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Weaving the real-time web into brick-and-mortar retail

By | February 18, 2009, 3:13pm PST

Summary: Few retailers hook up their online presence to their brick-and-mortar outlets, and the minority that do rarely manage to match the quality of the online customer experience with the service levels their staff are equipped to offer in store.

When I walked into Circuit City in San Mateo last September to buy a Flip Mino pocket camcorder, the visit summed up the clash of the old and the new that retailers are facing in the digital age. The manufacturer’s website had referred the chain as a stockist, and my iPhone had helped me find my way to the nearest store. But I nearly walked out of there empty-handed because the assistant was having trouble finding the item on the shelves.

Circuit City has since gone out of business, along with a lengthening list of other familiar retail names. Another factor in many of these closures, according to one commentator writing about the demise of fitted kitchen and furniture chain MFI in the UK, is a focus on cost-cutting at the expense of staff skills and customer service. So long as consumers were flush with cash and almost limitless credit, retailers only had to open up shop and the takings would roll in. In today’s changed climate, I believe the retailers that have continued to invest in providing a good customer experience (provided they didn’t overextend their borrowings to do so) are the ones that will be best placed to survive.

Trouble is, the Web complicates the picture for retailers. For many purchases, consumers get a better customer experience from a well-automated website than they do from most retail stores. They can search easily, instantly see what’s in stock, look up product specifications and discover personalized suggestions and offers based on their browsing and buying history. Few retailers hook up their online presence to take advantage of the one clear benefit of a brick-and-mortar presence — the possibility for a consumer to drive a few blocks and pick up their purchase today — and the minority that do rarely manage to match the quality of the online customer experience with the service levels their staff are equipped to offer in store.

This is difficult enough for large retail chains — even those with deep pockets — but it’s a real challenge for the smaller retailers that often have the best record of personalized customer service in-store. How do they replicate that customer experience online without deprecating the service levels they’re able to offer in person? In that context, I was pleased to learn about last week’s launch by NetSuite of a new edition of the company’s on-demand business operations suite that’s been developed specifically to meet the needs of retailers that want to operate both online and on Main Street.

NetSuite’s integrated suite approach is particularly well suited to this kind of requirement, where an established business needs to get online, but in a way that dovetails neatly with its existing operations rather than the online presence becoming almost another competitor. Speaking as a consumer, I especially like features that connect the online and real-world outlets, such as the ability to order online for in-store pickup, or for a customer to return a faulty or misdelivered product to a different location from where it was purchased. There’s also support for individual customer self-service pages where customers can manage their account and check on delivery progress, amend outstanding orders or request returns.

As an industry watcher, I’m also interested to note that this offering has a partner dimension, with the real-time integration with what’s happening in-store provided by retail specialist OnSite. This means that any implementations of the new multi-channel retail edition are delivered by OnSite, which provides a point-of-sale swipe device (see picture) to collect data at each store and forward it to the on-demand application. The OnSite elements of the application have been developed and implemented on NetSuite’s on-demand development platform, NS-BOS.

Charter customers announced at launch last week include several examples of the kind of small retailers that I’d say deserve a chance to survive the downturn: Market Share, the operator of GetWirelessNow, a chain of eight cellular retailers in Connecticut and Rhode Island; EcoBox of Austin, Texas, which sells new and used packaging boxes through two retail outlets and online; and Wrigleyville Sports, which sells sports goods online and through retail outlets in Chicago and Pittsburgh.

Of course what’s been announced in this first iteration is just a foretaste of the kind of online-to-real-world interaction we could see in the future. I’m looking forward to the next generation of Web-enabled in-store solutions, when the iPhone in my pocket could alert me to offers and new lines as I’m strolling through the store or even passing nearby. But only so long as I’m in charge of that interaction. Retail automation has to serve the consumer as much as it helps the retailer. If it makes my life easier as a consumer while helping my favorite stores to thrive, then so much the better.

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Since 1998, Phil Wainewright has been a thought leader in cloud computing as a blogger, analyst and consultant.

Disclosure

Phil Wainewright

Phil Wainewright's work as an independent consultant brings him into direct or indirect business relationships with several of the companies that he writes about, or their competitors. Phil is committed to maintaining the independent and opinionated stance that his writings are well known for and does not enter into contracts that would limit his freedom of expression in any way. However it is important in the interests of full disclosure to inform readers of those relationships so they can form their own judgement.

Read the complete list of Phil's relationships.

Biography

Phil Wainewright

Since 1998, Phil Wainewright has been a thought leader in cloud computing as a blogger, analyst and consultant. He founded pioneering website ASPnews.com, and later Loosely Coupled, which covered enterprise adoption of web services and SOA. As CEO of strategic consulting group Procullux Ventures, he has developed an evaluation framework to help ISVs and enterprises select cloud platforms, and advises US and European vendors on messaging, positioning and go-to-market. His newest role as an industry advocate is vice-president of EuroCloud.

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RE: Weaving the real-time web into brick-and-mortar retail
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Great Product. Great Partner.
gscott1234 18th Feb 2009
NetSuite has a winner here - I've seen the solution first hand. I don't think there is another product in the mid-market that can compete - especially if one wants a SAAS platform. The multi-channel approach will allow any retailer to compete with the largest retailers out there. This software can support a serious multi-channel strategy in the 5 to 6 figure range vs. client/server systems in the 6 to 7 figure range.
0 Votes
+ -
Netsuite - buyer beware
bodyp Updated - 20th Feb 2009
We were about to become a customer of NetSuite and had the
opportunity to see the product and we liked it.

We wanted to use one of their resellers ( skyytek ). Netsuite seems to
have a good product but they also seem to have poor implementation
and support. We got caught in a ugly chain of events with Netsuite
not allowing us to purchase the software from the skyytek which we
found stupid and shady. I have an email from the rep at netsuite
stating that we must deal with him directly and not talking too well
about skyytek (which I found very un-professional). It seems
someone was protecting their own commission.

We decided not to purchase and went with another solution.

later I found out that Skyytek and NetSuite severed ties. Skyytek
(which was netsuite's largest reseller at the time) was partnered with
onsite because they delivered the netsuite license, the onsite software
and also implementation of both.

This column seems like a re-statement of what skyytek was doing.

After some digging around I have recently found out that Skyytek has
issued a legal complaint against NetSuite. I am not privy to that
complaint and wonder if all this is connected.

http://dockets.justia.com/docket/court-candce/case_no-
5:2009cv00594/case_id-211402/

I did hear from other partners of netsuite (rumors really) that royalty
payments on licenses are one of the issues. It seems Netsuite is not
paying them - maybe to become profitable ?.

I did try to contact skyytek directly but they refused to discuss.

Seems like a great david v goliath story. It seems partners have been
pushed around by Netsuite for a long time and I am glad to see a
company step up to the plate.

I also think skyytek should take note of the cisco case :

http://searchitchannel.techtarget.com/news/article/0,289142,sid96_
gci1318231,00.html#

$6million was awarded in the favor of the partner.

Buyer and Partner beware.

It would be great to see some good journalist/lawyer find out what
this legal issue is though ?

0 Votes
+ -
A little off-topic
gscott1234 Updated - 25th Feb 2009
Your comments are off-topic. This is promising software and this blog post has nothing to do with channel conflict - which most software companies inevitably have to deal with.
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