EMBRACING CHINA’S “NEW RETAIL”
As online, offline and logistics merge, some brands are pulling ahead by redefining consumers, merchandise and stores.
ALIRESEARCH and BAIN & COMPANY
2018
The era of “New Retail” that Alibaba founder Jack Ma envisioned is starting to emerge across China in ways that
promise big gains for consumer products companies that act decisively and systematically while causing others to
lag behind.
In 2016, Ma predicted a seamless merger of offline, online and logistics for a dynamic new world of retailing.
His vision now can be seen in the millions of mom-and-pop stores throughout China that are taking on new life as order-and-delivery stations for e-commerce.
It is there in the booming food delivery platforms such as
Hema, which fulfills more than half of its orders online.
And you can glimpse it in China’s ubiquitous mobile
payments. Chinese consumers use their phones for 60 times more mobile payments than consumers in the US do.
Findings from a recent PwC Consumer Intelligence Series (CIS) survey of 15,000 global consumers confirm that technology will remain central to retailers' ability to understand and predict customer behavior. But none of these high-tech capabilities would be possible without people.
Go-to browsing channels vary
*(38%) start on Amazon
* (35%) search engines
* (21%) brand or retaile web sites
* (6%) e-Commerce marketplaces, such as eBay and Etsy
Findings from a recent PwC Consumer Intelligence Series (CIS) survey of 15,000 global consumers confirm that technology will remain central to retailers' ability to understand and predict customer behavior. But none of these high-tech capabilities would be possible without people.
Go-to browsing channels vary
*(38%) start on Amazon
* (35%) search engines
* (21%) brand or retaile web sites
* (6%) e-Commerce marketplaces, such as eBay and Etsy
Remodista RetailSource Paper - The Seamless Commerce ExperienceRemodista
A customer journey describes how a customer travels from point of entry to point of sale, but with today’s technology-driven upheavals in consumer behavior, the path can take many twists and turns through virtual and in-person experiences—it’s not a straight line. We struggle with the multiple channels, the numerous points of entry and the endless technology changes as buyers come in to the funnel. But have we thought enough about where the money actually exchanges hands (or exchanges accounts)?
Customers don’t just buy when they’re standing at the cash register in a brick-and-mortar store—mobile technologies and online commerce empower our customers to make purchases wherever and whenever they choose. At Remodista, we know we’ve got to stay on our toes to understand how technology is revolutionizing purchasing habits. Luckily, technology is simultaneously handing retailers a game-changing tool: big data.
10 Digital Commerce Trends from the Fashion and Apparel, 2020 ReportAlaina Carter
COVID-19 made this season quite unfashionable as, just like other industries, the fashion industry also faced the consequences of this pandemic. Thanks to digital transformation, the fashion and apparel industry has a fair chance to bounce back. Read more to know what are the 10 Digital commerce trends from the fashion and clothing, 2020 report.
The evolution of marketing from a product or services centric model to a consumer centric model, based on the solutions marketing platform, ensuring value to the consumer and the marketer
Integrated Marketing Communications Campaign:
- Proposed brand positioning, product offerings, and detailed implementation methods for a client's new business venture
- Completed for the course ADV4800 at the University of Florida
- The team for which I was the Group Lead/Account Executive won Best Strategic Plan
All across Asia, Latin America and Africa, sales channels are proliferating and demographics are changing. Could collaboration between brands and retailers transform the fragmented landscape?
In “Brands and Retailers Should Team Up in Emerging Markets,” Strategy& retail experts Nikhil Bhandare, Pali Tripathi, and Aparajita Kapoor say collaboration provides both short and long-term benefits. And they recommend several ways companies can partner, including: data-driven collaboration, co-branded advertisements and the use of real-time POS data.
Here are four clear paths for winning over—and retaining—customers in the digital era. For more from s+b, see: http://www.strategy-business.com/marketing_media_sales.
The Tasks of Marketing in the Digital EraYogeshIJTSRD
This article has a qualitative approach, where the main challenges that Marketing areas have in the era of disruptive technologies are raised. At the same time, it examines the opportunities offered by the same technologies to deal with the capture, management and treatment of large volumes of information dispersed in different sources, whose heterogeneous, unstructured data concentrates the basic elements to develop invaluable information to the departments Marketing, given that there would be obtained market trends, attributes and ideal characteristics to develop products and services tailored to consumers. Asqar Samadov "The Tasks of Marketing in the Digital Era" Published in International Journal of Trend in Scientific Research and Development (ijtsrd), ISSN: 2456-6470, Volume-5 | Issue-4 , June 2021, URL: https://www.ijtsrd.compapers/ijtsrd41164.pdf Paper URL: https://www.ijtsrd.comeconomics/market-economy/41164/the-tasks-of-marketing-in-the-digital-era/asqar-samadov
Informes PwC - Encuesta Total Retail GlobalPwC España
El informe "Hacia un modelo de Total Retail", elaborado por PwC, analiza las expectativas y hábitos de consumo del comprador online, a partir de 15.000 entrevistas a compradores digitales de todo el mundo, y las implicaciones para las compañías del sector de distribución y consumo en los próximos años.
7-Step D2C Distribution Takeover Approach | FlowprimeFlowprime
Find out how to take over your direct-2-customer distribution and stop being dependent on 3PLs. Flowprime has developed a 7-step strategy for D2C-proof warehouses:
1. Increase picking efficiency by selecting an optimal method for each process.
2. Enable continuous delivery creation.
3. Group orders that should be processed alike.
4. Build a fast lane through your warehouse.
5. Allow real flexibility & transparency for customers.
6. Accelerate the outflow with a pack-and-go process.
7. Build a complete returns process in the warehouse.
Contact us now and we will give you one free consultation:
ARNULF HORNBACH
+49 152 536 742 54
info@flowprime.de
www.flowprime.de
The ultimate guide to the new buyers journeyMarketBridge
At MarketBridge we have the privilege of working with hundreds of marketing and sales leaders every month. In those discussions one thing is abundantly clear: the customer buying journey is rapidly changing and organizations are struggling to keep up.
These dramatic shifts in buying behavior are well documented; independent research by Gartner and Forrester suggests that by 2020,
DEFINING THE FUTURE READY ORGANISATION
Shopping is potentially the area of human behaviour that has been most widely changed by digital technology. Today’s shopper expects their experience to be invisibly shaped around them, at any time, at their fingertips. This report explores how.
Remodista RetailSource Paper - The Seamless Commerce ExperienceRemodista
A customer journey describes how a customer travels from point of entry to point of sale, but with today’s technology-driven upheavals in consumer behavior, the path can take many twists and turns through virtual and in-person experiences—it’s not a straight line. We struggle with the multiple channels, the numerous points of entry and the endless technology changes as buyers come in to the funnel. But have we thought enough about where the money actually exchanges hands (or exchanges accounts)?
Customers don’t just buy when they’re standing at the cash register in a brick-and-mortar store—mobile technologies and online commerce empower our customers to make purchases wherever and whenever they choose. At Remodista, we know we’ve got to stay on our toes to understand how technology is revolutionizing purchasing habits. Luckily, technology is simultaneously handing retailers a game-changing tool: big data.
10 Digital Commerce Trends from the Fashion and Apparel, 2020 ReportAlaina Carter
COVID-19 made this season quite unfashionable as, just like other industries, the fashion industry also faced the consequences of this pandemic. Thanks to digital transformation, the fashion and apparel industry has a fair chance to bounce back. Read more to know what are the 10 Digital commerce trends from the fashion and clothing, 2020 report.
The evolution of marketing from a product or services centric model to a consumer centric model, based on the solutions marketing platform, ensuring value to the consumer and the marketer
Integrated Marketing Communications Campaign:
- Proposed brand positioning, product offerings, and detailed implementation methods for a client's new business venture
- Completed for the course ADV4800 at the University of Florida
- The team for which I was the Group Lead/Account Executive won Best Strategic Plan
All across Asia, Latin America and Africa, sales channels are proliferating and demographics are changing. Could collaboration between brands and retailers transform the fragmented landscape?
In “Brands and Retailers Should Team Up in Emerging Markets,” Strategy& retail experts Nikhil Bhandare, Pali Tripathi, and Aparajita Kapoor say collaboration provides both short and long-term benefits. And they recommend several ways companies can partner, including: data-driven collaboration, co-branded advertisements and the use of real-time POS data.
Here are four clear paths for winning over—and retaining—customers in the digital era. For more from s+b, see: http://www.strategy-business.com/marketing_media_sales.
The Tasks of Marketing in the Digital EraYogeshIJTSRD
This article has a qualitative approach, where the main challenges that Marketing areas have in the era of disruptive technologies are raised. At the same time, it examines the opportunities offered by the same technologies to deal with the capture, management and treatment of large volumes of information dispersed in different sources, whose heterogeneous, unstructured data concentrates the basic elements to develop invaluable information to the departments Marketing, given that there would be obtained market trends, attributes and ideal characteristics to develop products and services tailored to consumers. Asqar Samadov "The Tasks of Marketing in the Digital Era" Published in International Journal of Trend in Scientific Research and Development (ijtsrd), ISSN: 2456-6470, Volume-5 | Issue-4 , June 2021, URL: https://www.ijtsrd.compapers/ijtsrd41164.pdf Paper URL: https://www.ijtsrd.comeconomics/market-economy/41164/the-tasks-of-marketing-in-the-digital-era/asqar-samadov
Informes PwC - Encuesta Total Retail GlobalPwC España
El informe "Hacia un modelo de Total Retail", elaborado por PwC, analiza las expectativas y hábitos de consumo del comprador online, a partir de 15.000 entrevistas a compradores digitales de todo el mundo, y las implicaciones para las compañías del sector de distribución y consumo en los próximos años.
7-Step D2C Distribution Takeover Approach | FlowprimeFlowprime
Find out how to take over your direct-2-customer distribution and stop being dependent on 3PLs. Flowprime has developed a 7-step strategy for D2C-proof warehouses:
1. Increase picking efficiency by selecting an optimal method for each process.
2. Enable continuous delivery creation.
3. Group orders that should be processed alike.
4. Build a fast lane through your warehouse.
5. Allow real flexibility & transparency for customers.
6. Accelerate the outflow with a pack-and-go process.
7. Build a complete returns process in the warehouse.
Contact us now and we will give you one free consultation:
ARNULF HORNBACH
+49 152 536 742 54
info@flowprime.de
www.flowprime.de
The ultimate guide to the new buyers journeyMarketBridge
At MarketBridge we have the privilege of working with hundreds of marketing and sales leaders every month. In those discussions one thing is abundantly clear: the customer buying journey is rapidly changing and organizations are struggling to keep up.
