WHY IT MATTERS: Digital Transformation
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WHY IT MATTERS: Digital Transformation
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Why 2014 Will Finally Be the Year of the Online Grocer via @businessweek

Why 2014 Will Finally Be the Year of the Online Grocer via @businessweek | WHY IT MATTERS: Digital Transformation | Scoop.it
Venture capitalists are willing to fund a new generation of online grocery shopping startups
Farid Mheir's insight:

1998 all over again?

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This is [Modern] Retail #infographics via @nrf

This is [Modern] Retail #infographics via @nrf | WHY IT MATTERS: Digital Transformation | Scoop.it
Pin it, scan it or share it - operating in a digital world has become second nature for most shoppers today, and retailers are taking full advantage of it.
Farid Mheir's insight:

3M twitter followers for WholeFoods!

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What Lies Ahead for retail stores in 2014 via @nrf

What Lies Ahead for retail stores in 2014 via @nrf | WHY IT MATTERS: Digital Transformation | Scoop.it
Farid Mheir's insight:

more predictions...

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Retail Trends and a Future Shaped by Digital Technology viA @Accenture

Retail Trends and a Future Shaped by Digital Technology viA @Accenture | WHY IT MATTERS: Digital Transformation | Scoop.it
Technology trends impacting the retail industry—the digital consumer is in the driver’s seat and the technology retailers implement today is instrumental.
Farid Mheir's insight:

Major trends in retail technology are illustrated with plausible scenarios and a roadmap. Useful reading with an executive.

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5 New Year’s resolutions for retailers- omni channel everywhere via #nrf14 @nrf

5 New Year’s resolutions for retailers- omni channel everywhere via #nrf14 @nrf | WHY IT MATTERS: Digital Transformation | Scoop.it
KPMG's Global Head of Retail Mark Larson shares 5 areas retailers should focus on to build a more customer-focused, omnichannel organization.
Farid Mheir's insight:

Useful insights especially #4 : enhance both online and in-store.

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Canadian retailers lag U.S. ones in online shopping- report says grocery and pharma living in digital dark ages

Canadian retailers lag U.S. ones in online shopping- report says grocery and pharma living in digital dark ages | WHY IT MATTERS: Digital Transformation | Scoop.it
Canadians may be the heaviest Internet users in the world but our homegrown online retailers have yet to catch up to the performance of U.S.
Farid Mheir's insight:

No surprise here. Our own Quebec CEFRIO stated the same back in november. But this report is very detailed and provides some interesting insights.


Also see

New CEFRIO survey results- Quebec retailers continue to leave 75% of eCommerce retail $ to others #iceq http://sco.lt/58m2wD

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Disappointing social buzz for #nrf14 or sign that retailers are in the digital dark ages? via @RetailsBIGShow

Disappointing social buzz for #nrf14 or sign that retailers are in the digital dark ages? via @RetailsBIGShow | WHY IT MATTERS: Digital Transformation | Scoop.it
The official blog of the National Retail Federation
Farid Mheir's insight:

30000 attendees and 4 days of conferences and showcases and only 30000 tweets in total (with only 13600 original tweets). Look at the retweets and top 8 are tweets from corporations the NRF itself. Goes to show how few attendees bothered to tweet during the show. 


Is it because

a) the conference was not popular (I doubt it, with 30K attendees)

b) twitter is not appropriate to convey audience perceptions and news (would be a surprise as it is very much so in other events) or is it simply because

c) retailers are not technology friendly and stil resort to email or pen-n-paper to capture and report on their conference highlights to their peers?


I suspect c) to be the answer, to my dismay... No wonder Amazon is making a killing in the retail industry!

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Pickup in store a success in France with 2655 grocery stores with the service via @O_Laborne @ParabellumGI

Pickup in store a success in France with 2655 grocery stores with the service via @O_Laborne @ParabellumGI | WHY IT MATTERS: Digital Transformation | Scoop.it
Nos cartes drive sont mises à jour tous les trimestres. Découvrez sans plus attendre les nouveaux chiffres clés du parc de drive et services drive en France
Farid Mheir's insight:

(in french) mapping of grocery store pickup service (called "drive") in France for 2013. Amazing deployment considering that this trend started only in 2010 and now reaches 2655 and keeps growing.


