Recently I came across a presentation from
Dan Zarrella on "
The Science of Retweets. (http://www.slideshare.net/HubSpot/the-science-of-retweets-with-dan-zarrella). It is an insightful, fact-based analysis of how tweets propagate and what makes them successful.
The analysis is of course very interesting for those of us interested Tweeting. However, what really caught my attention is how well it illustrates, form a very different angle, some of
the issues I am discussing with retailers these days. In particular
the opportunities that e-commerce and social media open to those retailers with
the appetite and vision to tackle
the associated analytical challenges. And these challenges are of course not straightforward.
In his presentation
Dan introduces
the concept of Observability, I haven't had
the opportunity to discuss with
Dan his specific definition for
the term. However, in practical retail terms, I would say that it means that through social media (and other web channels such as search) we can analyze and track processes by measuring Indicators that were not measurable before.
The focus is in identifying patterns across a large number of consumers rather than what a particular individual "Likes".
The potential impact for retailers is huge. It opens
the opportunity to monitor changes in consumer preference and plan
the business accordingly. And you can do this almost "real time" rather than through infrequent surveys that provide a "rear view" picture of your consumer behaviour. For instance, you could envision identifying when a particular set of fashion styles are breaking out from
the pack, and commit a re-buy. Or you could monitor when
the preference for a specific mobile device has declined and hence markdowns should be considered; or how demand for a specific ready-made food typically flows across regions and manage
the inventory accordingly. Search, blogging, website and store data may need to be considered in identifying these trends.
The data volumes involved are huge (check Andrea Morgan's recent post on "Big Data" in retail) but so are
the benefits. As Andrea says, for
the first time we can start getting insight into "Why"
the business is performing in a certain way rather than just reporting on what is happening. And it is not just about
the data volumes. Tackling
the challenge also calls for integrated planning systems that can bring data and insight into
the context of
the Decision Making process Buyers, Merchandisers and Supply Chain managers are following. I strongly believe that only when data and process come together you can move from
the anecdotal to systematically improving business performance.
I would love to hear your opinions on these trends and where you think Retail is heading to exploit these topics - please email me:
[email protected]