These dramatic shifts in buying behavior are well documented; independent research by Gartner and Forrester suggests that by 2020,
DEFINING THE FUTURE READY ORGANISATION
Shopping is potentially the area of human behaviour that has been most widely changed by digital technology. Today’s shopper expects their experience to be invisibly shaped around them, at any time, at their fingertips. This report explores how.
360° Customer Capture - Enabling Retailers to Deliver a Complete Shopping Experience. Now!
TechVista provides a unified approach that reduces complexity for Retailers, allowing them to focus on connecting with customers and empowering their employees across all channels that allows them the flexibility necessary to respond quickly to the needs of your customers. TechVista empowers Retailers to deliver a complete shopping experience – personal, seamless, and differentiated – by helping them create a complete 360-degree view of the customer.
Informe de PwC sobre las expectativas y hábitos de consumo del comprador onlineMaría Bretón Gallego
El informe Hacia un modelo de ‘Total Retail’, elaborado por PwC, analiza las expectativas y hábitos de consumo del comprador online, a partir de 15.000 entrevistas a compradores digitales de todo el mundo, y las implicaciones para las compañías del sector de distribución y consumo en los próximos años.
Internet y las nuevas tecnologías han multiplicado la influencia del consumidor, pero, ¿qué les están pidiendo a las marcas? Las nuevas expectativas y hábitos del consumidor digital tendrán importantes implicaciones para las compañías del sector en los próximos años
Through precise location analytics, retailers now can monitor the entire path to purchase. With this data, marketers better understand what led to the purchase providing the ability to move beyond the traditional blanketed “campaign” to a year-round interaction based on consumer behavior. Customers “opt-in” by mobile app to receive highly-targeted promotions, information about merchandise they may have “visited” but didn’t purchase, and discounts for major events – based on correlations like visits, dwell and intent – to drive sales like never before.
RIS November tech solutions guide - analyticsiinside
Through precise location analytics, retailers now can monitor the entire path to purchase. With this data, marketers better understand what led to the purchase providing the ability to move beyond the traditional blanketed “campaign” to a year-round interaction based on consumer behavior. Customers “opt-in” by mobile app to receive highly-targeted promotions, information about merchandise they may have “visited” but didn’t purchase, and discounts for major events – based on correlations like visits, dwell and intent – to drive sales like never before.
Presented by Socialight Media Marketing
2015 Top Trends in B2B Social Marketing -- explore actionable insights regarding the biggest shifts in social marketing.
Contained within the report are answers to these questions:
-How is social marketing strategy changing in 2015?
-What are the new rules in content marketing?
-How are businesses adjusting their technology and process?
-Why is mobile so important for B2B marketers today?
-How are ad dollars shifting to social in 2015?
2015 Top Trends in B2B Social Marketing and explore actionable insights regarding the biggest shifts in social marketing.
Contained within the report are answers to these questions:
-How is social marketing strategy changing in 2015?
-What are the new rules in content marketing?
-How are businesses adjusting their technology and process?
-Why is mobile so important for B2B marketers today?
-How are ad dollars shifting to social in 2015?
It all starts with the customer. In business, this
has always been true. But today there is a
new breed of customer who is dictating a new
set of terms in the dynamic between buyers
and sellers.
Similar to ALIRESEARCH | 2018 | EMBRACING CHINA'S "NEW RETAIL" (20)
Stati Generali del Turismo 2022 | Chianciano 28_29 ottobre 2022 | Programma.pdfBTO Educational
Ministero del Turismo
Stati Generali del Turismo
1a Conferenza Programmatica Nazionale
Una nuova visione dell’industria del turismo
Parco Acqua Santa a Chianciano
venerdì 28 e sabato 29 ottobre 2022
Programma
Camminare, voce del verbo conoscere. Lungo il Sentiero Calabria ala scoperta di Luoghi, Culture, Tradizioni
https://scientificwte.it/event/sentiero-calabria/
WTE World Tourism Event for World Heritage Sites
XIIIa Edizione Consecutiva, da giovedì 15 a sabato 17 settembre 2022
A VERONA, Palazzo della Gran Guardia in piazza Bra, proprio di fronte all'Arena
https://scientificwte.it/
L’itinerario del Sentiero Calabria è costituito dal tratto calabrese del Sentiero Italia e dai percorsi, o piste interne, denominati sentieri di avvicinamento, utilizzati per la fruizione naturalistica e ambientale delle aree protette.
Il percorso che attraversa i Parchi Nazionali dell’Aspromonte, della Sila e del Pollino ed il Parco Regionale delle Serre, rappresenta il percorso escursionistico principale per la fruizione del patrimonio naturale, paesaggistico e storico-culturale delle aree interne della Calabria.
Il “Sentiero Calabria” nasce dall’idea di collegare l’intero territorio regionale con un unico percorso costituito da 35 tappe, cercando di creare un’offerta strutturata con i servizi integrati nel territorio.
Il sentiero, i cui tratti sono in larga parte coincidenti con quelli del “Sentiero Italia”, è un percorso escursionistico che, percorrendo longitudinalmente la regione, collega le aree naturalistiche, i borghi e le aree protette che da Reggio Calabria, attraversando tutto il Parco Nazionale dell’Aspromonte, il Parco Regionale delle Serre ed il Parco Nazionale della Sila, giunge fino al Parco Nazionale del Pollino.
Camminare, voce del verbo conoscere. Lungo il Sentiero Calabria ala scoperta di Luoghi, Culture, Tradizioni
https://scientificwte.it/event/sentiero-calabria/
WTE World Tourism Event for World Heritage Sites
XIIIa Edizione Consecutiva, da giovedì 15 a sabato 17 settembre 2022
A VERONA, Palazzo della Gran Guardia in piazza Bra, proprio di fronte all'Arena
https://scientificwte.it/
L’itinerario del Sentiero Calabria è costituito dal tratto calabrese del Sentiero Italia e dai percorsi, o piste interne, denominati sentieri di avvicinamento, utilizzati per la fruizione naturalistica e ambientale delle aree protette.
Il percorso che attraversa i Parchi Nazionali dell’Aspromonte, della Sila e del Pollino ed il Parco Regionale delle Serre, rappresenta il percorso escursionistico principale per la fruizione del patrimonio naturale, paesaggistico e storico-culturale delle aree interne della Calabria.
Il “Sentiero Calabria” nasce dall’idea di collegare l’intero territorio regionale con un unico percorso costituito da 35 tappe, cercando di creare un’offerta strutturata con i servizi integrati nel territorio.
Il sentiero, i cui tratti sono in larga parte coincidenti con quelli del “Sentiero Italia”, è un percorso escursionistico che, percorrendo longitudinalmente la regione, collega le aree naturalistiche, i borghi e le aree protette che da Reggio Calabria, attraversando tutto il Parco Nazionale dell’Aspromonte, il Parco Regionale delle Serre ed il Parco Nazionale della Sila, giunge fino al Parco Nazionale del Pollino.
Report di monitoraggio di Matera Capitale Europea della Cultura 2019 | Gennai...BTO Educational
Report di monitoraggio di Matera Capitale Europea della Cultura 2019.
Aggiornamento di gennaio 2021.
Argomento trattato dall'[EX] Presidente della Fondazione di Partecipazione Matera-Basilicata al WTE World Tourism Event for World Heritage Sites, Xa Edizione consecutiva a Palazzo Venezia a Roma da giovedì 26 a sabato 28 settembre 2019
https://scientificwte.it/rewind-2019/
https://scientificwte.it/event/la-citta/
https://scientificwte.it
Valutazione di Palermo Capitale Italiana della Cultura 2018 | ReportBTO Educational
Valutazione di Palermo Capitale Italiana della Cultura 2018 | Report
Argomento trattato dall'[EX] Assessore alle CulturE, Spazi Museali ed espositivi, Toponomastica, Beni comuni, Partecipazione democratica e Consulte della Città di Palermo Adham Darawsha
https://scientificwte.it/rewind-2019/
https://scientificwte.it/event/la-citta/
https://scientificwte.it
Valutazione di Palermo Capitale Italiana della Cultura 2018 | Executive SummaryBTO Educational
Valutazione di Palermo Capitale Italiana della Cultura 2018
Gli effetti dell’iniziativa sul territorio, sul partenariato istituzionale e sul sentiment di Palermo
Executive Summary
Argomento trattato dall'[EX] Assessore alle CulturE, Spazi Museali ed espositivi, Toponomastica, Beni comuni, Partecipazione democratica e Consulte della Città di Palermo Adham Darawsha
https://scientificwte.it/rewind-2019/
https://scientificwte.it/event/la-citta/
https://scientificwte.it
FactorYmpresa Turismo
L'accelerathon della sfida ACCESSIBILE!
Roma, 27 e 28 settembre 2019
Coffee House di Palazzo Colonna
Sala Altoviti del percorso museale di Palazzo Venezia
https://scientific.wtevent.it/la-sfida-accessibile/innvovatori/
http://www.factorympresa.invitalia.it
AROUNDHELP
Aroundhelp si prende cura di chi è in condizioni di fragilità per salute e si deve spostare per motivi di cura (medical tourism), chi è anziano con malattie croniche, ma ancora desideroso di viaggiare sicuro e/o che vuole mantenersi in forma (active aging), chi è anziano con difficoltà motorie temporanee o permanenti e deve poter contare e accedere ad una rete di servizi completa e verificata.
20 team d’innovatori in startup hanno presentato la propria idea imprenditoriale davanti alla giuria di FactorYmpresa Turismo: è la fase finale di un Accelerathon che ha coinvolto le migliori idee selezionate da INVITALIA | L’Agenzia per lo Sviluppo attraverso una call pubblica, ognuno di loro ha avuto a disposizione 3 minuti per il proprio pitch, ai primi 10 premi in denaro per una dotazione finanziaria complessiva di € 100.000 e servizi d’accompagnamento al mercato.
FactorYmpresa Turismo è un programma d’incentivi partito nel 2017 con la Direzione Turismo del Ministero dei beni e delle attività culturali e del turismo MiBACT.
La sfida ACCESSIBILE!
La SFIDA: offrire servizi innovativi per l’accessibilità fisica, generazionale e culturale dei luoghi e dei territori, aprendoli alla valorizzazione turistica per tutti. Individuare le barriere e proporre soluzioni per superarle, al fine di ampliare il più possibile la fruibilità del nostro Paese ai viaggiatori che richiedono servizi specifici in ragione dei propri bisogni.
FactorYmpresa Turismo è andata a focalizzare con la sfida ACCESSIBILE! l’attenzione sull’accessibilità alla fruizione turistica per tutti i viaggiatori: si è trattato di pensare a soluzioni in grado di abbattere ogni ostacolo legato a condizioni di età, di salute, fisiche, di ceto sociale e di livello culturale, dando la possibilità ai visitatori di fruire liberamente il territorio ed i servizi turistici, comprendere e interpretare la storia, la complessità e la varietà del patrimonio materiale e immateriale del Paese.
