AI in Retail

5 Lessons to learn from eTail Asia 20228 min read

March 26, 2019   |   7 min read

5 Lessons to learn from eTail Asia 20228 min read

Reading Time: 7 minutes

Last week was super exciting for all of us at Vue.ai®. We had a great couple of days at eTail Asia, one of the largest ecommerce and digital marketing conferences for leading Asian retail innovators. We interacted with some of Asia’s biggest fashion brands, inspiring leaders in retail, got amazing insights about the Asian retail market and met some wonderful people that we want to build long-term relationships with.

Day 1 at eTail Asia started with an insightful opening keynote by Rex Cheuk, Head of Tmall group, Hong Kong who gave us a sneak peek into the opportunities at China and the incredible growth prospects. He also emphasized on the role data plays in retail strategy. The powerhouse panel with Under Armour, TopHatter, Moleskine and Canali spoke about the key differentiators of their business – for some, price ranked above value and ability and for others, it was the other end of the spectrum with the value being the standout factor.

We hosted an incredibly enlightening session on ‘THE AI PROMISE:  How AI and Computer Vision are trailblazing new paths for the retail sector’ with Marita Abraham of Zilingo and Anandamoy Roychowdhary, Director of Technology, Sequoia Capital. Our session focused on how retailers around the world can harness the power of retail automation to boost revenues and retain customers. We have tons of insight from our session and the various talks we attended at the event. Take a look!

Our uber cool merchandise at eTail Asia

Our Senior Vice President Patrick Giusti moderated a panel around the AI promise and how Zilingo sees AI as a game changer for their business and why Sequoia believes AI has a huge role on in the future of retail.

Lesson 1: Fashion is a lot more democratic – Social Media is dictating shopping decisions like never before

About 74% of customers’ shopping habits are influenced by social media and about 55% also depend on online reviews to make their decisions. Trends are constantly changing and are independent of traditional methods of measuring trends. In the Instagram era with game-changing technology and better accessibility, influencers and fashion bloggers set the trends as they relate to people better compared to a runway model. Anandamoy Roychowdhary shared some of his thoughts on this phenomenon.

“The distance between trendsetters and trend followers has never been smaller. That’s a huge driver in the fashion and retail industry. You’re gonna see much more weekly and daily trends. Only those who can keep up can survive.” – Anandamoy Roychowdhary, Director of Technology, Sequoia Capital

Lesson 2: Retailers are deploying AI across the fashion value chain

Did you know that over 75% of fashion retailers plan to invest in AI in 2018 and 2019? Forecasting trends is becoming increasingly critical in the era of hyper-adoption and hyper-abandonment. Bringing in new customers to the door is the goal of every ecommerce business and retaining them is essential for long term success.  Artificial Intelligence can particularly help with personalisation and omnichannel experience for brands to create an outstanding online brand presence. Marita Abraham, CMO at Zilingo, gave us an example of how forecasting can be done with AI to provide better customer experience.

“In fashion, buying is not methodical. They are all very impulsive decisions. Today I might wear a black dress, tomorrow I might want to wear pants. So personalized recommendations cannot be repetitive” – Marita Abraham

“We work with a lot of small businesses whose businesses heavily depend on trends – they can end up losing everything if they don’t forecast correctly. We want to use AI to empower even the smallest vendors” – Marita Abraham

“People are very specific about how they look in an outfit – it’s the instagram nature of fashion. The easier people can visualize an outfit, the more likely they are to buy it. This way, AI outfit recommendations by Vue.ai® play a big role” – Anandamoy Roychowdhary, Director of Technology, Sequoia Capital

Ecommerce brands cannot solely depend on their online presence nowadays. Experiential stores are slowly becoming the stores of the future and several brands, after the retail apocalypse are picking up and understanding that experience is everything.  Pure play online retailers are expanding to brick and mortar spaces, while physical stores believe that an e-commerce presence is equally necessary in reaching their shoppers.

Roger Yuen, the founder and CEO of Clozette sums it up – “Whether it  is going into a store, a shopping mall or online, the discovery element is strong. Some products work better online, some offline. The question is where are you spending your time & money?”

