“As consumer expectations increasingly cut across formats, the store shelf has extended from a physical object to the entire supply chain,” said JoAnn Martin, vice president, retail strategy, JDA. “The C-Suite recognizes that expanding fulfillment options to improve customer experiences and support the ‘anywhere shelf’ is critical to survival and growth, but our survey shows their digital supply chain capabilities may be severely underprepared for this change.”
According to the survey, 78 percent of those surveyed do not have a real-time view of inventory across channels, and half of respondents believe they do not have the right platforms and tools in place to support expanded fulfillment options. In addition, retailers still do not have a single source of truth for their data nor the human capital to derive insights, and nearly half (46 percent) do not trust their data.
The C-Suite demands targeted, high-impact strategies to circumnavigate their top transformation challenges with 48 percent working under the pressure of short-term goals and 41 percent combating organizational resistance to change. To meet customer expectations and evolve to the “Intelligent Enterprise,” concerned executives plan to invest in agility, intelligence and automation strategies and solutions.
“Even as retailers try to get to consumer parity, the C-Suite is impeded with core challenges. Digital transformation maturity and keeping up with the next evolution of retail, the Intelligent Enterprise, will require successfully shedding old habits and eschewing channel-centric thinking for a more holistic view of retail,” said Gaurav Pant, Chief Insights Officer at Incisiv. “The latest technologies such as cloud, artificial intelligence (AI) and the Internet of Things (IoT) are the key enablers of this transformation.”
With business agility gaining importance in the digitally transforming world, cloud-based solutions are now an integral part of IT architecture. Despite executives’ belief that the cloud has more than 2X the impact on business agility compared to any other technology and is a key driver of the Intelligent Enterprise, along with AI, the survey found that supply chain and store systems lag in cloud adoption. AI has both the highest rate of current experimentation (pilots) and expected future adoption across the C-Suite, with respondents stating they plan a 5X increase in the technology over the next two years.
Greg Jones, director of business strategy for retail at Microsoft, commented: “These survey results further validate the strategic imperative behind AI and cloud as transformative technologies for retailers to gain competitive advantage by truly unlocking value from customer data. Retailers must know their shoppers better than they know themselves, and the powerful technologies coming to the forefront for digital transformation are the way to get there.”