchronises both human and technological capital.

This year we will see retailers do more than just dip their toe in the water when it comes to software and automation adoption, but they must remember to start this process from the ground up. The machine will evolve over the course of many years which will mean the centralised software orchestrating everything – technologies, people and processes within the warehouse – will need to evolve with it. This is why retailers are seeking centralised cloud-based systems that can be upgraded to advance innovation.

Reimagined use of AI-based technologies

In 2017, some retailers experimented with AI and chatbots to engage consumers and provide customer service. This year, retailers are expected to pivot from futuristic AI, virtual reality (VR) and augmented reality (AR) technologies to embrace more pragmatic uses of machine learning within their back-end supply chain operations. Warehouse Management Systems will advance in 2018 with a machine-learning capability they can sense and learn, so retailers can optimise the release of work to the warehouse floor and when best to execute customer orders to maximise service levels and operational efficiency.

Greater implementation of employee engagement solutions

Millennials are the new workforce and more of them than ever before are working in retail, presenting retailers with an engagement challenge. Employee engagement today requires more visual, graphic based content that is personal and digital. In 2018 retailers will look beyond traditional engagement channels to facilitate the sharing of thoughts and feedback in more creative and intuitive ways.

Source: www.manh.co.uk

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