Sunday, 9 September 2012

Retail Analytics


Visit: Modak Analytics

Retail sector is the fastest blooming business enterprise in our country. This can be validated from the fact that it accounts for 14-15% of Indian GDP. With the economic and technological landscapes transforming itself to complete sophistication, retailing industry also needs customize its services according to their upgraded customers; this often stands out as a challenge for the retailers, often clinging to scalability and profitability.
             The critical challenges that retailers’ face is usually price sensitivity, demand forecasting, inventory management, multi-channel marketing, cross-sell, etc. Retailing in this competitive era is the process of getting right products to the right customers at the right time at the right price. Gone are the days of ‘stack it high and fly high’, now it’s a predictable routine. This means that retailing now should be more efficient and organized.  This effective organization can be pulled up with the help of analytics.
Forecasting has long been important to retailers across a variety of functions. In many cases in the past, however, different groups and functions created their own forecasts to inform ordering, staffing, merchandising, and budgeting. Stores and regions created bottom-up forecasts; corporate created top-down forecasts. Whatever be the type of forecast, a firm needs to analyze the data it has collected through different ways, like transaction history, surveys, competitions, etc. having a good fore-view of demand structure will add up to the bonus point for a retailer. Retail Analytics can be a great asset for a business organization leading it competitively ahead among others. With the proper application of analytics a retailer can,
  • Develop close relationships with customers based on a deep understanding of their behaviors and needs;
  • Deliver the targeted advertising, promotions and product offers to customers that will motivate them to buy;
  • Balance inventory with demand so you’re never out of stock or carrying excess inventory;
  • Charge exactly the price that customers are willing to pay at any moment;
  • Determine the best use of marketing investments; locate stores, distribution centers, and other facilities in optimal locations.
                                                                               
The main question lingering around would be regarding the actual turf where this analytics provide support. Analytics mainly cater to,
·          Demand forecasting
·          Price and promotion modelling
·          Price rules and performance targets management
·          Price and promotion optimization
·          Markdowns optimization
·          Category management
·          Product assortment selection
·          Store clustering and price zone definition
·          Competition analysis
·          Market basket analysis
·          Customer segmentation
            Some of the most successful retailers are using analytics for reducing stock outs at retail locations. Retailers are starting to understand how analytics can be leveraged to provide several quantifiable benefits: reduced stock outs, reduced inventory levels, optimized delivery schedules, and more efficient ordering process.
The prerequisite for an analytical process is the availability of the data. Analytics is impossible without clear, fine quality, integrated and accessible data, which retailers have in plenty comprised from – point of sales transaction, from websites, from credit programs, from current loyalty programs, from Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP), and other such business applications. Once a retailer has such vast and accessible amount of data then it can apply any analytical process among so many of them. The few analytical processes widely used are:
  • Assortment Optimization and Shelf Space Allocation
  • Customer-Driven Marketing
  • Fraud Detection and Prevention
  • Integrated Forecasting
  • Localization and Clustering
  • Marketing Mix Modeling
  • Pricing Optimization
  • Product Recommendation
  • Real Estate Optimization
  • Supply Chain Analytics
  • Test and Learn
  • Workforce Analytics
  • Adoption and Use of Analytics
  • Analytical Ecosystems
  • Centralizing Analytics  
These are few of the many trends of Retail Analytics. Different retailers can use different analytical process that will benefit them the most.




 Image courtesy: Sacha Orloff Group News


No comments :

Post a Comment