Can Customer Centricity in Retail evolve in the light of new digital technologies? The answer may not be so obvious if Data Strategy and process digitization have not been developed upstream. "Putting the customer at the center" could have been enough when the latter in the store was recognized by a discount card or a more recent smart card. Now the customer is almost elusive, they are constantly moving between physical and digital stores, constantly looking for information and opportunities. Cultivating good Customer Centricity becomes much more difficult without the use of the right tools.
Technologies such as Business Intelligence (BI) and Business Analytics can help retailers make assumptions about customer behavior throughout their purchasing journey. This path has in fact been lengthened, adding numerous intermediate steps that constitute an unmissable opportunity to work alongside the customer in a positive way for the retailer in possession of the right technologies.
Customer Centricity therefore necessarily involves the collection, analysis and continuous processing of customer data, multiplying this operation by thousands or hundreds of thousands of times. Supposing the unit is the customer, then tens of thousands of customers are a market. And any market is, by definition, constantly evolving.
The same technologies, however, are the basis of as many indispensable tools and functions to manage logistics and customer support in real-time, digitize administrative processes and relationships with producers and distributors. A correct collection and reading of data (data quality) can favor and facilitate quick decisions not only on current problems but also help to define new market scenarios.
A modern marketing rule goes something like this: a customer can forget everything, but not the way a brand makes them feel. Customer Centricity in Retail thus becomes Customer eXperience (CX), and experience is something that can be easily judged, remembered and above all, shared hundreds of times.
Business Intelligence, therefore, becomes crucial in order to analyze the past, present and immediate future of customer behavior. Only the digitalization of the purchasing process can provide valuable information to the business management of brands to support production and distribution in an appropriate way. Doing all this from an Excel spreadsheet, however well designed, is impossible. In retail, like any other company, the data must be considered as a core asset of the company and as such it must generate value.
It is clear, therefore, that Business Intelligence moves the performance bar upwards. Let's see, in summary, 3 main benefits: