The DataHour Synopsis: Artificial Intelligence in Retail

Ankita Acharya 14 Jun, 2022 • 10 min read

Overview of Artificial Intelligence in Retail

Analytics Vidhya has long been at the forefront of imparting data science knowledge to its community. With the intent to make learning data science more engaging to the community, we began with our new initiative- “DataHour”.

DataHour is a series of webinars by top industry experts where they teach and democratize data science knowledge. On 28th April 2022, we were joined by Dr. Shanta Mohan for a DataHour session on “Artificial Intelligence in Retail”.

Dr. Shanta Mohan is a Mentor and Project Guide at the Integrated Innovation Institute of Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA. She co-founded Retail Solutions Inc. (RSi), a pioneering retail analytics company based in California, and ran its Global Product Development Team. 

She started her career with a Bachelor of Engineering (Hons.) in Electronics and Communication Engineering from the College of Engineering, Guindy. She pursued a PhD. in Operations Management at Tepper School of Management, Carnegie Mellon University. 

With an experience of close to 3 decades, Dr. Shantha worked in the Semiconductor industry. She worked in Software Engineering and led Kaveri Inc.’s professional services business as the CEO. She co-founded and led the global development team for Retail Solutions Inc. (RSi) for 13 years. 

Are you excited to dive deeper into the world of AI? We got you covered. Let’s get started with the major highlights of this session: Artificial Intelligence in Retail.

Introduction

The need to know technology and to get more technologically-advanced, altogether puts many challenges before us. And in this session, we’ll learn what kind of problems exist in artificial intelligence in retail, what are the opportunities, and then apply AI and machine learning to those problems. This datahour will focus only on how retail data is important to address many of the challenges that are present in retail. 

Retail means selling in small quantities to the ultimate consumer and industry of such selling. So, it has got several stakeholders, they are the one who provides these products and services, and those who sell these services to the retailers, and then to the consumers of the product. By applying AI and machine learning in this case study, we can find the flows and patterns of all those people. And then we can use those to make the process more efficient, and make the customer happier.

The Retail Industry Landscape and Challenges

The retail industry landscape focuses on three important dimensions, there can be many more but here we’ll focus mainly on:

  • Geographies
  •  Products
  •  Channels

Geographies: It deals with the whereabouts, or the particular location we are in. The location determines the challenges, and from this we can know what are the important criteria of that part/location.

Products: What kind of products in retail? The implications of this product, the challenges it encounters and what are the possible solutions one can think of. 

Channels: How these products get to the customers and what its supply chain creates in terms of its unique challenges. 

The Retail Industry Landscape and Challenges-Geographies

The Retail Industry has evolved a lot over the years depending on which part of the world you are in. In the West, you have all kinds of technological advances all in the way back in terms of beginning with the cash registers, credit cards, e-cash registers, information systems, w.w.w(world wide web), e-commerce, and most recently social media. These advances have made lots of differences in the western/developed worlds. And as early as 1962, when Wal-mart first opened BIG BOX retailing, things were never the same. Infact, now they don’t exist any longer though they do exist at a few places even today. 

In the developing world this phenomenon is new and developing. For example: in countries like India “the kirana/corner shops” is the lifeline of retail.

Now e-commerce has taken up a big way in most of the countries but it’s still not that popular as traditional kirana shops. E-commerce creates its own challenges and its own opportunities. The location determines the kind of focus the retail should have on servicing the customers. 

In the West, e.g. the US, the focus is on automating the stores, just to keep under control the cost of production as if the labour is expensive. Same principle led to the establishment of AmazonGo too.

Artificial Intelligence in retail

Source: Dr. Shanta Mohan presentation

 

And in developing countries, the focus is on how to make products and services available to customers more efficiently for a better price and how do we get goods to very remote locations in a more reliable and speedy manner.

The focus is different, though more often than technologies look at what’s happening in the developed part of the world and wanna bring it to the other parts too. The developing countries also always focus on adapting new technology as if it adds to their progress.

