What is omnichannel analytics?
Smart retailers know it’s not just about marketing anymore
Brittany Bullard, Senior Systems Engineer, SAS
Where do you do your shopping? If you’re like me, you’re all over the place.
I’ll see a shoe I like in a magazine or on a fashion blog (Jessica Simpson’s are my personal fav) and start researching reviews, prices and availability online. Then, because comfort is key, I’ll find a store where I can try them on and make sure I’m not tottering around like a baby deer on heels that are way too high for me. And while I’m trying them on, I’ll use my phone to see if I can find a last-minute better deal, because saving money is more important to me than instant gratification (well, most of the time…).
It’s a dizzying process for the retailers trying to keep up with me as I jump from one channel, device, website and location to the next. And I’m not the only one – my fiancé goes through a similar process whether he’s buying a tablet or new gadget for the house.
Free white paper: Using Big Data to Enable the Omnichannel Retail Experience
Smart retailers are harnessing big data from digital channels for a more sophisticated, centralized view of customers' preferences and buying journey. Download this white paper to learn about the joint retail analytics solution from SAS, Intel and Hortonworks.
For years, that’s what omnichannel analytics has meant in retail. It’s been about bridging all those digital and physical channels to recognize customers wherever they are, collecting data and understanding the retail customer’s purchasing journey -- all to market the right Jessica Simpson pumps to me at the right time on the right channel.
But what if retailers could do more with all the data you’re collecting on all those different channels?
Omnichannel analytics for retail
Your omnichannel analytics strategy can be so much more. You can take all that customer data, combine it with product data and apply analytics to:
- Laser focus your marketing.
- Optimize merchandising.
- Adjust your supply chain.
- Enhance store operations.
- And even improve cybersecurity.
Here’s how my colleague Lori Schafer explains omnichannel analytics:
“It’s allowing the retailer to apply analytics to every step of the customer journey. To be able to give that customer a much better experience, not just in terms of how we market to her, but also in terms of the ideal product assortment in each location, whether it be in-store or online. And also, how much and where the optimal inventory should go so we can satisfy that customer’s needs wherever she wants to shop.”
That’s true omnichannel analytics: Using data from multiple channels to improve all retail operations while also improving the customer experience. It’s accomplished through a strong data strategy, analytical merchandising, intelligent marketing and an open ecosystem for analytics.
Omnichannel analytics allows the retailer to apply analytics to every step of the customer journey. Lori Schafer Executive Advisor, Global Retail SAS
Omnichannel analytics supports unified commerce
In a recent Retail TouchPoints article, All CIOs Want for 2017 … Is Unified Commerce, the authors describe the true omnichannel shopping experience as unified commerce, which “goes beyond omnichannel by enabling a single, holistic platform, combining in-store, mobile, e-commerce and every other function within the enterprise.”
And that’s what omnichannel analytics provides – it supports a true unified commerce environment for retail. And 85 percent of retailers state that creating a unified commerce environment is their top priority, according to a recent Boston Retail Partners survey.
Breaking it down by area, here’s some of what retailers can accomplish with omnichannel analytics:
- Laser focus your marketing by understanding customer uniqueness, knowing how digital and physical channels affect one another, building effective targeted marketing to cover millions of interactions and consumers each day.
- Optimize merchandizing by planning the business for higher profitability, knowing what stores have similar product preferences, creating customer-centric assortments and knowing the right pricing strategy for each product life cycle.
- Adjust your supply chain by knowing if promotions are effective across channels to predict and plan demand, ensure the right levels of inventory and know where to fulfill e-commerce orders to reduce shipping costs.
- Enhance store operations by quickly analyzing your business and knowing what drives the customers’ path to purchase, communicating with customers in real time and determining optimal staffing and product placement to optimize productivity and increase sales.
- Improve cybersecurity by knowing if your network is secure and quickly uncovering suspicious activities to protect customers, minimize fraudulent activities and reduce losses.
Take my Jessica Simpson pumps, for example. A smart retailer with omnichannel analytics would have identified me as a multichannel super shopper – their ideal customer. They’d know my social media habits and populate my favorite fashion blogs with personalized ads showing me the latest Jessica Simpson shoe styles for the season. If I clicked through their ad to order the shoes but abandoned my cart, they’d send me an email saying that they’d noticed I’d left something in my cart -- and reminding me of their free shipping and returns.
If that still didn’t result in a sale, they’d follow up with a text message, inviting me to come in to the store because they have the shoes I want in stock (thanks to their localized assortment). And when I went in to the store, I’d get a welcome text message as soon as I walked in, providing more information about the shoes. They’d also notify a sales associate that I was there and what I was looking for so that she could help me try on the shoes and complete my purchase on their secure network.
That’s what omnichannel analytics looks like – it’s a seamless experience for the customer. And that’s what retailers will have to provide if they’re planning to stick around.
About the Author
Brittany Bullard is a Systems Engineer for the Retail and Consumer Packaged Goods (CPG) industries. At SAS, Brittany helps retailers drive profitability through the use of powerful analytics. Brittany has 9 years of experience in the retail industry. During her experience, she implemented, managed and took part in design of allocation, replenishment, forecasting, location planning and assortment planning solutions.
Recommended reading
- ARTICLE 3 ways to rethink retail forecasting and demand planning The pandemic has profoundly changed consumer shopping behaviors and experiences and the increasing pressure has retailers scrambling to improve their ability to precisely predict and plan for demand. If you don’t know where to start, here are three questions to ask as you rethink your forecasting and demand planning.
- ARTICLE The connected consumer: IoT's impact on the future of retailThe IoT and the connected consumer are set to revolutionize retail. Here are a few ways companies can take advantage of technology advancements.
- ARTICLE 5 IoT applications retailers are using today The Internet of Things can bring big benefits, but what is IoT and how are retailers taking advantage of it?
- ARTICLE How Walmart makes data work for its customersTips from the world's largest retailer on building an infrastructure that makes data work for its 240 million weekly customers.
Ready to subscribe to Insights now?
SAS® Viya™
Make analytics accessible to everyone and bridge the talent gap in your organization