Archive for the ‘Retail’ Category
« Older Entries
Wednesday January 18th 2012
Last Monday (January 16 2012) one of the front page headlines in The Daily Telegraph was ‘Clegg plans a John Lewis economy’.
What this means, at least to Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg, is that by rewarding the workforce with a share of the businesses they work for, people will – the theory is – work harder and more devotedly. The analogy with John Lewis derives from the well-known fact that the John Lewis organisation is, in fact, a partnership, owned by its employees. John Lewis distributes an annual profit share which, in recent years, has generally been about 15 percent of the employee’s salary.
Read full article »
Posted in Consumer Behaviour, Customer Centricity, Customer Experience, Retail | No Comments »
Christmas is on the way and consumers’ minds are turning towards preparations for the holiday season. Children and adults alike are thinking about and planning present lists, party invitation lists and of course, shopping lists. Read full article »
Posted in Consumer Behaviour, Customer Centricity, Customer Experience, Retail, Retail & Distribution | No Comments »
Tuesday February 2nd 2010
Post series written by Matthew Lynch (Senior Consultant at Charteris specialising in eCommerce). Before joining Charteris Matthew worked for IBM on various eCommerce enablement projects across multiple industries from the late 1990’s through to the present day.
This series of blogs is about how product managers in an eCommerce business can influence and optimise the customer search experience on their website by tuning the on-site search engine.
Tuning search is like servicing your car; omit it and you risk losing value and breaking down. Get the habit and the right people
Read full article »
Posted in Customer Experience, Enterprise Search, Retail, Search relevance, Search tuning, eCommerce | No Comments »
Post series written by Matthew Lynch (Senior Consultant at Charteris specialising in eCommerce). Before joining Charteris Matthew worked for IBM on various eCommerce enablement projects across multiple industries from the late 1990’s through to the present day.
This series of blogs is about how product managers in an eCommerce business can influence and optimise the customer search experience on their website by tuning the on-site search engine.
The search engine doesn’t know what it doesn’t know
You may already have a facility that helps you improve on-site search for your customers.
It should have been setup with an initial dictionary to make sure that it works well at go live.
But, after go-live, how can you make sure it continues to work for you? After all, you’ve got new products coming on-line all the time and you want to ensure your customers can find them.
Read full article »
Posted in Customer Experience, Enterprise Search, Retail, Search relevance, Search tuning, eCommerce | No Comments »
Wednesday December 2nd 2009
Post series written by Matthew Lynch (Senior Consultant at Charteris specialising in eCommerce). Before joining Charteris Matthew worked for IBM on various eCommerce enablement projects across multiple industries from the late 1990’s through to the present day.
This series of blogs is about how product managers in an eCommerce business can influence and optimise the customer search experience on their website by tuning the on-site search engine.
Read full article »
Posted in Customer Experience, Enterprise Search, Retail, Search relevance, Search tuning, eCommerce | No Comments »
Putting it altogether; the IT, the business organisation and a service oriented architecture, will provide a retailer with:
- an IT architecture that allows change, rather then dictating what changes can be made.
- a business that is geared to meet the needs of the channels and ultimately its customers
- a multi-channel platform that will last, adapt and perform
In summary, multi-channel retailers require agility and in delivering these key assets, a retailer can acquire the lasting agility that will differentiate them in the marketplace. Agility can be measured in many ways but there are some simple measures to consider in assessing just how agile a retailer really is. For instance, how long would it take to do the following:
- introduce a new range or products across one or more channels?
- open a new channel (such as a concession or mobile commerce platform)?
- react to a competitors promotion?
- introduce regional pricing and promotions?
- introduce differential pricing across channels?
- start marketing internationally
If the answer to any of these is “longer than my competitorsâ€, then there is room for improvement. Taking the customer centric approach will shortcut many of the hurdles in assessing what needs to be done and partnering with Charteris is a firm step towards creating agility.
The Charteris Approach
At Charteris we define Customer Centricity as “the alignment of organisational structure, processes and technology to deliver products and services to internal and external customers in the most agile way.†Applying this to multi-channel retailing is what we do best and have wide experience in making this not just a theoretical exercise, but making it real.