 The Retail Industry Landscape and Challenges-Products

 

The kind of products and services we get determine the kind of problems and challenges that the retailers and the suppliers encounter. 

Artificial Intelligence in retail

Images Source: Dr. Shanta Mohan presentation

The product characteristics determine how the supply chain is structured and what kind of issues that arise and how you get such products to the customers quickly such that their freshness or authenticity will be maintained.

The white goods such as fridge, A.C, etc, are the ones which we buy very few times during our lifetime compared to something  like fresh fruits which is perishable and has a short life span. So fresh fruits need to be delivered quickly as compared to white goods. 

Then apparel where we have consumers who have been attracted by these suppliers to buy a new fashion every season or more often. The kind of problems that arise in this sector is different because they are concerned more about servicing the customer with the latest. Same time there is a problem of wastage, eg, somebody may buy something over the internet and there is a size issue so return is initiated. So returns are a big problem in this industry.

The luxury good market here focuses on quality and customer experience. So, one does everything to meet customer expectations. 

Lastly, virtual products like Netflix, financial instruments, etc, have their own requirements on how to meet customer demands and keep their engagement.  

In  all of these the aim is to be able to provide goods and services as efficiently as possible to maintain the customer base to keep them from going away to some other retailer. Therefore, the kind of solutions you can develop with AI is very important.

The Retail Industry Landscape and Challenges-Channels

It’s mainly of three types:

  1. Brick & Mortar Retailers      
  2.  ECommerce
  3.  DTCs 

The Brick & Mortar Retailers: Walmart, COSTCO, and today’s Amazon are examples of this channel. Although Amazon is an e-commerce site, over time it understood the need for the physical presence of mart in order to keep itself in front of the customers as well as address some of the challenges that arise due to e-commerce.

The Brick & Mortar Retailers

Source: Dr. Shanta Mohan presentation

                                                

ECommerce: Alibaba, Flipkart, etc, are examples of this channel. It has its own advantages and challenges. The trick in crafting the AIML solution is to understand the advantages and address the challenges.

ECommerce | Artificial Intelligence in retail

Source: Dr. Shanta Mohan presentation

 

DTCs: Nestle, Cosper, etc are some of the examples of this channel. These cater to the customer directly. It benefits in knowing the customer more better and sum up the retailer who is providing the customers. The  whole idea behind AIML of having the data and being able to discover about your customer is very appealing. 

Importance of Data

Importance of Data

Source: Dr. Shanta Mohan presentation

 

 

Without data no transformations can be performed. So to do so you need to search  data, collect it, make sure data collected is relevant and then apply analytics in order to understand what you can do with the insights found in the data. 

Importance of Data- Collaboration

Importance of Data- Collaboration

Source: Dr. Shanta Mohan presentation

 

 

In retail, collaboration is the key in order to get benefit . It’s a collaboration because each entity is the main stakeholder in retail space and owns part of the data. For example, retailers have data such as inventory data,  predicting data about customer buying patterns, etc. This data is called master data that has to be there for both retailers and suppliers to make sense of any insights that you get from the data. So, it’s not enough to have only transaction data of the sale, in order to understand it better, collaboration is important. It benefits all including the customer. 

Importance of Data- Types of Data

zTypes of Data

Source: Dr. Shanta Mohan presentation

                                           

The types of data we deal with in retail:

  1. Structured( spreadsheet, relational database): This data is easy to deal with. But with the increase in data AI-ML comes into picture.
  2. Next is unstructured data including emails to customer support and social media where customers give their feedback, etc.
  3. Today, it’s about Internet-of-things. You get data in such volumes that you have to make sure that your systems are set up to take that data in and then be able to process them efficiently for better insights.

Importance of Data- Quality of Data

One principle applies when we talk about data i.e., garbage in, garbage out and if your data is not good enough to derive insights the data is useless.