FactorYmpresa Turismo
L'accelerathon della sfida ACCESSIBILE!
Roma, 27 e 28 settembre 2019
Coffee House di Palazzo Colonna
Sala Altoviti del percorso museale di Palazzo Venezia
https://scientific.wtevent.it/la-sfida-accessibile/innvovatori/
http://www.factorympresa.invitalia.it
WE MOVE ON
App creata con lo scopo di promuovere l’autonomia degli spostamenti per persone con disabilità e la mobilità sostenibile all’interno della città di Venezia. We Move On informa sull’esistenza di percorsi accessibili e sulla presenza di ostacoli, barriere architettoniche, acqua alta, dislivelli, ponti, affollamenti e altre difficoltà; accompagna le persone lungo itinerari più adatti a seconda delle diverse disabilità; fa scoprire i percorsi accessibili e gli edifici di interesse pubblico, monumenti, chiese, servizi e luoghi inediti; suggerisce i trasporti acquei migliori in base alla destinazione.
20 team d’innovatori in startup hanno presentato la propria idea imprenditoriale davanti alla giuria di FactorYmpresa Turismo: è la fase finale di un Accelerathon che ha coinvolto le migliori idee selezionate da INVITALIA | L’Agenzia per lo Sviluppo attraverso una call pubblica, ognuno di loro ha avuto a disposizione 3 minuti per il proprio pitch, ai primi 10 premi in denaro per una dotazione finanziaria complessiva di € 100.000 e servizi d’accompagnamento al mercato.
FactorYmpresa Turismo è un programma d’incentivi partito nel 2017 con la Direzione Turismo del Ministero dei beni e delle attività culturali e del turismo MiBACT.
La sfida ACCESSIBILE!
La SFIDA: offrire servizi innovativi per l’accessibilità fisica, generazionale e culturale dei luoghi e dei territori, aprendoli alla valorizzazione turistica per tutti. Individuare le barriere e proporre soluzioni per superarle, al fine di ampliare il più possibile la fruibilità del nostro Paese ai viaggiatori che richiedono servizi specifici in ragione dei propri bisogni.
FactorYmpresa Turismo è andata a focalizzare con la sfida ACCESSIBILE! l’attenzione sull’accessibilità alla fruizione turistica per tutti i viaggiatori: si è trattato di pensare a soluzioni in grado di abbattere ogni ostacolo legato a condizioni di età, di salute, fisiche, di ceto sociale e di livello culturale, dando la possibilità ai visitatori di fruire liberamente il territorio ed i servizi turistici, comprendere e interpretare la storia, la complessità e la varietà del patrimonio materiale e immateriale del Paese.
FactorYmpresa Turismo
L'accelerathon della sfida ACCESSIBILE!
Roma, 27 e 28 settembre 2019
Coffee House di Palazzo Colonna
Sala Altoviti del percorso museale di Palazzo Venezia
https://scientific.wtevent.it/la-sfida-accessibile/innvovatori/
http://www.factorympresa.invitalia.it
TRAVELLY
Travelly è l’agenzia di viaggio online per genitori single dove trovare proposte di viaggi di gruppo in base all’età dei figli, alla disponibilità economica e alla destinazione. Sulla piattaforma online è possibile trovare proposte preconfezionate di vacanze di gruppo o creare un annuncio per la ricerca di compagni di viaggio per la vacanza già prenotata.
20 team d’innovatori in startup hanno presentato la propria idea imprenditoriale davanti alla giuria di FactorYmpresa Turismo: è la fase finale di un Accelerathon che ha coinvolto le migliori idee selezionate da INVITALIA | L’Agenzia per lo Sviluppo attraverso una call pubblica, ognuno di loro ha avuto a disposizione 3 minuti per il proprio pitch, ai primi 10 premi in denaro per una dotazione finanziaria complessiva di € 100.000 e servizi d’accompagnamento al mercato.
FactorYmpresa Turismo è un programma d’incentivi partito nel 2017 con la Direzione Turismo del Ministero dei beni e delle attività culturali e del turismo MiBACT.
La sfida ACCESSIBILE!
La SFIDA: offrire servizi innovativi per l’accessibilità fisica, generazionale e culturale dei luoghi e dei territori, aprendoli alla valorizzazione turistica per tutti. Individuare le barriere e proporre soluzioni per superarle, al fine di ampliare il più possibile la fruibilità del nostro Paese ai viaggiatori che richiedono servizi specifici in ragione dei propri bisogni.
FactorYmpresa Turismo è andata a focalizzare con la sfida ACCESSIBILE! l’attenzione sull’accessibilità alla fruizione turistica per tutti i viaggiatori: si è trattato di pensare a soluzioni in grado di abbattere ogni ostacolo legato a condizioni di età, di salute, fisiche, di ceto sociale e di livello culturale, dando la possibilità ai visitatori di fruire liberamente il territorio ed i servizi turistici, comprendere e interpretare la storia, la complessità e la varietà del patrimonio materiale e immateriale del Paese.
FactorYmpresa Turismo
L'accelerathon della sfida ACCESSIBILE!
Roma, 27 e 28 settembre 2019
Coffee House di Palazzo Colonna
Sala Altoviti del percorso museale di Palazzo Venezia
https://scientific.wtevent.it/la-sfida-accessibile/innvovatori/
http://www.factorympresa.invitalia.it
N.I.C.O.
N.i.c.o. è un’applicazione che punta alla trasformazione digitale del territorio attraverso lo sviluppo di una soluzione capace di andare incontro agli utenti con esigenze specifiche. Si rivolge principalmente ad utenti ipovedenti e non vedenti al fine di coinvolgerli in un’esperienza culturale stimolante rendendoli autonomi, con l’obiettivo di migliorare il loro soggiorno nelle città scelte.
20 team d’innovatori in startup hanno presentato la propria idea imprenditoriale davanti alla giuria di FactorYmpresa Turismo: è la fase finale di un Accelerathon che ha coinvolto le migliori idee selezionate da INVITALIA | L’Agenzia per lo Sviluppo attraverso una call pubblica, ognuno di loro ha avuto a disposizione 3 minuti per il proprio pitch, ai primi 10 premi in denaro per una dotazione finanziaria complessiva di € 100.000 e servizi d’accompagnamento al mercato.
FactorYmpresa Turismo è un programma d’incentivi partito nel 2017 con la Direzione Turismo del Ministero dei beni e delle attività culturali e del turismo MiBACT.
La sfida ACCESSIBILE!
La SFIDA: offrire servizi innovativi per l’accessibilità fisica, generazionale e culturale dei luoghi e dei territori, aprendoli alla valorizzazione turistica per tutti. Individuare le barriere e proporre soluzioni per superarle, al fine di ampliare il più possibile la fruibilità del nostro Paese ai viaggiatori che richiedono servizi specifici in ragione dei propri bisogni.
FactorYmpresa Turismo è andata a focalizzare con la sfida ACCESSIBILE! l’attenzione sull’accessibilità alla fruizione turistica per tutti i viaggiatori: si è trattato di pensare a soluzioni in grado di abbattere ogni ostacolo legato a condizioni di età, di salute, fisiche, di ceto sociale e di livello culturale, dando la possibilità ai visitatori di fruire liberamente il territorio ed i servizi turistici, comprendere e interpretare la storia, la complessità e la varietà del patrimonio materiale e immateriale del Paese.
FactorYmpresa Turismo
L'accelerathon della sfida ACCESSIBILE!
Roma, 27 e 28 settembre 2019
Coffee House di Palazzo Colonna
Sala Altoviti del percorso museale di Palazzo Venezia
https://scientific.wtevent.it/la-sfida-accessibile/innvovatori/
http://www.factorympresa.invitalia.it
MONUGRAM
Una mobile app che, sfruttando algoritmi di Intelligenza Artificiale e Computer Vision, riconosce e descrive qualsiasi monumento e luogo di interesse scattandone semplicemente una foto e che propone le migliori opzioni di attività ed esperienze turistiche connesse. Monugram inoltre permette di tenere costantemente traccia dello stato di avanzamento di un viaggio attraverso una specifica sezione che funge da “travel management”, nella quale vengono riportati tutti gli step relativi al viaggio: trasporti, albergo, escursioni e altro.
20 team d’innovatori in startup hanno presentato la propria idea imprenditoriale davanti alla giuria di FactorYmpresa Turismo: è la fase finale di un Accelerathon che ha coinvolto le migliori idee selezionate da INVITALIA | L’Agenzia per lo Sviluppo attraverso una call pubblica, ognuno di loro ha avuto a disposizione 3 minuti per il proprio pitch, ai primi 10 premi in denaro per una dotazione finanziaria complessiva di € 100.000 e servizi d’accompagnamento al mercato.
FactorYmpresa Turismo è un programma d’incentivi partito nel 2017 con la Direzione Turismo del Ministero dei beni e delle attività culturali e del turismo MiBACT.
La sfida ACCESSIBILE!
La SFIDA: offrire servizi innovativi per l’accessibilità fisica, generazionale e culturale dei luoghi e dei territori, aprendoli alla valorizzazione turistica per tutti. Individuare le barriere e proporre soluzioni per superarle, al fine di ampliare il più possibile la fruibilità del nostro Paese ai viaggiatori che richiedono servizi specifici in ragione dei propri bisogni.
FactorYmpresa Turismo è andata a focalizzare con la sfida ACCESSIBILE! l’attenzione sull’accessibilità alla fruizione turistica per tutti i viaggiatori: si è trattato di pensare a soluzioni in grado di abbattere ogni ostacolo legato a condizioni di età, di salute, fisiche, di ceto sociale e di livello culturale, dando la possibilità ai visitatori di fruire liberamente il territorio ed i servizi turistici, comprendere e interpretare la storia, la complessità e la varietà del patrimonio materiale e immateriale del Paese.
FactorYmpresa Turismo
L'accelerathon della sfida ACCESSIBILE!
Roma, 27 e 28 settembre 2019
Coffee House di Palazzo Colonna
Sala Altoviti del percorso museale di Palazzo Venezia
https://scientific.wtevent.it/la-sfida-accessibile/innvovatori/
http://www.factorympresa.invitalia.it
EUROPASS ITALY
EuroPass si propone di attirare e guidare i turisti cinesi in viaggio in Italia ed Europa. Le difficoltà legate alla lingua, alle abitudini, ai metodi di pagamento creano spesso incomprensioni e difficoltà per questo segmento di turismo, sempre più importante per l’Italia e in continua crescita. EuroPass si propone quindi di abbattere questa barriera attraverso un miniapp su WeChat, la WeChat Travel Experience: una guida geolocalizzata con tutte le informazioni per i turisti, attrazioni, shopping e hospitality, a portata di click.
20 team d’innovatori in startup hanno presentato la propria idea imprenditoriale davanti alla giuria di FactorYmpresa Turismo: è la fase finale di un Accelerathon che ha coinvolto le migliori idee selezionate da INVITALIA | L’Agenzia per lo Sviluppo attraverso una call pubblica, ognuno di loro ha avuto a disposizione 3 minuti per il proprio pitch, ai primi 10 premi in denaro per una dotazione finanziaria complessiva di € 100.000 e servizi d’accompagnamento al mercato.
FactorYmpresa Turismo è un programma d’incentivi partito nel 2017 con la Direzione Turismo del Ministero dei beni e delle attività culturali e del turismo MiBACT.
La sfida ACCESSIBILE!
La SFIDA: offrire servizi innovativi per l’accessibilità fisica, generazionale e culturale dei luoghi e dei territori, aprendoli alla valorizzazione turistica per tutti. Individuare le barriere e proporre soluzioni per superarle, al fine di ampliare il più possibile la fruibilità del nostro Paese ai viaggiatori che richiedono servizi specifici in ragione dei propri bisogni.
FactorYmpresa Turismo è andata a focalizzare con la sfida ACCESSIBILE! l’attenzione sull’accessibilità alla fruizione turistica per tutti i viaggiatori: si è trattato di pensare a soluzioni in grado di abbattere ogni ostacolo legato a condizioni di età, di salute, fisiche, di ceto sociale e di livello culturale, dando la possibilità ai visitatori di fruire liberamente il territorio ed i servizi turistici, comprendere e interpretare la storia, la complessità e la varietà del patrimonio materiale e immateriale del Paese.
FactorYmpresa Turismo
L'accelerathon della sfida ACCESSIBILE!
Roma, 27 e 28 settembre 2019
Coffee House di Palazzo Colonna
Sala Altoviti del percorso museale di Palazzo Venezia
https://scientific.wtevent.it/la-sfida-accessibile/innvovatori/
http://www.factorympresa.invitalia.it
DUPLICART
Duplicart vuole far vivere la bellezza del patrimonio artistico italiano a tutti, anche a coloro che, per motivi di disabilità fisica o psichica, ne sono esclusi. Per perseguire questo obiettivo si avvale delle tecnologie più all’avanguardia nel campo della scansione digitale delle opere d’arte e della loro visualizzazione in realtà virtuale e aumentata, così da portare nelle case di tutti dei modelli 3D con un altissimo grado di fedeltà all’originale.
20 team d’innovatori in startup hanno presentato la propria idea imprenditoriale davanti alla giuria di FactorYmpresa Turismo: è la fase finale di un Accelerathon che ha coinvolto le migliori idee selezionate da INVITALIA | L’Agenzia per lo Sviluppo attraverso una call pubblica, ognuno di loro ha avuto a disposizione 3 minuti per il proprio pitch, ai primi 10 premi in denaro per una dotazione finanziaria complessiva di € 100.000 e servizi d’accompagnamento al mercato.
FactorYmpresa Turismo è un programma d’incentivi partito nel 2017 con la Direzione Turismo del Ministero dei beni e delle attività culturali e del turismo MiBACT.
La sfida ACCESSIBILE!
La SFIDA: offrire servizi innovativi per l’accessibilità fisica, generazionale e culturale dei luoghi e dei territori, aprendoli alla valorizzazione turistica per tutti. Individuare le barriere e proporre soluzioni per superarle, al fine di ampliare il più possibile la fruibilità del nostro Paese ai viaggiatori che richiedono servizi specifici in ragione dei propri bisogni.
FactorYmpresa Turismo è andata a focalizzare con la sfida ACCESSIBILE! l’attenzione sull’accessibilità alla fruizione turistica per tutti i viaggiatori: si è trattato di pensare a soluzioni in grado di abbattere ogni ostacolo legato a condizioni di età, di salute, fisiche, di ceto sociale e di livello culturale, dando la possibilità ai visitatori di fruire liberamente il territorio ed i servizi turistici, comprendere e interpretare la storia, la complessità e la varietà del patrimonio materiale e immateriale del Paese.
FactorYmpresa Turismo
L'accelerathon della sfida ACCESSIBILE!
Roma, 27 e 28 settembre 2019
Coffee House di Palazzo Colonna
Sala Altoviti del percorso museale di Palazzo Venezia
https://scientific.wtevent.it/la-sfida-accessibile/innvovatori/
http://www.factorympresa.invitalia.it
BOOKINGBILITY
E’ un sito web per la ricerca e la prenotazione in tempo reale di strutture ricettive adatte a ospitare persone disabili e con esigenze speciali. Selezionando soltanto strutture realmente accessibili, Bookingbility incentiva la fruizione delle mete turistiche, aumentandone i flussi, la permanenza media e l’inclusione sociale di un target spesso escluso.
20 team d’innovatori in startup hanno presentato la propria idea imprenditoriale davanti alla giuria di FactorYmpresa Turismo: è la fase finale di un Accelerathon che ha coinvolto le migliori idee selezionate da INVITALIA | L’Agenzia per lo Sviluppo attraverso una call pubblica, ognuno di loro ha avuto a disposizione 3 minuti per il proprio pitch, ai primi 10 premi in denaro per una dotazione finanziaria complessiva di € 100.000 e servizi d’accompagnamento al mercato.
FactorYmpresa Turismo è un programma d’incentivi partito nel 2017 con la Direzione Turismo del Ministero dei beni e delle attività culturali e del turismo MiBACT.
La sfida ACCESSIBILE!
La SFIDA: offrire servizi innovativi per l’accessibilità fisica, generazionale e culturale dei luoghi e dei territori, aprendoli alla valorizzazione turistica per tutti. Individuare le barriere e proporre soluzioni per superarle, al fine di ampliare il più possibile la fruibilità del nostro Paese ai viaggiatori che richiedono servizi specifici in ragione dei propri bisogni.
FactorYmpresa Turismo è andata a focalizzare con la sfida ACCESSIBILE! l’attenzione sull’accessibilità alla fruizione turistica per tutti i viaggiatori: si è trattato di pensare a soluzioni in grado di abbattere ogni ostacolo legato a condizioni di età, di salute, fisiche, di ceto sociale e di livello culturale, dando la possibilità ai visitatori di fruire liberamente il territorio ed i servizi turistici, comprendere e interpretare la storia, la complessità e la varietà del patrimonio materiale e immateriale del Paese.
FactorYmpresa Turismo
L'accelerathon della sfida ACCESSIBILE!
Roma, 27 e 28 settembre 2019
Coffee House di Palazzo Colonna
Sala Altoviti del percorso museale di Palazzo Venezia
https://scientific.wtevent.it/la-sfida-accessibile/innvovatori/
http://www.factorympresa.invitalia.it
DISHCOVERY
Dishcovery è una web app che permette ai ristoranti di creare il loro menù digitale multilingua ed interattivo e ai loro ospiti stranieri di leggere il menù nella loro lingua, senza scaricare nessuna app e offrendo preziose informazioni sulla cultura culinaria. I menù digitali non offrono solo la traduzione: gli ospiti potranno vedere anche la descrizione degli ingredienti, i piatti, gli abbinamenti consigliati e molto altro.
20 team d’innovatori in startup hanno presentato la propria idea imprenditoriale davanti alla giuria di FactorYmpresa Turismo: è la fase finale di un Accelerathon che ha coinvolto le migliori idee selezionate da INVITALIA | L’Agenzia per lo Sviluppo attraverso una call pubblica, ognuno di loro ha avuto a disposizione 3 minuti per il proprio pitch, ai primi 10 premi in denaro per una dotazione finanziaria complessiva di € 100.000 e servizi d’accompagnamento al mercato.
FactorYmpresa Turismo è un programma d’incentivi partito nel 2017 con la Direzione Turismo del Ministero dei beni e delle attività culturali e del turismo MiBACT.
La sfida ACCESSIBILE!
La SFIDA: offrire servizi innovativi per l’accessibilità fisica, generazionale e culturale dei luoghi e dei territori, aprendoli alla valorizzazione turistica per tutti. Individuare le barriere e proporre soluzioni per superarle, al fine di ampliare il più possibile la fruibilità del nostro Paese ai viaggiatori che richiedono servizi specifici in ragione dei propri bisogni.
FactorYmpresa Turismo è andata a focalizzare con la sfida ACCESSIBILE! l’attenzione sull’accessibilità alla fruizione turistica per tutti i viaggiatori: si è trattato di pensare a soluzioni in grado di abbattere ogni ostacolo legato a condizioni di età, di salute, fisiche, di ceto sociale e di livello culturale, dando la possibilità ai visitatori di fruire liberamente il territorio ed i servizi turistici, comprendere e interpretare la storia, la complessità e la varietà del patrimonio materiale e immateriale del Paese.
FactorYmpresa Turismo
L'accelerathon della sfida ACCESSIBILE!
Roma, 27 e 28 settembre 2019
Coffee House di Palazzo Colonna
Sala Altoviti del percorso museale di Palazzo Venezia
https://scientific.wtevent.it/la-sfida-accessibile/innvovatori/
http://www.factorympresa.invitalia.it
BABAIOLA
Babaiola è il primo LGBT social travel in Europa. Gli utenti utilizzano l’ App mobile o il Sito web Babaiola come piattaforma dove reperire informazioni quali: le zone più gay friendly (LGBT) delle città, eventi dedicati, club, hotel gay friendly e per interagire con oltre 20K iscritti per trovare compagni di viaggio e/o fare nuove amicizie.
20 team d’innovatori in startup hanno presentato la propria idea imprenditoriale davanti alla giuria di FactorYmpresa Turismo: è la fase finale di un Accelerathon che ha coinvolto le migliori idee selezionate da INVITALIA | L’Agenzia per lo Sviluppo attraverso una call pubblica, ognuno di loro ha avuto a disposizione 3 minuti per il proprio pitch, ai primi 10 premi in denaro per una dotazione finanziaria complessiva di € 100.000 e servizi d’accompagnamento al mercato.
FactorYmpresa Turismo è un programma d’incentivi partito nel 2017 con la Direzione Turismo del Ministero dei beni e delle attività culturali e del turismo MiBACT.
La sfida ACCESSIBILE!
La SFIDA: offrire servizi innovativi per l’accessibilità fisica, generazionale e culturale dei luoghi e dei territori, aprendoli alla valorizzazione turistica per tutti. Individuare le barriere e proporre soluzioni per superarle, al fine di ampliare il più possibile la fruibilità del nostro Paese ai viaggiatori che richiedono servizi specifici in ragione dei propri bisogni.
FactorYmpresa Turismo è andata a focalizzare con la sfida ACCESSIBILE! l’attenzione sull’accessibilità alla fruizione turistica per tutti i viaggiatori: si è trattato di pensare a soluzioni in grado di abbattere ogni ostacolo legato a condizioni di età, di salute, fisiche, di ceto sociale e di livello culturale, dando la possibilità ai visitatori di fruire liberamente il territorio ed i servizi turistici, comprendere e interpretare la storia, la complessità e la varietà del patrimonio materiale e immateriale del Paese.
ARTPLACE MUSEUM | FactorYmpresa Turismo | AccessibileBTO Educational
FactorYmpresa Turismo
L'accelerathon della sfida ACCESSIBILE!
Roma, 27 e 28 settembre 2019
Coffee House di Palazzo Colonna
Sala Altoviti del percorso museale di Palazzo Venezia
https://scientific.wtevent.it/la-sfida-accessibile/innvovatori/
http://www.factorympresa.invitalia.it
ARTPLACE MUSEUM
Palazzi storici, edifici religiosi, musei ed il paesaggio stesso compongono, infatti, un patrimonio di inestimabile ricchezza da valorizzare e da comunicare, anche e soprattutto attraverso le nuove tecnologie. Con tale finalità nasce Artplace Museum, la prima applicazione iBeacon-ready sviluppata appositamente per “dare voce” a questo patrimonio e ideata come un network per la condivisione di un numero sempre crescente di musei e punti di interesse digitalizzati.
20 team d’innovatori in startup hanno presentato la propria idea imprenditoriale davanti alla giuria di FactorYmpresa Turismo: è la fase finale di un Accelerathon che ha coinvolto le migliori idee selezionate da INVITALIA | L’Agenzia per lo Sviluppo attraverso una call pubblica, ognuno di loro ha avuto a disposizione 3 minuti per il proprio pitch, ai primi 10 premi in denaro per una dotazione finanziaria complessiva di € 100.000 e servizi d’accompagnamento al mercato.
FactorYmpresa Turismo è un programma d’incentivi partito nel 2017 con la Direzione Turismo del Ministero dei beni e delle attività culturali e del turismo MiBACT.
La sfida ACCESSIBILE!
La SFIDA: offrire servizi innovativi per l’accessibilità fisica, generazionale e culturale dei luoghi e dei territori, aprendoli alla valorizzazione turistica per tutti. Individuare le barriere e proporre soluzioni per superarle, al fine di ampliare il più possibile la fruibilità del nostro Paese ai viaggiatori che richiedono servizi specifici in ragione dei propri bisogni.
FactorYmpresa Turismo è andata a focalizzare con la sfida ACCESSIBILE! l’attenzione sull’accessibilità alla fruizione turistica per tutti i viaggiatori: si è trattato di pensare a soluzioni in grado di abbattere ogni ostacolo legato a condizioni di età, di salute, fisiche, di ceto sociale e di livello culturale, dando la possibilità ai visitatori di fruire liberamente il territorio ed i servizi turistici, comprendere e interpretare la storia, la complessità e la varietà del patrimonio materiale e immateriale del Paese.
WTE 2019 | Focus Città e Siti UNESCO
https://scientific.wtevent.it
Splendide notizie dalla Costiera Amalfitana!
Sala Cinesi Grande di Palazzo Venezia, a Roma
Venerdì 27 settembre | 10.45 : 11.15
https://scientific.wtevent.it/sessions/costa-amalfi/
Praiano naturarte
Roberto Pontecorvo
co-ideatore Praiano Naturarte
https://scientific.wtevent.it/relatori/roberto-pontecorvo/
A Roma, Palazzo Venezia giovedì 26, venerdì 27 e sabato 28 settembre per un evento che ha mantenuto la promessa di restituire spunti rilevanti per rinnovati modelli di management e per un efficace valorizzazione e promozione sostenibile dell’offerta culturale materiale e immateriale anche in chiave di crescita dell’economia del turismo, favorire la connessione con progetti innovativi e il networking tra persone.
PAOLA CASAGRANDE | Piemonte UNESCO | Settembre 2019BTO Educational
WTE 2019 | Focus Città e Siti UNESCO
https://scientific.wtevent.it
Città Contemporanee: IVREA, Città Industriale del XX Secolo
Sala Cinesi Grande di Palazzo Venezia, a Roma
Venerdì 27 settembre | 14.30 : 15.20
https://scientific.wtevent.it/sessions/ivrea/
Il Piemonte UNESCO
Paola Casagrande
Direttore Direzione Generale Turismo, Cultura e Sport Regione Piemonte
https://scientific.wtevent.it/relatori/paola-casagrande/
A Roma, Palazzo Venezia giovedì 26, venerdì 27 e sabato 28 settembre per un evento che ha mantenuto la promessa di restituire spunti rilevanti per rinnovati modelli di management e per un efficace valorizzazione e promozione sostenibile dell’offerta culturale materiale e immateriale anche in chiave di crescita dell’economia del turismo, favorire la connessione con progetti innovativi e il networking tra persone.
RENATO LAVARINI | Ivrea Citta industriale del XX secolo | UNESCO 2019BTO Educational
WTE 2019 | Focus Città e Siti UNESCO
https://scientific.wtevent.it
Città Contemporanee: IVREA, Città Industriale del XX Secolo
Sala Cinesi Grande di Palazzo Venezia, a Roma
Venerdì 27 settembre | 14.30 : 15.20
https://scientific.wtevent.it/sessions/ivrea/
Ivrea Città industriale del XX secolo
Renato Lavarini
Capo Gabinetto Comune di Ivrea
https://scientific.wtevent.it/relatori/renato-lavarini/
A Roma, Palazzo Venezia giovedì 26, venerdì 27 e sabato 28 settembre per un evento che ha mantenuto la promessa di restituire spunti rilevanti per rinnovati modelli di management e per un efficace valorizzazione e promozione sostenibile dell’offerta culturale materiale e immateriale anche in chiave di crescita dell’economia del turismo, favorire la connessione con progetti innovativi e il networking tra persone.
Mastering Local SEO for Service Businesses in the AI Era is tailored specifically for local service providers like plumbers, dentists, and others seeking to dominate their local search landscape. This session delves into leveraging AI advancements to enhance your online visibility and search rankings through the Content Factory model, designed for creating high-impact, SEO-driven content. Discover the Dollar-a-Day advertising strategy, a cost-effective approach to boost your local SEO efforts and attract more customers with minimal investment. Gain practical insights on optimizing your online presence to meet the specific needs of local service seekers, ensuring your business not only appears but stands out in local searches. This concise, action-oriented workshop is your roadmap to navigating the complexities of digital marketing in the AI age, driving more leads, conversions, and ultimately, success for your local service business.
Key Takeaways:
Embrace AI for Local SEO: Learn to harness the power of AI technologies to optimize your website and content for local search. Understand the pivotal role AI plays in analyzing search trends and consumer behavior, enabling you to tailor your SEO strategies to meet the specific demands of your target local audience. Leverage the Content Factory Model: Discover the step-by-step process of creating SEO-optimized content at scale. This approach ensures a steady stream of high-quality content that engages local customers and boosts your search rankings. Get an action guide on implementing this model, complete with templates and scheduling strategies to maintain a consistent online presence. Maximize ROI with Dollar-a-Day Advertising: Dive into the cost-effective Dollar-a-Day advertising strategy that amplifies your visibility in local searches without breaking the bank. Learn how to strategically allocate your budget across platforms to target potential local customers effectively. The session includes an action guide on setting up, monitoring, and optimizing your ad campaigns to ensure maximum impact with minimal investment.
A.I. (artificial intelligence) platforms are popping up all the time, and many of them can and should be used to help grow your brand, increase your sales and decrease your marketing costs.In this presentation:We will review some of the best AI platforms that are available for you to use.We will interact with some of the platforms in real-time, so attendees can see how they work.We will also look at some current brands that are using AI to help them create marketing messages, saving them time and money in the process. Lastly, we will discuss the pros and cons of using AI in marketing & branding and have a lively conversation that includes comments from the audience.
Key Takeaways:
Attendees will learn about LLM platforms, like ChatGPT, and how they work, with preset examples and real time interactions with the platform. Attendees will learn about other AI platforms that are creating graphic design elements at the push of a button...pre-set examples and real-time interactions.Attendees will discuss the pros & cons of AI in marketing + branding and share their perspectives with one another. Attendees will learn about the cost savings and the time savings associated with using AI, should they choose to.
First Things First: Building and Effective Marketing Strategy
Too many companies (and marketers) jump straight into activation planning without formalizing a marketing strategy. It may seem tedious, but analyzing the mindset of your targeted audiences and identifying the messaging points most likely to resonate with them is time well spent. That process is also a great opportunity for marketers to collaborate with sales leaders and account managers on a galvanized go-to-market approach. I’ll walk you through the methods and tools we use with our clients to ensure campaign success.
Key Takeaways:
-Recognize the critical role of strategy in marketing
-Learn our approach for building an actionable, effective marketing strategy
-Receive templates and guides for developing a marketing strategy
Is AI-Generated Content the Future of Content Creation?Cut-the-SaaS
Discover the transformative power of AI in content creation with our presentation, "Is AI-Generated Content the Future of Content Creation?" by Puran Parsani, CEO & Editor of Cut-The-SaaS. Learn how AI-generated content is revolutionizing marketing, publishing, education, healthcare, and finance by offering unprecedented efficiency, creativity, and scalability.
Understanding
AI-Generated Content:
AI-generated content includes text, images, videos, and audio produced by AI without direct human involvement. This technology leverages large datasets to create contextually relevant and coherent material, streamlining content production.
Key Benefits:
Content Creation: Rapidly generate high-quality content for blogs, articles, and social media.
Brainstorming: AI simulates conversations to inspire creative ideas.
Research Assistance: Efficiently summarize and research information.
Market Insights:
The content marketing industry is projected to grow to $17.6 billion by 2032, with AI-generated content expected to dominate over 55% of the market.
Case Study: CNET’s AI Content Controversy:
CNET’s use of AI for news articles led to public scrutiny due to factual inaccuracies, highlighting the need for transparency and human oversight.
Benefits Across Industries:
Marketing: Personalize content at scale and optimize engagement with predictive analytics.
Publishing: Automate content creation for faster publication cycles.
Education: Efficiently generate educational materials.
Healthcare: Create accurate content for patients and professionals.
Finance: Produce timely financial content for decision-making.
Challenges and Ethical Considerations:
Transparency: Disclose AI use to maintain trust.
Bias: Address potential AI biases with diverse datasets.
SEO: Ensure AI content meets SEO standards.
Quality: Maintain high standards to prevent misinformation.
