Technology & Innovation

Finding Retail Growth: A view from the corner office

July 10, 2016

Global

July 10, 2016

Global
Josselyn Simpson

Contributor

Josselyn has worked in the thought leadership and quantitative research team of the Economist Intelligence Unit for more than 15 years. She is an expert in creating engaging content for C-level and other senior executives. Among her areas of interest are organisation, governance, and the effects of technology on the workplace. She was also a Senior Campaign Manager at Booz & Company and a Senior Editor at McKinsey & Company. Through those roles she developed significant expertise in global thought leadership development and programme management. She began her career at The New Yorker. She is based in New York and holds an undergraduate degree with honors from Harvard College.

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Traditional retailing is one industry that particularly needs modern digital skills.

 Shopping in a store—in a physical location, with limited inventory, limited hours and uncertain service—is no longer what most customers want. Yet in research by the Economist Intelligence Unit research sponsored by Demandware, the need to compete for technologically savvy employees is just one of the top five trends affecting global retailers’ ability to meet their strategic goals. It’s one many say they aren’t prepared to meet: Of the retailers who say a tech savvy workforce is key to them, 42% are somewhat or less prepared to compete for those employees.

A recent discussion with senior retailing executives, furthermore, suggested a complicating digital challenge for retailers: shifting the mind set of all their employees, from the CEO to the store associate, so they’re comfortable using technology to offer excellent products and seamless service in a tech-driven world.

The survey did reinforce that those two traditional verities, product and service, are still key to retail success. But it also showed that retailers must deliver them in new ways. Those that fail to do so will suffer, whether from financial and trust impairment after a security breach or ERP mix-ups leading to having the wrong products in the wrong places, or lost sales because online and offline sales channels are not coordinated.

Such problems can be caused by a CEO who bets on the wrong technology because he/she doesn’t understand the opportunities or threats in enough detail, or a store associate who doesn’t remember he/she can order a shirt in the right size for a customer (and have it delivered free) when the store is out of stock. In other words, these problems come from people not integrating digital considerations to how they do their jobs every day. And even though almost everyone is comfortable with technology in their personal lives, creating a significant mind set shift at work is hard, every executive knows.

The discussion, convened by Demandware, suggested a tactic for doing so: adding a new role for retailers’ IT function—becoming cultural translators who help everyone become fluent in digital. This means helping executives fully understand the possibilities that live at the intersection of new technologies with their customer base and growth strategy. It means not developing new tools and shipping them to stores without context, but instead helping associates understand how those tools really help customers and make their jobs better so they will adopt them enthusiastically. It means not just being tech savvy, but also being ambassadors for technology and change.

In short, IT can best contribute to the success of retailers by fostering an informed discussion of how technology can really contribute to companies’ strategic goals and by working to align the strategy, the technological solutions, and how people use those solutions across operations.

The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Economist Intelligence Unit Limited (EIU) or any other member of The Economist Group. The Economist Group (including the EIU) cannot accept any responsibility or liability for reliance by any person on this article or any of the information, opinions or conclusions set out in the article.

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