Energizing Engagement
To help Macy's create an exceptional customer experience, Chairman Terry Lundgren appointed himself chief customer officer and sponsored an initiative to build an omni-channel strategy that uses insights from advanced analytics to inform decision-making.
Since roll out, this strategy has helped Macy's develop in-store experiences that "mirror the online shopping experience," says Lundgren, while "...adding functionality and content online to provide customers with additional assistance in product selection." The goal: "to build deeper relationships with customers and to ensure Macy's and Bloomingdale's are accessible no matter how or when our customers prefer to explore or shop."
From its advanced analytics findings, Macy's identified and developed several opportunities to turbo-charge its strategy: self–service kiosks, inventory–locating registers, and True Fit, a Macy.com "tool that helps women select jeans that are best–suited for their 'unique body and style preferences.'" Tools like True Fit can do much to help ease the trepidations that e-shoppers sometimes feel, wondering if a product purchased on the Web will actually look and function – after taking it out of the box – like the product promised in the imagery and reviews profiled online.
For Macy's VP of Customer Centricity Julie Bernard, this omni–channel strategy enables the retailer to finely tune its merchandising decisions.
Considering that Macy's annually invests US$40B in its displays, it could boost profits significantly by simply developing merchandising plans which appeal to a particular customer segment, plans which are informed by archived data on each segment's previous product preferences.
Finding the Most Fitting Option
There are many choices available. With advanced analytics, business leaders can understand which option identified is most feasible for their company to implement. In the case of Macy's, omni-channel retailing is proving a successful solution to helping the company dissuade customers from engaging in the two challenges large retailers face in the Internet age: showrooming and price-shopping.
As Macy's is also proving, advanced analytics can help companies better understand how they can refocus a customer's attention away from price – and toward their encounter with that products (i.e., in–store and online), people (i.e., clerks, reps, and customers), and places (i.e., physical and virtual) that humanize the transactional process – and infuse into the shopping experience a bit of retailtainment.
Though these kinds of efforts, businesses can put the right offers into the hands of the right customers via the right channel – before those customers find what they need elsewhere, either on the Web or in their neighborhood.
By: Joseph Dennis Kelly
Originally published at http://blogs.sap.com/