Conclusion:
AI-generated content offers significant benefits in efficiency, personalization, and scalability. However, ethical considerations and quality assurance are crucial for responsible use. Explore the future of content creation with us and see how AI is transforming various industries.
Connect with Us:
Follow Cut-The-SaaS on LinkedIn, Instagram, YouTube, Twitter, and Medium. Visit cut-the-saas.com for more insights and resources.
The Secret to Engaging Modern Consumers: Journey Mapping and Personalization
In today's digital landscape, understanding the customer's journey and delivering personalized experiences are paramount. This masterclass delves into the art of consumer journey mapping, a powerful technique that visualizes the entire customer experience across touchpoints. Attendees will learn how to create detailed journey maps, identify pain points, and uncover opportunities for optimization. The presentation also explores personalization strategies that leverage data and technology to tailor content, products, and experiences to individual customers. From real-time personalization to predictive analytics, attendees will gain insights into cutting-edge approaches that drive engagement and loyalty.
Key Takeaways:
Current consumer landscape; Steps to mapping an effective consumer journey; Understanding the value of personalization; Integrating mapping and personalization for success; Brands that are getting It right!; Best Practices; Future Trends
Mastering Multi-Touchpoint Content Strategy: Navigate Fragmented User JourneysSearch Engine Journal
Digital platforms are constantly multiplying, and with that, user engagement is becoming more intricate and fragmented.
So how do you effectively navigate distributing and tailoring your content across these various touchpoints?
Watch this webinar as we dive into the evolving landscape of content strategy tailored for today's fragmented user journeys. Understanding how to deliver your content to your users is more crucial than ever, and we’ll provide actionable tips for navigating these intricate challenges.
You’ll learn:
- How today’s users engage with content across various channels and devices.
- The latest methodologies for identifying and addressing content gaps to keep your content strategy proactive and relevant.
- What digital shelf space is and how your content strategy needs to pivot.
With Wayne Cichanski, we’ll explore innovative strategies to map out and meet the diverse needs of your audience, ensuring every piece of content resonates and connects, regardless of where or how it is consumed.
Top 3 Ways to Align Sales and Marketing Teams for Rapid GrowthDemandbase
In this session, Demandbase’s Stephanie Quinn, Sr. Director of Integrated and Digital Marketing, Devin Rosenberg, Director of Sales, and Kevin Rooney, Senior Director of Sales Development will share how sales and marketing shapes their day-to-day and what key areas are needed for true alignment.
Most small businesses struggle to see marketing results. In this session, we will eliminate any confusion about what to do next, solving your marketing problems so your business can thrive. You’ll learn how to create a foundational marketing OS (operating system) based on neuroscience and backed by real-world results. You’ll be taught how to develop deep customer connections, and how to have your CRM dynamically segment and sell at any stage in the customer’s journey. By the end of the session, you’ll remove confusion and chaos and replace it with clarity and confidence for long-term marketing success.
Key Takeaways:
• Uncover the power of a foundational marketing system that dynamically communicates with prospects and customers on autopilot.
• Harness neuroscience and Tribal Alignment to transform your communication strategies, turning potential clients into fans and those fans into loyal customers.
• Discover the art of automated segmentation, pinpointing your most lucrative customers and identifying the optimal moments for successful conversions.
• Streamline your business with a content production plan that eliminates guesswork, wasted time, and money.
The What, Why & How of 3D and AR in Digital CommercePushON Ltd
Vladimir Mulhem has over 20 years of experience in commercialising cutting edge creative technology across construction, marketing and retail.
Previously the founder and Tech and Innovation Director of Creative Content Works working with the likes of Next, John Lewis and JD Sport, he now helps retailers, brands and agencies solve challenges of applying the emerging technologies 3D, AR, VR and Gen AI to real-world problems.
In this webinar, Vladimir will be covering the following topics:
Applications of 3D and AR in Digital Commerce,
Benefits of 3D and AR,
Tools to create, manage and publish 3D and AR in Digital Commerce.
Most small businesses struggle to see marketing results. In this session, we will eliminate any confusion about what to do next, solving your marketing problems so your business can thrive. You’ll learn how to create a foundational marketing OS (operating system) based on neuroscience and backed by real-world results. You’ll be taught how to develop deep customer connections, and how to have your CRM dynamically segment and sell at any stage in the customer’s journey. By the end of the session, you’ll remove confusion and chaos and replace it with clarity and confidence for long-term marketing success.
Key Takeaways:
• Uncover the power of a foundational marketing system that dynamically communicates with prospects and customers on autopilot.
• Harness neuroscience and Tribal Alignment to transform your communication strategies, turning potential clients into fans and those fans into loyal customers.
• Discover the art of automated segmentation, pinpointing your most lucrative customers and identifying the optimal moments for successful conversions.
• Streamline your business with a content production plan that eliminates guesswork, wasted time, and money.
When most people in the industry talk about online or digital reputation management, what they're really saying is Google search and PPC. And it's usually reactive, left dealing with the aftermath of negative information published somewhere online. That's outdated. It leaves executives, organizations and other high-profile individuals at a high risk of a digital reputation attack that spans channels and tactics. But the tools needed to safeguard against an attack are more cybersecurity-oriented than most marketing and communications professionals can manage. Business leaders Leaders grasp the importance; 83% of executives place reputation in their top five areas of risk, yet only 23% are confident in their ability to address it. To succeed in 2024 and beyond, you need to turn online reputation on its axis and think like an attacker.
Key Takeaways:
- New framework for examining and safeguarding an online reputation
- Tools and techniques to keep you a step ahead
- Practical examples that demonstrate when to act, how to act and how to recover
The digital marketing industry is changing faster than ever and those who don’t adapt with the times are losing market share. Where should marketers be focusing their efforts? What strategies are the experts seeing get the best results? Get up-to-speed with the latest industry insights, trends and predictions for the future in this panel discussion with some leading digital marketing experts.
Mastering Local SEO for Service Businesses in the AI Era is tailored specifically for local service providers like plumbers, dentists, and others seeking to dominate their local search landscape. This session delves into leveraging AI advancements to enhance your online visibility and search rankings through the Content Factory model, designed for creating high-impact, SEO-driven content. Discover the Dollar-a-Day advertising strategy, a cost-effective approach to boost your local SEO efforts and attract more customers with minimal investment. Gain practical insights on optimizing your online presence to meet the specific needs of local service seekers, ensuring your business not only appears but stands out in local searches. This concise, action-oriented workshop is your roadmap to navigating the complexities of digital marketing in the AI age, driving more leads, conversions, and ultimately, success for your local service business.
Key Takeaways:
Embrace AI for Local SEO: Learn to harness the power of AI technologies to optimize your website and content for local search. Understand the pivotal role AI plays in analyzing search trends and consumer behavior, enabling you to tailor your SEO strategies to meet the specific demands of your target local audience. Leverage the Content Factory Model: Discover the step-by-step process of creating SEO-optimized content at scale. This approach ensures a steady stream of high-quality content that engages local customers and boosts your search rankings. Get an action guide on implementing this model, complete with templates and scheduling strategies to maintain a consistent online presence. Maximize ROI with Dollar-a-Day Advertising: Dive into the cost-effective Dollar-a-Day advertising strategy that amplifies your visibility in local searches without breaking the bank. Learn how to strategically allocate your budget across platforms to target potential local customers effectively. The session includes an action guide on setting up, monitoring, and optimizing your ad campaigns to ensure maximum impact with minimal investment.
Videos are more engaging, more memorable, and more popular than any other type of content out there. That’s why it’s estimated that 82% of consumer traffic will come from videos by 2025.
And with videos evolving from landscape to portrait and experts promoting shorter clips, one thing remains constant – our brains LOVE videos.
So is there science behind what makes people absolutely irresistible on camera?
The answer: definitely yes.
In this jam-packed session with Stephanie Garcia, you’ll get your hands on a steal-worthy guide that uncovers the art and science to being irresistible on camera. From body language to words that convert, she’ll show you how to captivate on command so that viewers are excited and ready to take action.
Everyone knows the power of stories, but when asked to come up with them, we struggle. Either we second guess ourselves as to the story's relevance, or we just come up blank and can't think of any. Unlocking Everyday Narratives: The Power of Storytelling in Marketing will teach you how to recognize stories in the moment and to recall forgotten moments that your audience needs to hear.
Key Takeaways:
Understand Why Personal Stories Connect Better
How To Remember Forgotten Stories
How To Use Customer Experiences As Stories For Your Brand
3. Embracing China’s “New Retail” | Bain & Company, Inc. | AliResearch
Page i
Contents
1. Executive summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . pg. 1
2. Introducing New Retail. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . pg. 3
3. How should brands change to fully capitalize on New Retail? . . . . . . . . . . . pg. 5
Step 1: Identify new governance principles for a customer-centric model . . . pg. 5
Step 2: Develop new flexibility and efficiency in R&D and supply chains . . . pg. 6
Step 3: Reimagine marketing and consumer management for New Retail. . . pg. 9
Step 4: Modernize route-to-market and retail formats . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . pg. 10
Step 5: Transform the organization and operating model for digital. . . . . . pg. 13
Step 6: Invest in new technology development . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . pg. 15
4. About the authors and acknowledgments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . pg. 19
4. Embracing China’s “New Retail” | Bain & Company, Inc. | AliResearch
Page 1
Executive summary
The era of “New Retail” that Alibaba founder Jack Ma envisioned is starting to emerge across China in ways that
promise big gains for consumer products companies that act decisively and systematically while causing others to
lag behind. In 2016, Ma predicted a seamless merger of offline, online and logistics for a dynamic new world of
retailing. His vision now can be seen in the millions of mom-and-pop stores throughout China that are taking on
new life as order-and-delivery stations for e-commerce. It is there in the booming food delivery platforms such as
Hema, which fulfills more than half of its orders online. And you can glimpse it in China’s ubiquitous mobile
payments. Chinese consumers use their phones for 60 times more mobile payments than consumers in the US do.
Enabled by leading-edge technology, New Retail has created an imperative for brands. Alibaba CEO Daniel Zhang
summed up the unfolding challenge in a letter to investors when he said companies must use Big Data analytics
to redefine the traditional core elements of retailing—consumers, merchandise and stores—and the relationship
among those elements to upgrade current formats and create new retail occasions.
Indeed, China’s e-commerce platform, represented by Tmall, is evolving to establish a New Retail infrastructure,
empowering brands with data. Leading brands are gaining an edge by using the emergence of New Retail as an
occasion to build a new consumer-centric model while at the same time creating operations that are more effi-
cient. Brands as diverse as Mondelez, Friso, Estée Lauder and Bestseller are leading the charge to shape tomor-
row’s retailing. Consider how pioneers are reimagining those core elements and the relationships among them.