In early days it used to be 3V’s of data:

  • Volume: It’s about the size of the data.
  • Velocity: It’s the speed at which the data comes at you, you should be able to deal with it and turn it to insights. For example, recommended products online.
  • Variety

Presently, this 3V’s of data has been converted into 10 V’s of data.

3 and 10 V's of Data

Source: Dr. Shanta Mohan presentation

 

Retail Use Cases

Brick & Mortar Stores – Cashierless

Brick & Mortar Stores - Cashierless

Source: Dr. Shanta Mohan presentation

It helps in automating, making the product available in a frictionless experience where you can just walk-in to the store, either shop or not, and walk-out. There are no queues, no cash points, detectors and used technology will automatically perform their functions before you exit. For example: amazon go, 7/11, etc.

In order to survive in the business, stores need to innovate. 

For example: ALDI an global retailers have innovated itself to survive in the market. If you wanna buy alcohol here they are monitoring your face and decide accordingly.

Another example is WATASALE announced in 2018 in India but today either they are vanquished or don’t exist.

Brick & Mortar Stores – Apparel, Beauty

Brick & Mortar Stores - Apparel, Beauty

Source: Dr. Shanta Mohan presentation

                       

The challenges they have is AI enabled smart mirrors. For example, Lenskart uses this technology. This is done to get better faster sales and perfect customer satisfaction.

ECommerce Stores

These use AI in different ways such as chatbots. Earlier chatbots were home-based but now with AI they are more enhanced and are robotic. 

Earlier there used to be a Test-to-test method that has shifted to voice-to -text now such as Alexa, Siri, etc.

Recommendation systems : Recommendations showed to us on social media, this happens because of AIML. Through collaborative filtering  your data such as which product you were searching for last, your buying pattern, etc will be traced and accordingly your feed will be managed that too involves you as well as similar users like you. Another is content based filtering that doesn’t involve other users but focuses solely only on your behavior. 

Today’s better system combines both collaborative filtering and content based filtering.

Supply Chain Management

Supply Chain Management

Source: Dr. Shanta Mohan presentation

 

There are two supply chain:

First one and the traditional one involves supplier, distributor, retailer, delivery, last customer. In this the supplier supplies the material to the distributor, distributor to retailer, retailer to delivery or directly to customer.

Second comprises the supplier and the customer. The supplier itself provides delivery of the product and services to the customers. 

The supply chain problems can be best monitored with the AIML help. The supplier can invoke AI to check whether the product is reaching the customer on the promised date or not, what will be the best way to use to do delivery fast, and how to manage returns. AIML use makes all this long process a little simpler and faster.

Responsible Retailing 

Responsible Retailing | Artificial Intelligence in retail

Source: Dr. Shanta Mohan presentation

                                                     

As per the records, the E-commerce penetration in retail has doubled since 2020. It adds to a retailer’s carbon footprint. The increasing need for fast delivery has added up to an increased carbon footprint because in order to deliver at the earliest the club delivery concept is vanishing nowadays. Resulting in more shipping numbers and packaging issues. If retailers ship all the items in one go, then this could reduce carbon footprint to a great extent.

Responsible Retailing includes:

  1. Encourage in-store pickup
  2. Minimize total customer travel
  3. Reduce dedicated customer trips
  4. Ship from local stores

For example UPS, it’s a kind of delivery van which uses AIML. AI helps the driver in discovering the most efficient way of delivering the product.

Future of AI/ML in Retailing

Future of AI/ML in retailing | Artificial Intelligence in retail

Source: Dr. Shanta Mohan presentation

 

There are going to be so many new technologies to come:

  • EDGE computing
  • Drones: helping last-mile delivery
  • Robots: Managing inventory-warehouses
  • Voice-to-voice technology

Conclusion on Artificial Intelligence in Retail

I hope you enjoyed the session on Artificial Intelligence in retail and understood it very well. I hope by employing the use cases I provided you with a clear understanding of Artificial Intelligence in retail.

Ankita Acharya 14 Jun 2022

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