The service may be a sign of the future, offering bulky heavy items for pickup, keeping the cost of eCommerce delivery down. Also allows customers to "top off" their order themselves, selecting their tomatoes and meat themselves.


The service is a sign of the times, with consumers finding eCommerce a solution for staple low cost items as well as high priced ticket items such as electronics. It marks a turning point for retailers, recently faced with showrooming and omni-channel, as they transform their stores to become more than glorified warehouses. Stores now are service delivery locations that must deliver a personalized experience.


Technology becomes  essential, although it may be hidden from sight. Distribution logistics must also evolve from bulk cases distribution to individual, order fulfillment. Who leads the way in this? Amazon, with its leadership in eCommerce technology, fulfillment automation, and personalization.

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Is Amazon Fresh a Boon For Small Businesses? A look at infinite shelf space in a branded marketplacevia @inc

Is Amazon Fresh a Boon For Small Businesses? A look at infinite shelf space in a branded marketplacevia @inc | WHY IT MATTERS: Digital Transformation | Scoop.it
Startups are loving the exposure that comes with joining the e-commerce giant's grocery-delivery business. But is dealing with technical hassles and giving up a large cut of revenue really worthwhile?
Farid Mheir's insight:

What is most useful here is the opportunity for small and local businesses to leverage a large, well known brand like amazon (or Walmart, or another). This has been happening for years in other industries (electronics, books, etc.) and now food and CPG are finding their way into Amazon's amazing marketplace where shelf space is infinite and listing fees are small.

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Cyber Monday Sets Records

Cyber Monday Sets Records | WHY IT MATTERS: Digital Transformation | Scoop.it
Cyber Monday exceeded all expectation with a record setting day, according to IBM's digital analytics. Over the full day of online shopping, retailers raked in 20.6% sales growth over last year.
Farid Mheir's insight:

Very good insights on the latest eCommerce xmas craze.

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Amazon Pantry to take on Costco- makes perfect sense in the big picture for Amazon via @usatoday

Amazon Pantry to take on Costco- makes perfect sense in the big picture for Amazon via @usatoday | WHY IT MATTERS: Digital Transformation | Scoop.it
Pantry will help Amazon expand more in the huge consumer package goods market and take on warehouse club stores Costco and Wal-Mart's Sam's Club, sources say
Farid Mheir's insight:

Alone this sounds like the dummest idea on the planet: go compete on low cost, low margin, high volume, bulky and heavy products (read difficult to ship) against the lowest price market leaders (Costco, Sam's). True in isolation.


Step back and consider those facts:

1- Amazon does not have retail stores, but is building warehouses close to its customers to reduce delivery costs

2- You can only do #1 when you have volume

3- How do you build volume? staples, stuff that people order on a regular basis

4- Amazon has a Prime programme where delivery is free for a yearly membership

5- Amazon is build Fresh to deliver groceries to home - easy to tag Pantry products in the same vans - additional cost in marginal

6- Amazon has a very successful replenishment programme - and what do you replenish most? pantry items!


After careful consideration, Amazon Pantry makes perfect sense, doesn't it?!

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Kiva Robots may save Amazon $916M annually & shave 40% off the $3.75 order fulfilling cost @WSJ

Kiva Robots may save Amazon $916M annually & shave 40% off the $3.75 order fulfilling cost @WSJ | WHY IT MATTERS: Digital Transformation | Scoop.it
Amazon got a lot of ink for its sci-fi drone delivery idea this week, but a more real and immediate robot effort underway in the Seattle retailer’s warehouses could save it as much as $916 million a year, according to one analyst.
Farid Mheir's insight:

How can brick and mortar retailers compete with this level of automation when they must support real estate and HR costs?


They can

1- invest in similar automation (but onlny if they have volume to scale) for comparable products in their online operations

2- provide an in-store experience that is fully linked with the online information: order picked and return in store, value added services in stores (training, support, etc.)

3- embrace local and niche products from small businesses to bring unique personalized products and solutions to shoppers


Anything else?