For starters, people are no longer viewed only as consumers. The most forward-thinking brands also see them
in the role of coproducers. In the past, with relatively limited consumer insights, it was sufficient for a brand
to identify target consumers and determine their needs. Now, armed with a comprehensive—and dynamic—
profile, brands have new missions, such as finding ways to stimulate consumer needs, identifying look-alike
consumers and turning consumers into brand ambassadors who effectively cocreate the brand.
Also, products are advancing from commodities to become part of the consumption process and an integrated
consumer experience. As the old business-to-consumer model evolves from the simple goal of meeting mass
demand to a world of consumer-data-inspired personalized products and delivery, the best brands are determin-
ing how to integrate products into the overall customer experience—which includes not only shopping but learn-
ing about a product, using it and recommending it.
In addition, stores have extended from online-only or offline-only into a seamless omnichannel consumer experi-
ence that’s fully integrated. People can shop while enjoying content or while spending time on social networks,
for example, as well as in stores or on e-commerce platforms. Brands are creating occasions beyond the con-
straints of time and location.
Winning brands are taking six steps to reshape the future and make the most of New Retail.
Step 1: Identify new governance principles for a customer-centric model
The best brands put customers at the heart of their operations, with full consideration of the end-to-end cus-
tomer experience, from awareness to purchase to referral. In addition, they commit to embedding data and smart
technology into their operations, breaking down the data silos within their organizations for cross-function inter-
connection and extending their links with the broader ecosystem.
5. Embracing China’s “New Retail” | Bain & Company, Inc. | AliResearch
Page 2
Step 2: Develop new flexibility and efficiency in R&D and supply chains
We see the best companies transforming their operations to take advantage of retailing’s new realities, and mak-
ing those operations more efficient in the process. These brands use real, comprehensive and timely understand-
ing of consumers to optimize R&D and their supply chains. In R&D, they adapt to shorter cycles while engaging
with consumers directly in the product development process—early and often. These brands make supply chains
flexible enough to adjust to real-time frontline sales results and the more accurate estimates enabled by artificial
intelligence, the Internet of Things, blockchain and other emerging technologies. Companies selling in China
are at the forefront of this movement to use smart technology.
Step 3: Reimagine marketing and consumer management for New Retail
The digital ecosystem that encompasses purchase, payment, delivery and all the other customer touchpoints pro-
vides the opportunity to reach consumers whenever and wherever they are online. Online becomes a closed loop
for interacting with consumers, collecting data, and gaining the insights that can help brands develop and deliver
personalized marketing messages at the appropriate customer touchpoints, constantly refining what they learn
and how they market. It is a shift in philosophy that turns marketing from a brand expense into a brand asset.
Step 4: Modernize route-to-market and retail formats
In “Old Retail,” the multilayered distribution network contains many pain points. The costs are high, and
brands have limited control or transparency into sales. Now, leading brands are replacing those old networks
with streamlined electronic route-to-market models that help them reduce costs with fewer levels, expand their
coverage, and gain visibility into real-time inventory and sales data while improving point-of-sale and channel
relationships. The distribution changes also are enabling brands to introduce targeted retail formats that reduce
communication costs while increasing SKU productivity. They can tailor messaging for similar stores and rely on
consumer insights generated from sales data to optimize the product portfolio within a retail outlet. A new major
role for the store: collecting consumer data.
Step 5: Transform the organization and operating model for digital
These operational changes won’t yield sufficient results without redesigning the organization to make full use of
New Retail’s power. Winners understand the need to organize for data. For example, the organizational structure
needs to allow for seamless coordination among functions and between offline and online platforms. Success in
the digital age requires cross-functional work on marketing, sales, consumer engagement and data analysis.
Another important consideration: coordinating resources across different brands.
Step 6: Invest in new technology development
New technologies give brands the opportunity to boost their operational efficiency as they deliver a better customer
experience. However, companies need to take a systematic approach to choosing from the evolving options for
improving decisions and connecting business operations. As a first giant step to move out ahead of rivals in this
new world of retailing, brands should assess their current digitalization status (their “point of departure”), set clear
goals for their digital transformation (“point of arrival”) and spell out a clear roadmap and implementation plan.
As New Retail takes root, the brands that thrive will acknowledge that the changes they make today—the new
capabilities they develop and the operating models they devise—won’t necessarily help them a year from now.
New Retail is a work in progress, requiring brands to constantly refine and reinvent themselves for new occa-
sions, new formats and the steady flow of new ideas that will define retailing tomorrow.
6. Embracing China’s “New Retail” | Bain & Company, Inc. | AliResearch
Page 3
Introducing New Retail
It feels like a decade since Alibaba founder Jack Ma introduced the term “New Retail” to describe a future in
which online, offline and logistics would merge to create a dynamic new retailing era.
The reality is that he coined the name recently, in 2016. The changes he predicted are arriving so swiftly and so
dramatically that each month seems to bring a big new preview of what retailing will look like everywhere, as
China sets the pace for the rest of the world. Indeed, with millions of mom-and-pop stores now taking on new
life as order-and-delivery stations for e-commerce, with food delivery platforms such as Hema fulfilling more
than half of its orders online, and with mobile payments rising to more than 60 times the US level, wherever
retailing is headed, China is already there (see Figure 1).
For brands hoping to sell in China, survival means moving equally fast to capture this future ahead of com-
petitors, both incumbents and digitally savvy upstarts. It will not be enough merely to keep up. Brands will be
required to get ahead and help shape the vast changes, even as they completely overhaul the rules of engagement.
In a letter to investors, Alibaba CEO Daniel Zhang summed up the challenge when he called for using Big Data
analytics to redefine the traditional core elements of retailing—consumers, merchandise and stores—and the
relationship among those elements to upgrade current formats and create new retail occasions.
China’s e-commerce platform, represented by Tmall, is evolving to establish New Retail infrastructure, empower-
ing brands with data. Leading brands are gaining an edge by using the emergence of New Retail as an occasion
to build a new consumer-centric model while at the same time creating operations that are more efficient.
Figure 1: China is the forerunner in digitalization
Sources: China Internet Network Information Center; iResearch; State Post Bureau; Pitney Bowes; eMarketer; Forrester; Bain analysis
0.0
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
China US
# of mobile Internet users (2016, B) Mobile payment transaction value (2016, T RMB) # of delivery orders (2016, B units)
0
20
40
60
0
10
20
30
40
~0.7
~0.2
~60
~1
~31
~13
China China USUS
Mobile Internet Mobile payment Delivery
7. Embracing China’s “New Retail” | Bain & Company, Inc. | AliResearch
Page 4
Consider the fundamental changes and ways that the best brands are responding (see Figure 2).
Consumers. People are no longer viewed only as consumers. The most forward-thinking brands also see them
in the role of coproducers. In the past, with relatively limited consumer insights, it was sufficient for a brand
to identify target consumers and determine their needs. Now, armed with a comprehensive—and dynamic—
profile, brands have new missions, such as finding ways to stimulate consumer needs, identifying look-alike
consumers and turning consumers into brand ambassadors who effectively cocreate the brand. Welcome to the
C2B (consumer-to-business) age.
Merchandise. Products are advancing from commodities to become part of the consumption process and an
integrated consumer experience. As the old business-to-consumer model evolves from the simple goal of meet-
ing mass demand to a world of consumer-data-inspired personalized products and delivery, the best brands are
determining how to integrate products into the overall customer experience: not only shopping but also learning
about a product, using it, talking about it on social media and recommending it.
Stores. Stores have extended from online-only or offline-only into a seamless omnichannel consumer experience
that’s fully integrated. People can shop while enjoying content or while spending time on social networks, for
example, as well as in stores or on e-commerce platforms. Creating occasions beyond the constraints of time and
location is among the new moves that winning brands are making to get ahead.
Figure 2: New Retail redefines the three core elements of retail as well as their inner relationship …
Core elements of retail
Consumer
Status quo New Retail
Redefine
core
elements
Redefine
relationship
Prosumer
Integrated
shopping
experience
Trans-retail,
seamless
omnichannel
Online and
offline outlets,
separately
Products
Enabled by data
Transaction is
limited by product
availability in
the retail place
Consumer-centric
transactions
happen in any
occasion-based
places beyond
time and location
constraints
Source: Bain analysis
Consumer Merchandise Stores
8. Embracing China’s “New Retail” | Bain & Company, Inc. | AliResearch
Page 5
How should brands change to fully capitalize on New Retail?
From our experience, some brands are in a stronger competitive position to win in New Retail. These companies
take a systematic approach that covers six well-defined steps.
Step 1: Identify new governance principles for a customer-centric model
The best brands redefine the relationship among consumers, merchandise and stores in a way that makes the
most of their operations while strengthening such fundamentals as the operating model and ability to develop
new technology (see Figures 3 and 4). This starts by acknowledging—and acting on—two principles of New
Retail. They put customers at the heart of operations, with full consideration of the end-to-end customer experi-
ence, from awareness to purchase to referral. In addition, they commit to embedding data and smart technology
into their operations, breaking down the data silos within their organizations for cross-function interconnection
and extending their links with the broader ecosystem. In the past, they may have used internal CRM data to inform
functional business decisions in such areas as R&D and production, marketing and sales. Now they continually
refine the data and expand their data sources through external partnerships, engaging in test-and-learn exercises
to develop and act on broader, deeper and constantly changing consumer insights. They establish a two-way
closed loop to connect internal and external data for smarter business decisions.
Figure 3: … allowing brands to understand consumers and enhance their experience through cocreation,
while maximizing productivity
Brands are entering the stage of cocreation with consumers;
more opportunities exist along with fierce competition
Key
changes
Implication
for
brands
Source: Bain analysis
Status quo New Retail
• Insufficient and
incomplete
consumer
understanding
• Comprehensive
and complete
profile
• B2C mass
production
based on
limited consumer
understanding
• Cocreation
between brands
and consumers
(integrated
experience)
• Separate online
and offline
retailing
• Diversified
occasions, online
and offline
seamless
integration
• Who are the
real target
consumers?
• What are their
needs?
• How to stimulate
consumer needs?
• Who are the
potential
look-alikes?
• What are the
right products?
• When will
consumer
purchase?
• How to integrate
products with the
overall shopping
experience?
• Where to buy?
• How to reach?
• How to create
occasions beyond
the constraints of
time and
location?
Core elements of retail
Consumer Merchandise Stores
9. Embracing China’s “New Retail” | Bain & Company, Inc. | AliResearch
Page 6
Step 2: Develop new flexibility and efficiency in R&D and supply chains
New Retail is having a big effect on every corner of a brand’s operations. As consumer needs become more diver-
sified, the potential consumer pool would shrink if existing R&D and supply chain strategies remain unchanged.
