| |
Customer-centric
Service: Revealing Consumer Desires
Second Conference
on Advances in Retail Supply Chains
IBM
T. J. Watson Research Center
Columbia
Business School W. Edwards Deming Center
January
12th, 2001
IBM T. J. Watson Research Center
Hawthorne, New York, USA
With advances in the Internet, global communications
and transportation, consumers today have more choices than ever
before when it comes to purchasing a product. Using a simple computer
screen, one can order a product from anywhere in the world and,
within two days, have the product delivered to a location of choice.
The ease with which consumers can make purchases has driven retailers
to fiercely compete for consumers' attention, trust, and ultimately
their wallets. Retailers must identify and develop strong relationships
with key consumers by providing immediate and personalized fulfillment
of these consumers' desires. The current multi-channel environment
provides retailers with many different opportunities to offer consumers
personalized information and shopping experiences. On the other
hand, this new multi-channel environment brings the challenge of
achieving the level of customer intimacy attained in more traditional
retail settings, where a single person or a small group of people
serves each customer.
To meet this challenge, retailers endeavor to provide
a consistent, quality service experience regardless of the channel
customers choose to use when they shop. Each customer contact provides
a retailer with an opportunity to demonstrate the value of his service
and to increase customer loyalty. Retailers can benefit from customizing
each customer's shopping experience according to the individual
customer's preferences. Toward this end, retailers must utilize
all available information sources to learn about customer desires.
Today, retailers gather large amounts of data from point-of-sale
transactions, customer inquiries placed to retail call centers,
and clicks on a retailer's web site. Reports generated from the
raw data provide weekly or daily transaction counts and other summary
statistics. But the knowledge contained in this data is far richer.
For example, retailers can match data generated by individual customers
over multiple visits across multiple channels. Many retailers already
capture much of the information they need - what's moving, who's
buying it, what is in the shopping basket, and which promotions
have been applied to any particular sale. The challenge is how to
used this data to make better decisions to drive improved business
results.
In this conference we will discuss how retailers collect
and use data to gain insight into customer preferences and behaviors.
Speakers at the conference will be representatives from companies
who recognize the hidden knowledge buried in the wealth of data
that they collect every day, and who grapple with the challenge
of using data to understand customer needs. We will also discuss
how advances in technology contribute to the ease with which retailers
can successfully use data. The goals of this information exchange
are to raise awareness of the challenges and benefits of using data
to gain insight into customer behaviors, and to identify meaningful
directions for extending the state of the art for the industry.
INSTITUTIONS REPRESENTED:
| Axioma, Inc. |
IBM |
| Aisle Network |
KPMG Peat Marwick |
| Arsenal Capital |
Leonard N.Stern School of Business |
| B2Porter |
Malaysia Airlines Golden Boutiques |
| Benetton USA Corp. |
Media Solutions - Sony Electronics |
| Bloomingdales |
Modell's Sporting Goods |
| Chanel, Inc. |
PERC Communications |
| Columbia Business School |
Ritz-Carlton Hotel Company, LLC |
| Columbia School of Engineering |
Retek Inc. |
| Columbia Business School Deming Center |
Sears Canada |
| Dress Barn |
The Ridge Group |
| Eddie Bauer |
Toys R Us |
| Estée Lauder |
Wharton School |
| ExperienceEngineering, Inc. |
Whitaker Intl. |
| Fingerhut |
Universitat Pompeu Fabra |
| Franklin Mint |
Zany Brainy, Inc. |
| i-Open, Inc. |
|
PRESENTATIONS:
The meeting (see agenda)
took place on Friday, January 12. It began with introductory remarks
from Alfred Spector, Vice President of Services and Software, IBM
Research. It continued with seven presentations discussing how retailers
and service providers can customize services by using the large
amounts of data collected on a daily basis about customer preferences
and behaviors. There were also a number of demonstrations of state-of-the
art technology aimed at improving customer experience.
Pat Mene
Vice President of Quality, Ritz-Carlton Hotel Company, LLC
Data-driven Customer
Intimacy: Using the Customer and Market Focus Criteria
Abstract:
For more than 10 years Patrick Mene, Vice-President of Quality at
The Ritz-Carlton Hotel Company has applied the values and concepts
of the Malcom Baldridge National Quality Award to the specialty
of hotel management. Mr. Mene's presentation will address data-driven
customer intimacy, using the customer and market focus criteria,
Section 3 of the MBNQA application summary.