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Needle Guided Shopping- is "fansourcing" or "curated commerce" the future of eCommerce?

Needle Guided Shopping- is "fansourcing" or "curated commerce" the future of eCommerce? | WHY IT MATTERS: Digital Transformation | Scoop.it

Needle leverages your best advocates, certifies them to sell your products, and enables them to do it from anywhere.

Farid Mheir's insight:

Needle is part of a new set of solutions and companies that provide tools, technologies and services to help retailers enter the world of "fan sourcing" or "curated commerce".


The concept is simple: there is too much offering on the web and it is difficult to decide what to buy online, even with enhanced descriptions, high definition pictures, reviews and ratings. This due in part because we have come to not trust them, and in part because we rely on recommendations from people we know or from experts, rather than the promotion marketing material that brands and retailers prepare.


This is what needle appears to provide. It facilitates the creation of a network of "advocates" that can speak to your potential customers and inform them on the products you have to sell and determine which is best for your customer. One on one, personalized shopping.


OK in reality they are pimped-up sales reps, paid when they sell you a product. Nothing new here. But the way in which they sell, online rather than in store, may mean that shopping for a TV on amazon wesbite tomorrow will feel a lot more like going to a Best Buy store today.

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How digital made Nespresso possible- an in depth analysis of the business model via @BDoom

How digital made Nespresso possible- an in depth analysis of the business model via @BDoom | WHY IT MATTERS: Digital Transformation | Scoop.it
Nespresso is a machine-and-pod coffee concept for making espresso, developed by the food multinational Nestlé. By fitting an aluminium coffee pod into the machine, perfect espresso can be made at t...
Farid Mheir's insight:

Nespresso has grown into a powerhouse by leveraging the digital tools: eCommerce website, community, third party logistics, etc. Yes it oepns stores for the experience and the product feel. But it also leverages the digital tools to grow into a huge business with little overhead.


Wondering how the business model canvas can be leveraged? Here is a great example.

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Amazing overview of average margin earned by apparel distributors- can also be extended to other via @fail_harder

Amazing overview of average margin earned by apparel distributors- can also be extended to other via @fail_harder | WHY IT MATTERS: Digital Transformation | Scoop.it

This section will give you a quick background how Distributors, Retailers, and Brand Direct E-Commerce work as businesses and their corresponding relationship to the brand who makes the products available for retail.

Farid Mheir's insight:

Simply amazing paper that describes so well the different fulfillment models. Essential read for any eCommerce professional... and who isn't in this day and age? ;-)

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5 must to help retailers keep up with consumers via @McKinsey

5 must to help retailers keep up with consumers via @McKinsey | WHY IT MATTERS: Digital Transformation | Scoop.it
The retail industry is more dynamic than ever. US retailers must evolve to succeed in the next decade. A McKinsey & Company article.
Farid Mheir's insight:

McKinsey lays down actions that forward thinking retailer should apply to survive the digital transformation. They include:

  • leverage multi-channel to expand (and thus grow) revenue and profit;
  • cut costs (as digital business are often leaner);
  • reduce real estate (I wrote about that already - physical stores are here to stay but must transform as digital help push certain distribution activities towards eCommerce)
  • leverage digital (data and analytics) for decision making (not looking back but looking forward)
  • rethink assortments and product offering (with Future Shop now selling vitamins and food supplements, I guess all retailers must do that as well!)


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Target will spend more on technology than on stores in 2014 via @wsj

Target will spend more on technology than on stores in 2014 via @wsj | WHY IT MATTERS: Digital Transformation | Scoop.it

In an effort to catch up, Target this year is spending about as much of its $2.3 billion U.S. capital budget on improving its technology, developing mobile apps and modernizing its supply chain as it is on opening and remodeling stores. Next year, the company will spend more on those investments than on stores, an acknowledgment that future growth will increasingly depend on digital sales.

Farid Mheir's insight:

2.3B$ in technology to try and increase its online sales (now at 2% of 73B) is proof of the need by retailers to transform their ways or disappear. Then again Target used to let Amazon run its website.


