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Technology Trends & Innovation tRetail Summit Brian H. Fitzsimons

tRetail Summit 2014 May 2014 Personalisation, Context, Proximity. IoT and wearables #Travel

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Communication, Applications & Location Personalisation, Context and Retail Wearables, API’s, IoT Organisational Predictions & Impacts

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Page 1: tRetail Summit 2014 May 2014 Personalisation, Context, Proximity. IoT and wearables #Travel

Technology Trends & InnovationtRetail Summit

Brian H. Fitzsimons

Page 2: tRetail Summit 2014 May 2014 Personalisation, Context, Proximity. IoT and wearables #Travel

© OPENJAW TECHNOLOGIES 2014 ‹#›

Michael Jackson performed at the Billboard Music Awards. As a Hologram.

Imperial College London announced “physicists have discovered how to create matter from light”

Oculus VR announced “This [Facebook acquisition] is going to be an MMO where we want to put a billion people in VR”

In September California DMV will begin issuing special licenses for driverless vehicles

… none of which were directed by J. J. Abrams

May 2014 : Review

Page 3: tRetail Summit 2014 May 2014 Personalisation, Context, Proximity. IoT and wearables #Travel

© OPENJAW TECHNOLOGIES 2014‹#›

Topics

Communication, Applications & Location

Personalisation, Context and Retail

Wearables, API’s, IoT

Organisational Predictions & Impacts

Page 4: tRetail Summit 2014 May 2014 Personalisation, Context, Proximity. IoT and wearables #Travel

Communication, Applications & Location

Page 5: tRetail Summit 2014 May 2014 Personalisation, Context, Proximity. IoT and wearables #Travel

© OPENJAW TECHNOLOGIES 2014 ‹#›

More Connected. More Informed. More Demanding

• 4G LTE is leading to a higher expectation for rich digital content• Access is ubiquitous Data Plans have gone Global• New user segments are emerging as smartphone price drops• Instant platform agnostic data is a challenge to travel providers• There is strong a demand for new innovative contextual services

Communication, Applications & Location

Page 6: tRetail Summit 2014 May 2014 Personalisation, Context, Proximity. IoT and wearables #Travel

© OPENJAW TECHNOLOGIES 2014 ‹#›

Continued Uber-fication of Services

• Uber revolutionised personal transportation. The resulting trend indicates successful services offer …

• Simple click to order services• Guaranteed quality• Seamless payment• Mobile access• Accountability

Communication, Applications & Location

Page 7: tRetail Summit 2014 May 2014 Personalisation, Context, Proximity. IoT and wearables #Travel

© OPENJAW TECHNOLOGIES 2014 ‹#›

Communication, Applications & Location

Photos from the Future - A Driverless Cab

Page 8: tRetail Summit 2014 May 2014 Personalisation, Context, Proximity. IoT and wearables #Travel

Personalisation, Context and Retail

Page 9: tRetail Summit 2014 May 2014 Personalisation, Context, Proximity. IoT and wearables #Travel

© OPENJAW TECHNOLOGIES 2014 ‹#›

Contextual Services 1.0 exist todayThey are just fragmented and manual

• hipmunk.com innovative booking interface• seatguru.com tells you all you need to know about where you are

seated• seatalert.com tells you when a better seat becomes available• tripit.com keeps you appraised of your flight status, auto adds

itineracy to Calendar

The next step is Convergence

Personalisation, Context and Retail

Page 10: tRetail Summit 2014 May 2014 Personalisation, Context, Proximity. IoT and wearables #Travel

© OPENJAW TECHNOLOGIES 2014 ‹#›

Personalised Proximity Retail

location-aware, context-aware, pervasive small wireless sensor

• NFC range is up to 20 cm• iBeacon up to 10 Meters• iBeacon is Apple + Android Compatible

Personalisation, Context and Retail

Page 11: tRetail Summit 2014 May 2014 Personalisation, Context, Proximity. IoT and wearables #Travel

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Context, Privacy, Personalisation

Digital Convergence is Eroding Boundaries

• Consumers expect uniform service between Physical & Digital worlds• Convergence of personal and business use is also driving this trend

Personalisation outweighs privacy concerns (Accenture)

• Consumers extremely interested in having a more personalised shopping experience, despite their concern for privacy protection

• They want flexibility and to control the data that is tracked

Welcome to the era of small data and personalisation

Personalisation, Context and Retail

Page 12: tRetail Summit 2014 May 2014 Personalisation, Context, Proximity. IoT and wearables #Travel

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The Beacon Era - Considerations

Experiment / Play / Learn - Carefully!

