Shopper-Facing Retail Technology: An Adoption Decision Calculus (original) (raw)

Shopper-Facing Retail Technology: A Retailer Adoption Decision Framework Incorporating Shopper Attitudes and Privacy Concerns

Journal of Retailing, 2017

Continual innovation and new technology are critical in helping retailers' create a sustainable competitive advantage. In particular, shopperfacing technology plays an important role in increasing revenues and decreasing costs. In this article, we briefly discuss some of the salient retail technologies over the recent past as well as technologies that are only beginning to gain traction. Additionally, we present a shopper-centric decision calculus that retailers can use when considering a new shopper-facing technology. We argue that new technologies provide value by either increasing revenue through (a) attracting new shoppers, (b) increasing share of volume from existing shoppers, or (c) extracting greater consumer surplus, or decreasing costs through offloading labor to shoppers. Importantly, our framework incorporates shoppers by considering their perceptions of the new technology and their resulting behavioral reactions. Specifically, we argue that shoppers update their perceptions of fairness, value, satisfaction, trust, commitment, and attitudinal loyalty and evaluate the potential intrusiveness of the technology on their personal privacy. These perceptions then mediate the effect of the technology on shopper behavioral reactions such as retail patronage intentions and WOM communication. We present preliminary support for our framework by examining consumers' perceptions of several new retail technologies, as well as their behavioral intentions. The findings support our thesis that shopper perceptions of the retailer are affected by new shopper-facing technologies and that these reactions mediate behavioral intentions, which in turn drives the ROI of the new technology.

Retailing technology: do consumers care?

Spanish Journal of Marketing - ESIC, 2020

Purpose Disruptive retailing technologies improve productivity and cost optimization, but there is a lack of academic literature about their effects on shoppers’ perceptions and behaviors. This paper aims to develop and test a conceptual model regarding the effects of retail technology on store image and purchase intentions and to measure how human interaction services (HIS) moderate this relationship. Two relevant retail technologies are explored. Design/methodology/approach The results of this study indicate that retailing technology has notable influences on consumer perceptions. Thus, shopping technologies improve store image perceptions and increase purchase intention, moderated by HIS. Research limitations/implications Future field experiments in actual stores should attempt to corroborate the results of this study and offer greater internal validity. Practical implications The results should help reduce retailers’ resistance to technology adoption. In-store technology can hel...

The path-to-purchase is paved with digital opportunities: An inventory of shopper-oriented retail technologies

Technological Forecasting and Social Change

This study focuses on innovative ways to digitally instrument the servicescape in bricks-and-mortar retailing. In the present digital era, technological developments allow for augmenting the shopping experience and capturing moments-of-truth along the shopper's path-to-purchase. This article provides an encompassing inventory of retail technologies resulting from a systematic screening of three secondary data sources, over 2008-2016: (1) the academic marketing literature, (2) retailing related scientific ICT publications, and (3) business practices (e.g., publications from retail labs and R&D departments). An affinity diagram approach allows for clustering the retail technologies from an HCI perspective. Additionally, a categorization of the technologies takes place in terms of the type of shopping value that they offer, and the stage in the path-to-purchase they prevail. This indepth analysis results in a comprehensive inventory of retail technologies that allows for verifying the suitability of these technologies for targeted in-store shopper marketing objectives (cf. the resulting online faceted-search repository at www.retail-tech.org). The findings indicate that the majority of the inventoried technologies provide cost savings, convenience and utilitarian value, whereas few offer hedonic or symbolic benefits. Moreover, at present the earlier stages of the path-to-purchase appear to be the most instrumented. The article concludes with a research agenda.

Anticipating the impact of new technologies on retailing

Journal of Retailing and Consumer Services, 1996

This paper explores emerging technologies, such as electronic retailing and interactive shopping, and their impact on consumers, retailers and manufacturers. Potential opportunities and threats facing marketers and retailers who engage in business via the information superhighway are examined. Elements that will figure in the evolution of electronic retailing and interactive shopping such as convergence and synergy are discussed. Key concerns of ‘electronic’ consumers are also considered, including convenience, ease of use, and the opportunity to dialogue with retailers.

E-Commerce in a Physical Store: Which Retailing Technologies Add Real Value?