Wook Kwon, the Regional Head of Ecommerce experience at Levis believes that combining online & offline channels is crucial for success. “Some customers see price in store, compare online. Some customers are very shy to talk to store reps so they get more info online”

On our #VueRetailExperiences series on Instagram, we talked about Nordstrom Local, a pick-up only store for shoppers to speed up their experience and make it more convenient. Personalisation is key when it comes to online shopping and brands need to be more fastidious about understanding customer preferences and needs. Predicting what customers want goes way beyond just tracking runway trends and bestsellers.

We also attended several other insightful sessions at the event. One of our favourite talks,  “How to succeed as an eCommerce brand in an era of dominant e-tailers”, had some  eye-opening insights  from Warren Hayashi – President of Ayden (Asia Pacific), Roger Yuen – Founder and CEO of Clozette, Arun Kumar – Head of Digital Marketing at Carousell, Charmaine Chua – Head of Product at Love, Bonito, Wook Kwon – Regional Head of e-commerce at Levi Strauss & Co and Candice Ong – Chief Commercial Officer at ShopBack.

Lesson 3: Technology is the new differentiator for retail businesses

There’s product, there’s the business model – but to be able to stay ahead of the curve and continue to see success at scale, brands are betting on new technology to do the job. More importantly, the fashion influencer community is  growing by the day and social media buzz is accompanied with a lot of irrelevant noise and similar content. Consumers lose interest when they spend a lot of time online and not find what they are looking for or find clones of the same outfit. Personalised curations are becoming the norm and brands need to figure out how to deliver content in a way that’s engaging and exciting to their consumers. 

“In an industry where there’s so much noise you have to find a differentiator” – Sree Menon of tophatter talks about the importance of standing out for ecommerce platforms.

Lesson 4: If your marketing strategy has no context of your customers’ lives, you’re probably failing the CX game

Customer Experience is a hard nut to crack and Avis Easteal of LuxAsia, Poonpat Wattanavinit of aCommerce and Mahip Dwivedi of Flipkart gave us some excellent insights on perfecting the customer journey.

How many promotional emails do we actually read or even pay attention to skim through it? This practice can drastically change when you let the customer know that they actually matter. Rather than sending generic emails that either go to spam or the trash,  there’s a better way to get the attention of the consumer. By implementing personalised emails, brands can peek the interest of their target audience with relevant content.

On email marketing: “Context is important and we find that birthdays are wonderful. We get to know their age, a big data point & it allows us to personalize the message that we send on birthdays. We get 10-20% repeat purchases on birthday messages. It really works!” – Avis Easteal

“It’s very important for us to make absolutely sure that our emails don’t irritate you (the consumer). Because if we irritate you, you leave” – Avis Easteal

“We spend a lot of time listening to our customers and prioritise the feedback,” says Charmaine Chua of LoveBonito.

LoveBonito uses customer feedback to design better customer experiences. A lot of emphasis is placed on making the experience personal for each customer.

Arun Kumar of The Carousell talks about how their platform uses the power of AI to predict customer behaviour to serve them better. “How we win their hearts and minds really come down to knowing what they want what they need even before they do.”


Lesson 5: Consumers may love the convenience of new retail experiences but they don’t want to lose human touch entirely

Candice Ong of ShopBack also points out the importance of human touch in digital platforms. Online businesses have to be in constant touch with their customers to better understand their likes and dislikes.

“Losing human touch is not a good long term strategy. Taking care of advocates is very important. One area where we try to invest in is community engagement. Talking to customers face-to-face and understanding them is key.” Candice ONG Chief Commercial Officer, Shop Back.

The eTail Asia 2019 experience was nothing short of amazing. We had a star-studded panel featuring Marita Abraham, CMO of ZIlingo, Anandamoy Roychowdhary, CTO of Sequoia Capital and Patrick Giusti, SVP of Vue.ai® moderating the panel. eTail Asia was an incredible learning experience for us – whether it was understanding how brands in Asia are focused on customer experience, how they’re strategizing and tackling ecommerce competition, how they’re integrating new technology and solutions and create an exciting interactive digital and physical experiences – it was amazing and we hope to be back at the event next year!

We’ve got more in store for you. Here’s an excerpt from our session at eTail Asia “THE AI PROMISE:  How AI and Computer Vision are trailblazing new paths for the retail sector!


ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Vue.ai

Vue.ai engineers bespoke AI transformation roadmaps for enterprises across industries. Retailers to resellers, auto-extracting data from files to extrapolating fashion styles, 150+ conglomerates in five continents recruit Vue.ai. How can we help yours?