• Know your user - Learn habits, trends, sell value, don't spam• Know your technology - Where does it fit in your Sales Process• Know your beacon - Battery life, Form-factor, Customisation• Know your limitations - App required? Data on? Location required?• Train your team - Know the app, Privacy Policy, Feedback• Train your user - Educate customer, Make it simple, Reward • Have a (continual) plan - Use the data, Improve, Evolve

Learn to combine the physical data with the digital data early

Personalisation, Context and Retail

Page 13: tRetail Summit 2014 May 2014 Personalisation, Context, Proximity. IoT and wearables #Travel

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Personalisation, Context and Retail

Photos from the Future - Biometric Payment

Page 14: tRetail Summit 2014 May 2014 Personalisation, Context, Proximity. IoT and wearables #Travel

Wearables, API’s, IoT

Page 15: tRetail Summit 2014 May 2014 Personalisation, Context, Proximity. IoT and wearables #Travel

© OPENJAW TECHNOLOGIES 2014 ‹#›

Narrative Clip is a small wearable lifelogging camera, funded via crowd funding site Kickstarter. He had to delete the photos but he got it back.

Wearables, API’s, IoT

Page 16: tRetail Summit 2014 May 2014 Personalisation, Context, Proximity. IoT and wearables #Travel

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Wearables, API’s, IoT

Photos from the Future - Airport Security

Page 17: tRetail Summit 2014 May 2014 Personalisation, Context, Proximity. IoT and wearables #Travel

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Wearables, API’s, IoT

They are coming!

Marketing Opportunities- Social Campaigns- Experience tracking- Social sentiment tracking- Retail wearables?

Whats your policy?- Register in booking- Employees and wearables- Compliment travel

Some examples …

Page 18: tRetail Summit 2014 May 2014 Personalisation, Context, Proximity. IoT and wearables #Travel

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Wearables, API’s, IoT

Myo motion control

Bragi Dash

Music, Sensor,

Motion tracker

What about Glass?

Page 19: tRetail Summit 2014 May 2014 Personalisation, Context, Proximity. IoT and wearables #Travel

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Wearables, API’s, IoT

• Many challenges remain • Social acceptance• Technological limitations• Price• Privacy• Novelty• Who is the target market?

• Emerging advantages• Hotel & Flight search• Real-time discounts• Google+ sharing• Passbook in Glass• Google Now in Glass• Experience

Google Glass in a Travel Context

Page 20: tRetail Summit 2014 May 2014 Personalisation, Context, Proximity. IoT and wearables #Travel

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Wearables, API’s, IoT

Photos from the Future - Social Sharing

Page 21: tRetail Summit 2014 May 2014 Personalisation, Context, Proximity. IoT and wearables #Travel

Organisational Predictions / Impacts

Page 22: tRetail Summit 2014 May 2014 Personalisation, Context, Proximity. IoT and wearables #Travel

© OPENJAW TECHNOLOGIES 2014 ‹#›

• Social technologies will become increasingly integrated into existing enterprise• Strategic component in virtually all customer engagement• Internal data + External data = Enterprise cloud (connecting int/ext customer data)

• Digital Experience Delivery Makes (or Breaks) Firms• Impressions of a business established through digital engagement “software is the brand• Digital experience agencies are engaged by chief marketing officers and chief technology

officers to a greater extent than by chief information officers

• APIs become a Digital Glue• Many instances where APIs represent business model innovation• Open access to useful functionality through network-based services using technologies

that are readily accessible from a broad range of programming environments.

