companies & products news research white papers webinars videos project help
   
 
Premium Reports
Event Calendar
Slide shows

 

Reach thousands of potential customers through KioskMarketplace and its sister sites.

Click to find out how.

 

Rugged, Reliable Printers - Telpar

AML

 
>Customer Experience
Research center sponsored by: Nanonation |

    

Retailers tackle 2010 with technology

Troy Carroll
• 23 Dec 2009

As the days of 2009 dwindle, I find myself crisscrossing the country, talking to retailers of every stripe. These conversations have revealed a few consistent themes, which are likely to drive customer-facing retail technologies in the coming year.

To my relief, and that of probably everyone in the industry, there’s a sense the economy is coming back. Last month, I was at the Kioskcom Self Service Expo in New York, and I would describe the mood as "unexpected optimism." Retailers and technology buyers of all sorts were on the floor in surprising numbers with specific projects they needed to execute. One exhibitor even exclaimed, "We’re on the way up!" while making a swooping airplane motion toward the sky. Now that’s what I call a return to confidence. It is a safe bet that retailers who have been waiting on the sidelines will resume investments in their store experiences in the coming year.

The dominant theme I have heard from retailers is the need to inspire shoppers. Retailers are seeking technologies that do for any product category what mannequins do for apparel — show the customer how to bring many items together into a compelling, personalized solution. An expectant mother furnishing a baby’s room, a couple designing a home theater, a parent building a fish tank for his child — shoppers need to be inspired and guided to a final solution. Retailers understand that addressing a consumer’s end goal is the key to driving more sales, yet doing this with human interactions is expensive. So, I expect to see increasingly sophisticated shopper-assistance tools emerge from the simple product selectors of today. Retailers are keenly focused on the problem, and a few are ready to test solutions.

Closely related to inspiration is the idea of cross-selling. Retailers are interested in technology that helps them add items to a shopper’s basket by reaching across the store to cross-sell many product categories. I get the sense from retailers that this is an area in need of improvement. Customer-facing technologies that draw upon in-store and online inventories to automatically suggest the best complementary goods will likely be tested in the coming year.

Another recurring theme is a desire to provide quality customer service where today’s economics simply do not allow it. Many complex products do not sell in enough volume or at high enough prices to justify having human experts in the store. Several retailers see technology as the way forward. Expert systems can give customers the additional product education they need to make an informed choice, while sparing the cost of additional store labor. Expect to see customer-facing technologies deployed most commonly around these so-called "marginal" product categories.

Finally, with recessionary pressures on staffing levels, retailers want to make the most out of their store staff through sales-process automation. They want humans doing what humans do best — guiding customers through complex, personalized, real-world product problems and decisions. For the 80 percent of any selling process that is the same for every customer, retailers are looking for technological solutions that do this work, letting store associates handle more customers in a given period of time. In a sense, self-checkout was only the beginning. The phrase I have heard is "moving customers from questions to the counter" as quickly as possible. I personally view this as challenging to execute in practice and anticipate some failed trials, given the need for seamless integration between store personnel and in-store technology. However, the first retailer to do it will reap significant rewards and set the stage for the future of retail.

The year ahead is shaping up to be an exciting one for in-store technologies. Recession-induced paralysis seems to be over, and retailers seem to have a clear view of how they want to move forward. If they succeed in deploying the right solutions, it will be a winning year for everyone—shoppers, retailers and even technology suppliers.
 
Troy Carroll is CEO of Intava, a provider of interactive retail technology. To submit a comment about this article, please e-mail the editor.



Related articles on this topic: Customer Experience

Frozen yogurt shops with kiosks see sweet rebirth
Survey: Fliers seek more control through self-service kiosks and mobile phones
Comark introduces Live Help interactive kiosks
Drivers can check fatigue level via kiosks in Australia
Kid-friendly kiosks power National Children's Museum

 

© 2010 NetWorld Alliance LLC. All rights reserved.

MOST POPULAR
  • Special summit will again offer secure, open forum for deployers
  • Video game- and DVD-rental/game buy-back kiosk company e-Play suspends operations
  • Focus on Escalate Retail's new Pocket Kiosk
  • Movie Gallery cites 'cannibalization' by redbox kiosks in bankruptcy filing
  • Truck stop technology
  • Bill in Congress would mandate blind-accessible interfaces on all kiosks
  • NCR, Blockbuster continuing westward expansion
  • Iowa library builds own self-checkout kiosk, saves tens of thousands of dollars
  • Bike-share kiosk effort pedals forward in Minneapolis
  • NCR, Diebold fare better than expected, despite financial drops

  • NEWS HEADLINES
    Bill Pay: Texas students use kiosk to pay utility bills
    Patient Self-Service: Optometry group installs free vision-screening kiosks in supermarkets
    Supermarkets & Grocery: Big Y Foods implements NCR deli-ordering kiosks
    Retail - Specialty: Kiosks part of Richmond OTB saloon
    DVD Rental Kiosk: Blockbuster may soon file for bankruptcy: Report
    Europe: Barcelona, Madrid airports implement kiosks with biometrics
    New report explores the ROI of self-service in restaurants
    More News Headlines

    FEATURE STORIES
    More Feature Stories

    WHITE PAPERS
    More White Papers

    FEATURED PRODUCTS
    More Featured Products

    VIDEO GALLERY
    More Videos

    PHOTO GALLERIES
    More Photo Galleries

    ALSO ON NETWORLD ALLIANCE
     
       
     
       
     
    © 2010 NetWorld Alliance

    Get the latest kiosk news delivered to
    your in-box.
    Click here to sign up for free.