NIM Marketing Intelligence Review

To remain competitive in a connected world, offline retailers have responded with integrating digital in-store technologies into their physical servicescapes. Often, the introduction of multichannel connecting services like click & collect or order from or return to store are first steps. Shopper-facing advanced technologies can be key to creating a different physical shopping experience for consumers and delivering benefits to retailers such as improved traffic, conversion and baskets or streamlined operational cost. In general, consumers consider retailing technologies as useful. However, shoppers assess the fairness of the exchange about procedures, outcome and treatment and the value of the technology they receive compared to what the retailer gets. Also, satisfaction, trust and privacy concerns are relevant for customers. Retail managers need to ensure the functionality and safety of their application and take consumer concerns seriously. Also, they need to address privacy conc...

INTEGRATING ADVANCED TECHNOLOGIES IN RETAIL: A CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK FOR ENHANCING CONSUMER EXPERIENCE AND TRUST

International Journal of Engineering Technologies and Management Research, 2024

This study explores the integration of advanced technologies, such as Artificial Intelligence (AI), Augmented Reality (AR), and Big Data Analytics, in retail to enhance personalized consumer experiences while addressing privacy concerns. This research investigates the personalization-privacy paradox, where consumers value tailored recommendations but remain wary of data collection practices. Through a comprehensive literature review, this study developed a conceptual framework for responsibly integrating these technologies in retail. The framework illustrates how AI personalizes shopping experiences, AR enhances consumer engagement, and Big Data improves operational efficiency while also considering privacy issues. The key findings reveal that balancing personalized services with transparent data practices is essential for building consumer trust. This study emphasizes the importance of transparency and ethical data handling in mitigating privacy concerns and fostering a more consumer-centric retail environment. These insights contribute to retail strategies and provide practical guidance for leveraging cutting-edge technologies without compromising privacy, thereby highlighting the need for a balanced approach that maximizes the benefits of innovation while safeguarding consumer trust.

Interactive Technologies and Retailing Strategy: A Review, Conceptual Framework and Future Research Directions

Journal of Interactive Marketing, 2010

During the past decade, a number of interactive technologies, including the Internet, have fundamentally transformed how retailers compete in the marketplace. In a similar vein, emerging interactive technologies can be expected to significantly alter the retailing landscape through their impact on retailing strategy and operations. Furthermore, it is conceivable that certain emerging interactive technologies will be perceived by some retailers as enablers (tools to more effectively compete in the marketplace) and by other retailers as disruptors of the present ways of doing business. Interactive technologies can either be generic, a technology that is readily available from an information technology (IT) vendor and is widely adopted by retailers, or proprietary. An interactive technology that is proprietary can enable a firm to generate economic rents from the innovation for an extended duration of time. Investing in a generic interactive technology, however, may be perceived as a cost of doing business for a retailer, and not a potential source of sustainable competitive advantage. However, a retailer's complementary resource endowments may enable the retailer to more effectively leverage a generic technology relative to its competitors and thereby achieve a sustainable competitive advantage. In this paper, we review the related literature, develop a process model delineating the mechanisms by which an interactive technology can affect and necessitate changes in retailers' strategies and identify directions for future research.

Innovations in Shopper Marketing: Current Insights and Future Research Issues

2011

Shopper marketing refers to the planning and execution of all marketing activities that influence a shopper along, and beyond, the entire pathto-purchase, from the point at which the motivation to shop first emerges through to purchase, consumption, repurchase, and recommendation. The goal of shopper marketing is to enable a win-win-win solution for the shopper-retailer-manufacturer. Shopper marketing has emerged as a key managerial practice among manufacturers and retailers, who are eagerly embracing innovations in the different aspects of shopper marketing. We review current and potential innovations in shopper marketing. We identify the managerial challenges to achieving new win-win-win solutions among shoppers, manufacturers, and retailers in shopper marketing and outline future scenarios and research issues related to these challenges.

Understanding Consumer’s Acceptance of Technology-Based Innovations in Retailing

Journal of technology management & innovation, 2012

The availability of a huge number of studies about the Technology Acceptance Model (TAM) for predicting consumer's acceptance and usage of innovations in points of sale motivates writing of the present. Review, with emphasis on the new variables integrated in the traditional model. This is concerned with a synthesis of the current progresses in the field, thus offering a unified view of consumers' behaviour towards new technical solutions. Such synthesis is achieved from an extensive literature analysis, including computer science, innovation, human-computer interaction, and technology management perspectives. For each case, both opportunities and issues are outlined in order to advance the current knowledge and highlight what practitioners and scholars should take into account for developing new and efficient corporate strategies.