by Andy Randall
In an Amazon-driven market, how can specialist retailers get closer to their customers? They have something that the growing mass of online conglomerates just cannot offer — their domain expertise.
In many cases a customer needs more than just picking an item off the shelf, or opening a box left on the doorstep. Specialist retailers can fit a part on-site, the customer can book a service slot, or the retailer can even take their skills and expertise to the customer. Andy Randall, Group COO at Halfords, explains how technology both inside and outside of physical stores helps retailers scale their knowledge and expertise to empower employees and ensure customer-centricity across the board.
Retail has undergone a huge transformation in the last two to three years. The online and ecommerce shift had begun long before COVID-19, as Amazon went from book retailer to the everything store. Pandemic pressures, subsequent supply chain disruptions, and growth in a mass of digital market entrants have only quickened this. The digital retailers have the supply chain covered with expansive global networks, allowing them to keep prices low and delivery times short. It is becoming increasingly challenging for generalist brick-and-mortar retailers to compete with ecommerce giants on these terms.
Product Centricity Gives Way to Service Centricity
The answer lies in the skills, expertise, and knowledge that set specialist retailers apart from low-contact market entrants such as Amazon, Uber, and others. Brands offering services and expertise have an edge — think DIY stores mixing paint and advising on building materials, key cutters, dry cleaning experts, home repairs, car parts providers, and many others. These businesses rely on the skill of their employees to provide vital services to end-customers. The challenge for specialist retailers becomes how best to scale this knowledge, expertise, and fantastic service across every customer touchpoint and all of their employees.
Mobile Retail That Takes Services Direct to the Customer
The pandemic has prompted an increasing number of brands to augment their physical estate with services that bring the shop to the customer’s front door. This is where the rise of mobile retail services has taken hold, providing pre-booked services with minimal contact and disruption to the shopper. The pros for consumers are many professional services delivered at their convenience, backed up by digital communications to keep them looped in on slot times, stock levels, and arrival expectation.
From a retailer’s perspective, a move to mobile services can be as simple as procuring a fleet of vehicles and putting their experts on the road, but on the back end they must ensure their software infrastructure is up to the challenge. When slots are promised and services are often vital for the customer, missing an appointment is not an option.
Service with Slick Infrastructure Works
This means making sure retailers have a software system to match the end-to-end mobile customer journey and expectations. This can be done by taking data and putting this journey together, from offering available slots online through to order processing, stocking vans, route optimization, and last-mile delivery. With a robust software system in place, scale and efficiencies can be quickly realized.
For example, Halfords has been growing their mobile service vans to fit tyres and car parts over the last three years. They developed their own software, Avayler, to manage this process and ensure the expansion to mobile operations was successful and profitable. They were very quickly able to increase productivity by 20 percent on top of their initial projections.
Digital Touchpoints are Essential in the Physical Store
Back in the physical store, manual spreadsheets and creating retail platforms for ePOS, stock management, and appointment bookings cannot provide the level of consistent service and support required by both employees and customers in today’s ultra-competitive retail environment. Brands must augment colleague expertise through digital means to ensure a more consistent and customer-centric shopping experience. Tablets and mobile devices should be on the shop floor to allow employees to quickly answer customer queries, check stock levels, and even execute a purchase.
Even when employees are carrying out services on a customer’s equipment, they can use tablets to photograph or film work done and deliver this straight to the customer to ensure the highest possible standards of quality and safety. This assisted selling makes sure employees across the retail business, regardless of their location or skill level, have access to the information they need to ensure a customer-centric interaction.
Technology Provides the CX Driving Force
A recent PwC report underlines the vital role technology will play in driving a more customer-centric retail future as consumer expectations continue to rise. The report found that speed, convenience, knowledgeable help, and friendly service are prioritized by shoppers. These qualities were highlighted by nearly 80 percent of all survey respondents as being the most important elements to ensure a positive customer experience.
The report states: “Those who get it right prioritize technologies that foster or provide these benefits over adopting technology for the sake of being cutting edge. Customers expect technology to always work (and are unlikely to take note of new technology unless it malfunctions or interrupts the seamless, friendly experience). They want the design of websites and mobile apps to be elegant and user-friendly. They want automation to ease experience, but these advances are not meaningful if speed, convenience, and the right information at the right time are lacking.”
Unleashing the Specialist Retail Secret Weapon — At Scale and Speed
Never forget, experienced specialist retailers have a secret weapon — their domain expertise and knowledgeable colleagues. They must use this to get closer to the customer, a strategy that will be crucial for survival in a volatile industry. Technology will provide the means to take this value proposition both inside and outside the confines of traditional brick-and-mortar stores. The race is on to move from being simply product centric to becoming truly customer-centric in the brave new retail world.