UK retailers are seeking to upgrade their e-commerce platforms and improve customer experience in response to a pandemic-induced spike in online shopping, according to a new report by Information Services Group (ISG), a global technology research and advisory firm. Nearly 30 per cent of all retail revenue in the country in 2020 came from online shopping, with online sales jumping by 45 per cent from the previous year.
Growth was largely driven by the COVID-19 pandemic.UK retailers are seeking to upgrade their e-commerce platforms and improve customer experience in response to a pandemic-induced spike in online shopping, says a new report by Information Services Group. Nearly 30 per cent of all retail revenue in the country in 2020 came from online shopping, with online sales jumping by 45 per cent from the previous year.#
The 2021 ISG Provider Lens Retail Software and Services Report for the UK says retailers want to use more technology tools and services to improve online and in-store shopping. Many retailers here are applying data analytics, digital displays and shelf-monitoring technologies to their in-store shopping experiences. The aim is to enhance productivity, ease of customer access and personalization inside stores.
In addition, retailers are leveraging technologies across multiple supply chain touchpoints. For example, a robot can scan shelves for out-of-stock items, trigger a request for restocking, then prompt the backend system to dispatch a robot to fill the shelf with minimal human intervention. Retailers see these systems making the supply chain more agile.
“Before 2020, the U.K. already had one of the highest adoption rates of online shopping among western economies,” said Mike Witty, director in the ISG consumer services practice, said in a press release. “UK shoppers have been taking advantage of a mature logistics infrastructure and the ability to move across channels.”
UK retailers are also embracing drive-through pick-up locations after customers have ordered products online, the report says. Some small-format retail stores in residential areas are doubling as micro-fulfillment hubs.
Fashion retailers are using smart-fitting technologies to help shoppers choose the right size clothing, and grocery stores are beginning to look at automated picking and packing systems, coupled with artificial intelligence-based delivery logistics algorithms to expand online delivery.
The report sees UK retailers shifting to hybrid operating models, in which humans and machines work together to deliver services. Retailers are using this hybrid model in store operations, in customer-facing technology, in the supply chain and in online and backend operations.
The report also finds UK retailers embracing machine learning to obtain better views of customer behavior online. Retailers also are experimenting with algorithmic retailing, artificial intelligence and the Internet of Things for tracking inventory, enabling their workforces to better serve customers and make store spaces and processes more efficient and intelligent.
In the area of platform migration services, the report finds some large retailers are moving away from packaged technology offerings and investing in developing their own micro services-enabled platforms. These companies are focused on shaping technology tools from scratch and having complete control over their shopping technology environment.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (DS)