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Amazon's 1,263 Patents Reveal Retailing's High-Tech Future and how it will transform retailing via @forbes @mit

Amazon's 1,263 Patents Reveal Retailing's High-Tech Future and how it will transform retailing via @forbes @mit | WHY IT MATTERS: Digital Transformation | Scoop.it

In a recent article for MIT’s Technology Review, I argue that Amazon is approaching retailing as an engineering problem — not as the old-fashioned domain of inspired hunches and showmanship. After all, Amazon doesn’t have three crucial ingredients of a traditional store: showrooms where customers can touch the goods; onsite salespeople to talk up the wares, or an ability for customers to take purchases home with them instantly. As a result, I wrote, “everything that Amazon’s engineers create is meant to make these fundamental deficits vanish from sight.”

Farid Mheir's insight:

A glimpse into some of the reasons why amazon may in the future be known more for disrupting physical stores than for leading the eCommerce revolution.


In a nutshell, Amazon works hard to make the traditional brick and mortar store irrelevant, which in turn will force traditional retailers into doing two things:

1- embrace eCommerce, and remove all the non value adding aspects from the physical stores (replenishment, staple items, etc.)

2- transform the physical stores to make them useful again, probably with a focus on some of the aspects where Internet has limitations: showrooming electronics, cars, etc., or educating customers on ways to use their products, making recipes in grocery stores or training newbies on new iPads.


By the way, this is exactly what is now happening at Walmart and other retailers.


Also see this

Amazon warehouse & operations and Apple stores trace the future of brick-n-mortar stores via @bi http://sco.lt/5pCgBl

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Amazon’s now shipping on Sundays - will rescue US Postal Service + disrupt shipping industry? via@washingtonpost

Amazon’s now shipping on Sundays - will rescue US Postal Service + disrupt shipping industry? via@washingtonpost | WHY IT MATTERS: Digital Transformation | Scoop.it

For most people, waiting at home for a package to be delivered is largely infeasible during the workweek, leaving Saturday as their best hope for catching the parcel truck. But thanks to Amazon, consumers can now get their e-commerce shipments on Sundays, too.

Farid Mheir's insight:

I've been writing about this trend of same-day or next-day delivery, making the point that most customers are not willing to pay for same-day delivery but that affordable or free next-day delivery could make inroads into brick-and-mortar business, forcing them to transform the way they sell and what they sell.


7-day a week delivery is part of this essential service that a store-less, online pure play must make if it wants to fight without opening physical stores. 

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Amazon warehouse & operations and Apple stores trace the future of brick-n-mortar stores via @bi

Amazon warehouse & operations and Apple stores trace the future of brick-n-mortar stores via @bi | WHY IT MATTERS: Digital Transformation | Scoop.it
200 packages a SECOND.
Farid Mheir's insight:

This informative but shallow post (as is often the case with BI.com) nevertheless made me realize how much amazon warehouse and fulfillment process will transform physical stores in the future.


No more will we go to stores for the mundaine and the repetitive shopping (replenish peanut butter or buy a computer cable). We will go to stores for the "experience": we will be entertained, trained, or pampered. Visit an Apple store today and you'll get my point. You do not go there to buy a cable (this can be done online) but you go to see a new product, try it, get help and explanation from the genius bar or get insight from sales persons. The store is small and already has the highest sales per square feet of any store in the US


What does this mean for brick-n-mortar retailers? Move all the non-value-adding sales real estate (all those middle aisle with shelves full of non-descript low margin products) to online eCommerce store (with low cost fulfillment and delivery/pickup), then transform the freed-up store aisles into customers-focussed training, entertaining, pampering, etc. areas.


This represents a huge challenge for organizations as they will need to transform their merchandising, store operations, marketing, HR, etc. into a digital world (customers will expect online and in-store experience to be seamless) where customer service will become more important (sales clerks will need to know more about their products and not only be shelf stocking low paid employees).


Fun times ahead!