Peter Kolesar
Professor, Graduate School of Business Columbia University
Industrialized Intimacy:
A Framework for Customer Service in the Information Technology Era
Abstract:
Industrialized intimacy is a strategy for service delivery that
exploits information technology capabilities to efficiently create
and deliver appropriately familiar and customized customer services.
It builds on the service factory concepts of Levitt by systematizing
customer knowledge and processing and distributing it as needed
throughout the service organization. The industrialized intimacy
strategy can enhance both the productivity of service processes
and the value they deliver to customers. Examples of companies already
implementing the industrialized intimacy approach will be discussed.
This work, done jointly with Garrett van Ryzin and Wayne Cutler,
was a collaboration between the Deming Center of the Columbia Business
School and operations management practice of Booz Allen and Hamilton.
Syed Ahmad Syed Salim
Chief Operating Officer, Malaysia Airlines Golden Boutiques
Extending the Customer Loyalty Program:
Malaysia Airlines Golden Boutique Buy N Fly Program
Abstract:
Malaysia Airlines Golden Boutiques is a duty free in-flight shopping
cum mail order business that leverages their Customer Loyalty database
of over four million shoppers. Topics covered will be engaging technologies
like smart chip, and how to collect data to gain insight into customer
preferences and buying behaviors.
Deb Campbell
Project Manager, Business Intelligence Fingerhut Companies, Inc.
Best of Breed Modeling
Techniques for the Direct Mail Industry and Beyond
Abstract:
In order to capture decades of data mining and modeling experience,
Fingerhut's Business Intelligence group has built a Best of Breed
(BOB) modeling tool. The tool utilizes homegrown techniques as well
as packaged software in preparing data, finding relevant data, modeling
and comparing and evaluating models. With BOB, Fingerhut can utilize
their breadth of experience in each and every modeling effort, provide
process standards, train new analysts, build models efficiently,
and offer a tutorial on best practices. The Business Intelligence
group assists in supporting the Fingerhut catalog, telemarketing,
Internet and credit businesses, Fingerhut subsidiaries and affiliates,
as well as Federated's retail businesses. BOB can be incorporated
into the support process across all of these divisions. Looking
forward, the BOB tool can be utilized in a wide variety of both
modeling applications and industries beyond Fingerhut and Federated.
Corey A. Perine
Executive Vice President i-Open, Inc.
Julien Bramel
Director, Internet Consulting Axioma, Inc.
Store-Specific Marketing: Promotion
Optimization using Digital Signage
Abstract:
In this talk, we will present new approaches to store-specific marketing.
i-Open has developed an Internet-enabled in-store advertising medium,
which has been enhanced using Axioma's optimization technology and
experience in developing optimization and revenue management applications
for different industries. i-Open's new medium, combined with Axioma's
technology, can dramatically improve customer conversion rates,
increase revenue, and fundamentally change the way marketers conduct
advertising campaigns. Using the power of the Internet, the two
technologies can synthesize advertising, point-of-purchase promotion,
and inventory management to deliver precisely targeted messages
to consumers in high-traffic public spaces. i-Open and Axioma are
proposing a controlled experiment to measure and prove the effectiveness
of the combined technologies in a retailer environment. This talk
will present the two technologies and describe parts of the study.
Lou Carbone
Chief Experience Officer and President ExperienceEngineering, Inc.
Experience
Management Systems in the 21st Century
Abstract:
No organization can avoid providing an experience. The question
is, how haphazard or how managed is the one your business is delivering?
To affect strong customer and employee loyalty, market leaders in
the 21st century will become "experience enabled enterprises." They
will utilize Experience Management Systems that provide the focus
and practical tools for consistently delivering preference-building
experiences in order to build a company's brand experientially.
Vicki Raport
Vice-President Benefits Realization Retek Inc.
Customer Driven Retail: Maximizing
Market Opportunity
Abstract:
The single greatest opportunity for retailers to drive growth, revenue
and profit will come from the effective use of customer information
as part of their core selling, merchandising, marketing and supply
chain processes. In addition, consumers are now forcing retailers
to a more customer intimate business model, thus demanding that
retailers leverage their customer and transaction information for
delivery of products and services. The successful retailers of the
21st Century will be multi-channel and they will use customer information
for a 360-degree view of activity and opportunity both within and
outside of their existing customer base. However, most retailers
are far from leveraging this asset as a key component of their business.
Many retailers do not collect customer specific information and
most who do, haven't put it to good use in their business. This
presentation will discuss the current customer driven retail environment,
the opportunities for value in the marketplace, the Retek vision
and approach to delivering customer knowledge, critical technologies
and several customer stories where retailers are turning information
into action.
|