Retailanalytics IT
Retailanalytics IT
Retailanalytics IT
retail analytics?
It’s really quite simple.
There are a million things retailers have to stay on top of in the digital age, and simply
not enough time in the day.
Today’s retailers are facing a bevy of new challenges, including declining sales, fierce
competition from online-only stores, and changing consumer preferences. Yet, despite
these challenges, some traditional retailers are managing to grow year-over-year,
shredding previous sales records.
The winners are doing something different, something that not only helps them survive
but also thrive in this quickly unfolding retail apocalypse – advanced retail analytics.
According to McKinsey & Company, the reason some retailers are winning (while others
struggle) is advanced analytics. New research says that retailers using advanced
analytics outperform the competition by 68% in earnings — and the disparity is growing
exponentially.
But what exactly is “advanced analytics,” and how does it differ from regular old Excel
analysis?
To explain what makes advanced analytics in the retail industry so special, we need to
start at the beginning.
Virtually all retailers are doing some form of data analytics — even if they’re only
reviewing sales numbers on Excel. But there is a very big difference between an analyst
firing up Excel to sift through spreadsheets and using purpose-built AI to analyze billions
of data points at once.
To understand this difference, you first need to understand the 4 different types of retail
data analytics.
What are the Types of Retail Data
Analytics?
There are four types of retail data analytics that each play an important role in providing
today’s retailers with key insights into their business operations. The four different types
are;
Descriptive Analytics
Diagnostic Analytics
Predictive Analytics
Prescriptive Analytics
It works by bringing in raw data from multiple sources (POS terminals, inventory
systems, OMS, ERPs, etc.) to generate valuable insights into past and present
performance.
Traditionally, analysts did this manually in Excel; gathering data from different sources,
formatting it, charting it, etc. Today, a lot of this data gathering and reporting work can
be automated with BI tools and integrations.
Simply put, descriptive analytics uses data to describe “what” is happening in your
business. But it doesn’t do much to answer the “why” — unless combined with other
types of data analytics that can show patterns and correlations.
Taking the same raw data used in descriptive analytics, diagnostic analytics uses
statistical analysis, algorithms, and sometimes, machine learning, to drill deeper into the
data and find correlations between data points.
Diagnostic analytics can also be used to find anomalies and flag potential problems as
they happen (if results do not match pre-programmed benchmarks and business rules).
Historically, the most accomplished analysts did all of this manually. They would sift
through data, apply statistical models, look for patterns, and find correlations.
But in today’s data-heavy world, this is nearly impossible for a human to do. With
billions of data points and increasing complexity, larger retailers can’t effectively use
diagnostic analytics without machine learning and AI.
As you’ll find below, there are virtually no standalone “diagnostics” solutions for
retailers. This is because the fundamentals of diagnostic analytics (discovering hidden
relationships between variables in your business) is much better used to predict the
future and automate complex analysis.
If descriptive analytics shows you the “what” of what’s happening in your business, and
diagnostic analytics tells you the “why” — predictive analytics tells you “what’s next.”
This is the second most advanced type of analytics.
Effective predictive analytics uses findings from both descriptive and diagnostic
analytics to forecast the future. This is because to accurately predict what happens
next, you must first understand what’s already happened and what caused it.
Predictive analytics automatically detects clusters and exceptions and uses complex
algorithms and statistical methods to predict future trends.
Like other types of analytics, many retailers attempt to manually do this work, with
analysts compiling data in Excel and applying generic statistical models to project
trends into the future.
Unfortunately, retail businesses are very complex, and there are too many correlations
between factors (demand, price, inventory, product assortment, competitors, consumer
behaviour, etc.) for any human to account for all of them manually. That’s why simple
sales forecasts are much less accurate than demand forecasts.
Thus, to accurately forecast the future and account for the most important correlations,
retail predictive analytics must use a combination of AI, advanced mathematics, and
intelligent automation.
The previous types of analytics can tell retailers “what” is happening, “why” it happened,
and “what will happen next.” Prescriptive analytics can tell retailers “what you should do
next” to get the best results.