• Process and Intelligence• IT is losing some control over BI tools and applications• External users are changing as are the internal user demands• The demand from the business is increasing.

Organisational Predictions / Impacts

Page 23: tRetail Summit 2014 May 2014 Personalisation, Context, Proximity. IoT and wearables #Travel

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• Firms get a grasp on how they will use their data• Big data concepts are adopted• Open data, Adaptive intelligence approaches, Next generation smart systems• Overall more agile, collaborative, and adaptive methods for analytics and data sharing

will emerge

• The IoT is no longer niche. sensors and devices are inevitable • Internet of things brings firms and customers closer together• Proliferation of devices & wearable computing connects physical and digital data sets• Service providers start contextually marketing to ecosystems

Organisational Predictions / Impacts

Page 24: tRetail Summit 2014 May 2014 Personalisation, Context, Proximity. IoT and wearables #Travel
Page 25: tRetail Summit 2014 May 2014 Personalisation, Context, Proximity. IoT and wearables #Travel

Customer-Infused Retailing Interactive Marketing

Delegate Reading

Page 26: tRetail Summit 2014 May 2014 Personalisation, Context, Proximity. IoT and wearables #Travel

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Here is a look at how key aspects of business will likely change in the near future for customer-infused retailers:• The retail organization. For starters, the internal structure of retail organizations should change radically. Today, they are organized around functional areas with buyers, marketers

and operations working side-by-side. This siloed approach serves as a barrier toward creating unified and relevant customer experiences since valuable insights are “locked” within the walls of each function. Customer-infused retailers will have cross-functional teams that identify top-down customer value, strategy growth objectives and customer key performance metrics.

• Technology. Seamless internal structures are only possible through seamless technology solutions. Retailers should leverage centralized customer databases through cloud computing, accessing data from it and running customer data management applications through it to allow a clear understanding of the customer.

• To prepare for future technologies today, retailers should first and foremost develop reliable sensing capabilities to illuminate customers on a much more granular and real-time basis—flexible micro-segments—instead of the old school static and rigid segmentations. Analytics are recommended to marry those insights to specific offers, and execution capabilities are recommended to support organization-wide sharing of insights at scale and across multiple channels.

• Suppliers. Increasingly, suppliers will not only continue to be collaborators but will also become competitors. While P&G supplies Tide detergent to your store, it will also be competing with Tide Laundromats, Mr. Clean Car Washes and Art of Shaving stores that sell Gillette razors. A successful retailer should team up with its suppliers to offer relevant brand selections or potentially “stores-within-a-store.” More important, suppliers should work with retailers to drive the right customer to the right channels based on the customer’s value and needs.

• Branding. A retailer’s brand must evolve to deliver a clear and compelling brand promise. Target is family fashion apparel and home goods at low prices. Best Buy is the latest in electronics. Wal-Mart meets everyday needs at the lowest prices. Zara is “fast fashion” at affordable prices.

• Branding that is not distinctive or playing on cost-only is likely a loser’s game. The store brand should provide a compelling difference in an era when smart phone applications can compare prices and consumers can scan any item in a store and learn quickly where their money gets the most traction.

• Stores. Offering everything in-store is not necessary, or necessarily profitable for that matter. Supplying relevant items every day likely is. Physical stores should match the space needed to meet the demand of the customers who shop it. Other products and services can be offered via in-store kiosk or on the Internet for pickup or home delivery.

• The digital presence should offer all products so that customers can quickly and easily find them. Stores will begin to appear when and where needed through vending machines and “pop-up” seasonal outlets.

• Digital. Brands will communicate with consumers at the relevant point of need. That includes social media like Twitter and Facebook and indicates moving away from passive research to active involvement, understanding what motivates a buyer. Digital and mobile media will be significant to reach customers at the point of sale, offering them time-sensitive offers and discounts on items when they’re in-store or near retail outlets.

Customer-Infused Retailing – Interactive Marketing