Posted in Customer Centricity, Multichannel, Retail | No Comments »
In gearing any part of an organisation to deliver a service, whether it be technology, system, process or people related, an understanding of the customer is vital. For example, a retailer who also provides white label channels has not only the end consumer to consider, but also the partner organisations to whom they provide white label solutions. Similarly, merchandisers, graphic designers and cataloguers servicing more than one channel can consider each channel as a customer. When an organisation starts to think along theses lines, about who their customer really is, then the implementation of a service led philosophy becomes an easier task. Underpinning this approach is taking a considered view of the customer in order to understand their motivations, behaviour, likes and dislikes.
Taking a customer centric approach enables each area to focus on delivering exactly what the customer wants. Critically analysing processes, systems and related functional areas and determining their effectiveness in delivering customer service is at the heart of the customer centric approach. Breaking down each element and step of a process and stripping out those that do not add value to the customer can create efficiencies and benefits across the organisation. In doing this, the multi-channel retailer can create a framework of services that is ultimately geared towards the customer rather than the requirements or functions of a particular channel or technology.
Posted in Customer Centricity, Multichannel, Retail | No Comments »
Thursday October 23rd 2008
Structuring the operational model around the new architectures and solutions is often left as a last minute consideration in delivering any new system. Organisational structure and associated processes are vital in order to deliver the most customer focussed experience and service possible. Every aspect of the operational model needs to be visited and assessed to determine the value it actually delivers to the customer and ensure that the priority and focus is aligned to this strategy.
This is where the thinking around the use of SOA needs to break out of the IT box and permeate through the business functions and respective processes. This is where the hard questions can often be found and where the structure of business functions needs to be most challenged. However, the balance of dividing business functions amongst the selected channels as opposed to maintaining a centralised operational model is a real tightrope and one that can only be managed on a case by case basis.
Creating a business architecture by applying SOA principles is not an exact science in some respects is still in its infancy. Even considering the business and operational model as an “Architecture†is a step too far for some organisations. But, those that have embraced this philosophy have broken out of the traditional business models and created cross functional working units geared to providing services to their customers, whether internal or external. This approach not only is geared towards a value added customer experience but leverages the experience and expertise of the people within an organisation.
Posted in Customer Centricity, Multichannel, Retail | No Comments »
Wednesday October 22nd 2008
From an IT perspective, the use of SOA (Service Oriented Architecture) is a logical fit to fulfil the multi-channel solution where core capabilities such as product, delivery, payment etc. are developed in such a way that they are created as services allowing for re-use across the enterprise. However, if the IT department is the only place where the SOA principles are adopted, then there can be no real alignment between IT and the business. Therefore, it is essential that the SOA blueprint is adopted throughout the enterprise rather than remain solely as just another IT acronym. In order to achieve this, the entire organisation must adopt SOA principles and the blueprint for this ideally is owned by the business. If the IT department alone is trusted in implementing the SOA architecture (as is so often the case), then the chances of the remaining parts of the organisation fostering the principles of SOA (and hence the benefits) are somewhat slim.
Posted in Customer Centricity, Multichannel, Retail | No Comments »
Tuesday October 21st 2008
So, the decision has been made to create a new architecture and it’s all hand on deck. Constructing the great new systems and solutions to support the multi-channel ambition is one thing, but there are many other considerations which are just as important. IT is undoubtedly the key enabler in this relentless march towards customer satisfaction, but it is truly only one part of the jigsaw. The creation of a technical architecture that is aligned to the operating goals is vital; less so is the selection of the exact technology as there are various products and technologies that can be blended together to form an effective solution. In addressing the architecture issue, the creation of a Service Oriented Architecture (SOA) is widely recognised as the best practice approach and one that dovetails into a customer focussed strategy.
The key benefits of SOA in a multi-channel strategy are one of re-use and the ability to initiate changes (to business or channel specific rules and functionality) without having a knock-on effect to all parts of the organisation. As discussed in my posts on the practicalities of multi-channel retailing, re-using components such as inventory, delivery and payment across the channels as services increases the efficiency and realises cost savings across the channels. However, the full benefits can only be full realised by creating a business logic layer across these services where specific attributes cater for the requirements of each channel. This is where such elements as price, promotions and catalogue are controlled and provide the channels with independence despite sharing a common data set.
Posted in Customer Centricity, Multichannel, Retail | No Comments »