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Real-life Solutions that can be developed with @Grok

Real-life Solutions that can be developed with @Grok | WHY IT MATTERS: Digital Transformation | Scoop.it
Farid Mheir's insight:

This page presents some solutions that can be built on top of Grok, a new service that will be demonstrated in 2 days at the Amazon re:invent conference


I believe there are many more applications that those listed here. In Retail, for eCommerce prediction and fraud prevention. In Finance, for anomaly detection in the price of stocks or fasat changing data. Medical applications, weather applications, etc. etc.


For those like me that were impressed with the book "On Intelligence" and are fans of the theory behind "Singularity is near", then this feels like another small but major step in the direction of intelligent machines.

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Granify startup improves conversion rates and claims 95% accuracy via @BetaKit @stephanegoyette

Granify startup improves conversion rates and claims 95% accuracy via @BetaKit @stephanegoyette | WHY IT MATTERS: Digital Transformation | Scoop.it
Edmonton-based startup Granify, a software as a service (SaaS) company that improves ecommerce conversion rates, has raised $1.5 million in seed funding from several investors, including Peter Thiel's Valar Ventures, iNovia Capital, Klass Capital,...
Farid Mheir's insight:

Not sure if this technology works but it sure sounds interesting. Not having to rely on coupons or price breaks to improve conversion sure sounds nice. The idea of digging through data to identify reasons why shoppers leave (such as return issues) and presenting them with messages that help sounds a lot like what a sales person will do in a physical store. Hmmm...

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Sendapackage.com Bills Itself as ‘New York’s Inmate Superstore’- talk about a captive audience via @nytimes

Sendapackage.com Bills Itself as ‘New York’s Inmate Superstore’- talk about a captive audience via @nytimes | WHY IT MATTERS: Digital Transformation | Scoop.it
Sending packages to loved ones doing time can be, as thousands of local families know, a Kafkaesque process. Sendapackage.com helps get the goods behind bars.
Farid Mheir's insight:

Sounds like a great niche. And everything an online commerce should be: well defined audience, real need, (rules, regulations, families not being inside, inmates not being outside, etc.), and long-term customers (in certain cases).


Makes me think of those special orders flown into northern territories from stores in the "South" where products are cheaper and airfare, in bulk, less expensive than the many intermediaries in typical retail.

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Online grocer Peapod shows Amazon, Walmart how it's done- I haven't seen so much hype since webvan days! via @cnet

Online grocer Peapod shows Amazon, Walmart how it's done- I haven't seen so much hype since webvan days! via @cnet | WHY IT MATTERS: Digital Transformation | Scoop.it
While WalMart and Amazon are just starting to see how tricky the online grocery business can be, 20-year-old Peapod has already figured it out. Read this article by Donna Tam on CNET News.
Farid Mheir's insight:

I have not seen so many papers and articles regarding online grocery shopping since the late 1990s when webvan was a big thing. And the angle remains the same (everyone needs to eat, the market is huge, just 1% is enormous, etc. etc.).


There is a huge difference however: now the Internet is real. With Peapod getting 30% of its orders from mobile, Ocado fulfilling 180K orders per week (yes per week), there may be now the right conditions to make online grocery a reality. We should know soon enough.


The real question is raised  here as well: what will be the role of brick and mortar grocery stores? Certainly they will remain but for what? High end and niche products, where low-cost staples get delivered from a warehouse (who needs to see the peanut butter before you buy)? Recipe demonstrations and culinary tips, with a focus on hands-on experience and expert recommendations? Where will technology fit in all this? 

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Staples expands e-commerce via marketplace sales 8k SKUs in store, 1M SKUs online via @internetretailer

Staples expands e-commerce via marketplace sales 8k SKUs in store, 1M SKUs online via @internetretailer | WHY IT MATTERS: Digital Transformation | Scoop.it
Internet Retailer - E-Retailers/Retail Chains - Staples expands e-commerce via marketplace sales
Farid Mheir's insight:

Great way for brick and mortar retailers with a known brand to leverage the Internet by creating marketplaces and act as an online "magnet" for consumers that go to their site to find everything they're looking for, often bypassing Google.


This is what has been happening at Amazon for past few years, Amazon being top destination for searches related to books, videos, and other related items. Easy to understand when you consider Amazon has 600K SKUs in its warehouses but over 8M in its online catalog!

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