To make good recommendations, a prescriptive analytics system needs to not only
know what is likely to happen in the future but also needs to know what actions will lead
to the best possible future outcome.
This is a difficult proposition because there are a nearly infinite number of actions a
business can take to generate some change in the numbers.
Analytics can also help you understand what’s going on with your business in much
greater detail than you could otherwise.
As you grow, analyzing data needs to become a core part of your business to improve
decision-making and come up with effective retailing strategies.
It’s no surprise then, that there exists a massive, thriving industry for retail analytics
solutions. Below, we’ll discuss some of these applications, how they work, and what
benefits you could see from using them.
1. Business Intelligence
To effectively manage and organize their data, many businesses turn to Business
Intelligence tools. Because BI tools help you structure and visualize your data, they are
an example of descriptive analytics.
Many retailers conduct basic BI using native features in their ERP (Enterprise Resource
Planning) system, or by importing data directly into Microsoft Excel.
Power BI
Tableau
SAP
QlikView
Apache Spark
These applications support multiple data sources, appealing visualizations, and some
degree of data manipulation.
The most sophisticated BI usually involves data scientists that use programming
languages (like Python) that give them a greater degree of flexibility for data
manipulation, data visualization, and data modelling.
While valuable, all of the examples above require a lot of human input and are quite
time-consuming to manage. This is especially true for medium to large retailers running
hundreds or thousands of stores (and tens or hundreds of thousands of products). This
is why many retailers have dedicated teams of analysts in most departments to
generate reports.
By their sophistication, advanced analytics solutions like Retalon can often automate
most of the manual, repetitive tasks associated with traditional BI practices.
Simply put, sales forecasting is the process of looking at historical sales data, finding
trends, and projecting them into the future to predict sales.
This helps retailers with everything from purchasing inventory and managing their OTB
budgets to setting high-level financial targets for the company.
As the name suggests, sales forecasting is predictive in nature — and it is the most
rudimentary type of predictive analytics used by retailers.
Because businesses have been attempting to forecast sales for centuries, there are
many different approaches to doing so:
While sales forecasting is the backbone of many retail planning processes — this is
perhaps the biggest area of data analytics in need of an overhaul. This is because sales
forecasting is quite often inaccurate, and fails to account for the complexity of the retail
business.
For example, if retailers sold out of a product last year, most sales forecasting methods
would lead them to make the same mistake — even if they could potentially sell
substantially more.
For this reason, most sales forecasting has fallen out of vogue, replaced by more
sophisticated predictive analytics.
3. Demand Forecasting Software
As mentioned above, demand forecasting is a much more sophisticated type of
predictive analytics in use by retailers.
Rather than attempting to predict sales using merely historical sales data, demand
forecasting uses a much broader range of data to calculate the demand of each
product, at each store, at specific time intervals. This makes demand forecasting much
more accurate than traditional sales forecasting.
Historical pricing
Historical inventory
Assortment breadth and depth
Product clusters and families
Seasonality
Supply chain variability
Competitor activity
Consumer trends
Etc.
You can imagine how difficult it would be to manually compile, analyze, and model all of
this data for billions of unique Store / SKU combinations.
The best way retailers have to make use of demand forecasting is to find a retail
predictive analytics software vendor with a proven track record of working with
retailers in their vertical.
Using specialized software like this gives retailers a slew of benefits.
For example, you can test changing individual variables such as product price, new
store openings, new product launches (and others) to see the impact this might have on
your bottom line metrics — and adjust your inventory, prices or marketing strategy
accordingly.
Falling under the final type of analytics (prescriptive analytics), unified advanced
analytics aims to combine the benefits of business intelligence, powerful diagnostics,
and accurate demand forecasting with intelligent automation that recommends the most
profitable actions across the business.
Various solutions provide this level of advanced data analytics including Retalon’s retail
analytics platform, which leverages highly accurate demand forecast and advanced AI
to generate hundreds, thousands, or even millions of granular optimizations that
improve the bottom line.
Furthermore, this type of software is fully customizable and can be configured to auto-
accept certain suggestions or require human approval for others for more control.