We see the best companies transforming those operations to take advantage of retailing’s new realities, and mak-
ing them more efficient in the process. These brands use real, comprehensive and timely understanding of
consumers to optimize R&D and their supply chains (see Figures 5 and 6). For example, as they deliver
personalized products and services, they thoughtfully adapt to shorter R&D cycles. Pioneering companies also
take an interactive approach to R&D that allows for timely changes in design and planning based on real-time
consumer behavior. Importantly, they view their consumers as participants in the R&D process, engaging with
them early in product development, conducting consumer testing before production and connecting frequently
before a product launch to enhance loyalty.
A brand’s customization model demands different levels of complexity in its R&D capability and supply chain.
For example, it is possible to create a product mix that requires virtually no change in an existing supply chain.
That would be the case when allowing customers to select slightly different shoe sizes for their left and right feet,
or when offering personalized wine labels for birthdays or weddings. However, the supply chain becomes more
complex when a company integrates consumer ideas into production—enabling them to personalize the colors
of outer packaging, for example. The highest degree of complexity happens when companies manufacture a
product based on consumer needs, relying on consumer participation throughout the process, from ideation and
R&D to marketing and sales.
Figure 4: New Retail requires a consumer-centric model that optimizes operations in the organization
Consumer-centric: Redefine the
relationship among people, product and place to optimize consumer experience
R&D and supply chain
Decentralized,
C2B design
(customization)
Profound consumer understanding
via touchpoints anytime and
everywhere
Closed-loop, test and learn
From “brand expense”
to “brand asset”
Consumer experience/retail
efficiency improvement via new
technology
Occasion-based product mix
Smart and flexible supply
chain: cost effective, highly
efficient and customized
Channel management:
transparency and conflict
Losses and distribution
cost reduction
Value enhancement Cost optimization
Identify government principles
Marketing and
consumer operation
Key pillars
Organization and operating model optimization
New technology development
RTM and retail
Optimize
operation
Strengthen
fundamentals
Source: Bain analysis
10. Embracing China’s “New Retail” | Bain & Company, Inc. | AliResearch
Page 7
Figure 5: To ensure smart decision making, brands should create a two-way closed loop to connect
internal and external data
Source: Bain analysis
Inner
loop
Outer
loop
CRM
data
(continuously
accumulate)
CRM data to provide insights to
inform functional business
decisions
Bridge inner and outer data silo to
create closed loop; “test and
learn” to continuously adjust/refine
Expand corporate CRM data to more
data dimensions in ecosystem to
obtain deeper consumer insights
Smart, results-oriented business decisions empowered by digitalization
Corporate internal
function teams
Big Data
partners/ecosystem
R&D and
production
Marketing
Sales
Validationandfeedback
Interconnectivity
Weibo
Youku
Tmall.com
Amap.com
Figure 6: Brands can use real, comprehensive and timely consumer data to optimize R&D and supply chains
Retail status quo
Consumer survey
R&D
Manufacture
Supply chain
Supply chain
R&D
Retail
Consumer
Manufacture
Retail
New Retail
Biased insights with limited sample size Optimize design and planning based
on real-time consumer behavior
Adjust based on real-time frontline sales
results and more accurate estimate
Collect real-time
data from
transaction and
consumer
journey to
provide
feedback on
R&D and
supply chain
Continuously
optimize cost
structure and
focus on
product
differentiation
and tailor-made
solutions
Cost and scale oriented
Adjust based on sales estimate
Merchandising based on “rule of thumb”
Consumer
Disconnected data system prevents
feedback from getting to R&D
Lagging R&D and marketing insights
(typically 1–2 years behind new trends)
Feedback of
consumers in each
key value chain
stage gate
Source: Bain analysis
11. Embracing China’s “New Retail” | Bain & Company, Inc. | AliResearch
Page 8
To see customization in action, look no further than the whimsical Oreo Music Box, which Mondelez introduced
on Tmall’s Super Brand Day 2017, with the goal of making Oreos more popular among teenagers, strengthening
the brand’s emotional appeal to consumers of all ages and driving traffic to its Tmall store. The company created
a truly inventive product: a turntable-like device that plays tunes when an Oreo biscuit is placed on it. Customers
can change the prerecorded music simply by taking a bite from the Oreo and placing it back on the music box.
They can also record their own voices and decorate the device, customizing it by scanning the QR code. The mu-
sic box is a good illustration of what it now takes to get ahead in New Retail. The company partnered with third-
party vendors and Tmall in its development and marketing. In addition, by relying on a flexible supply chain,
Mondelez was able to get the product to market in a record seven days, as opposed to the traditional two to three
months. A New Retail success story, the “singing biscuits” generated 80 times more sales on Mondelez’s site
than average, with 90% of the purchases made by new consumers.
Brands are making supply chains flexible enough to adjust to real-time frontline sales results and the more accu-
rate estimates enabled by artificial intelligence (AI), the Internet of Things (IoT), blockchain and other emerging
technologies. Companies selling in China are at the forefront of this movement to use smart technology. The
most advanced among them integrate all the parties in the supply chain, analyzing the full spectrum of available
data to improve visualization, analysis and supply chain automation (see Figure 7). For example, a visualized
real-time supply chain enables these companies to track cargo and machine information to quickly detect and
solve problems. They rely on robots in factories. They develop smart analytics to streamline inventory forecasting
and planning, as well as category selection, procurement, reallocation and replenishment. These companies
make the required investments to choose the right service providers, manage the data and improve the operating
efficiency of their supply chains.
Figure 7: Brands can improve operational efficiency using more advanced technologies
Source: Bain analysis
Entire smart
supply chain
Key drivers Visualized real-time supply chain Automated operation Smart & advanced analytics
Implications
for brands
Consumer engagement R&D
ProcurementManufacturingWarehousing
Planning
Delivery
Smart supply chain
• End-to-end cargo and machine info
tracking
• Remote problems detecting and solving
• Remote sensing between equipment
Build visualized supply chain
and strengthen auxiliary
supervision mechanism
Test "unmanned factory"
model to increase production
automation level
Recruit new tech (Big Data, AI)
talents to build
strong analytics capability
• Robotics operation in factory
• Pick up and drop off cargo by
self-driving cars
• Remote area delivery by drones
• Streamlined sell-in/out and inventory
forecast and planning
• Smart category selection
• Smart procurement, reallocation and
replenishment
12. Embracing China’s “New Retail” | Bain & Company, Inc. | AliResearch
Page 9
Nestlé has reaped significant benefits from its “One Set Inventory” unified supply chain, which serves different
channels (business-to-business, business-to-consumer, offline-to-online and others), sharing its logistics service
and inventory (see Figure 8). From a single hub, Nestlé ships to different channels instantly, choosing the
destination based on insights generated by real-time data. The move has dramatically improved turnover effi-
ciency; the online product shortage rate has dropped from 22% to 5%. It has also lowered logistics costs, reducing
cross-region delivery from 60% to 10%. In addition, the new supply chain setup has improved delivery timeli-
ness for Nestlé. Now, nearly 80% of orders are delivered same day or next day.
Step 3: Reimagine marketing and consumer management for New Retail
New Retail changes the game in marketing and consumer management, too. The digital ecosystem that encom-
passes purchase, payment, delivery and all the other customer touchpoints provides the opportunity to reach
consumers whenever and wherever they are online. That is why winning brands have extended the horizons for
digital marketing. For them, online is not limited to a sales channel; rather, it becomes a consumer-centric closed
loop for unlocking business potential (see Figure 9). These companies collect data whenever a consumer uses
an app to hail a taxi or process a payment. They integrate online and offline data, incorporating everything from
the categories customers browse online to their responses to digital marketing to the frequency of visits to
physical stores and the amounts they typically spend there. From this composite of transactions, brands gain
insights that help them develop and deliver personalized marketing messages at the appropriate customer touch-
points, constantly refining what they learn and how they market. It is a major shift in philosophy that turns
marketing from a brand expense into a brand asset.
Figure 8: Nestlé launched “One Set Inventory” initiative for omnichannel supply empowered by Big
Data analytics
Nestlé’s “One Set Inventory” framework
• Understand and analyze real-time channel situation • Instantly ship goods to channels based on insights from data
Different channels (B2B, B2C, O2O and others) share logistics service and inventory
Product flow Data flow
Logistics and
warehousing
Data
integration
Warehouse
“One Set Inventory” supply chain hub
Data analytics
Delivery
Forecast
Distribution
Planning
Note: The core of “One Set Inventory” lies in shared inventory in different channels powered by advanced data analytics and logistics system
Sources: Brands’ materials; Alibaba; Bain analysis
Nestlé ships products to CaiNiao omnichannel hub distribution center
Nestlé
TMALL.COM CHAOSHI.TMALL.COM CUN.TAOBAO.COM Alibaba LingShouTong FreshhemaAlib b Li Sh T
13. Embracing China’s “New Retail” | Bain & Company, Inc. | AliResearch
Page 10
Milk and infant formula producer Friso created an online closed loop to cover the stage gates of the consumer
journey. The first stage involves identifying target consumers and customizing marketing information based on
such elements as an individual’s stage of pregnancy or purchasing power. Friso then expands its marketing
efforts to include multiple touchpoints such as popular social media platform Weibo and video websites to max-
imize brand exposure and accumulate consumer behavioral data. Finally, the brand continuously interacts with
consumers via content marketing through its online membership platform, which enhances loyalty and provides
more data for further marketing efforts.
Cosmetics brand Estée Lauder takes a similar approach, continuously building, refining and drawing from its
consumer database (see Figure 10). To enhance awareness, the brand recently initiated a campaign in which it
blended ads with content to reach targeted potential consumers in multiple channels. Its precise consumer pro-
filing enabled it to connect with more than 10 million targeted consumers in six days and attract more than
100,000 new followers. It then interacted with those consumers through diversified media, using each interac-
tion as an opportunity to trace consumer behavior. (Traditionally, companies only track click-through rates with-
out generating further insights.) This effort enabled Estée Lauder to reach more than 500,000 fans in a two-week
period. About 12% of those consumers interacted with the brand and revisited the site to research or browse
products. It then relied on Big Data to zero in on more than a million high-value, easy-to-convert consumers in
its database and targeted them for resell. The effort boosted Estée Lauder’s conversion rate by 80% over previous
approaches.
Step 4: Modernize route-to-market and retail formats
Distribution and retail formats are being reinvented with New Retail.
Figure 9: Online is not just a sales channel, but an opportunity to unlock business potential
New approach vs. traditional
Source: Bain analysis
R&D
Supply chain Marketing
CRM
Sales
R&D
Supply chain
Marketing
CRM
Use real-time consumer data to inform new product
development for R&D (instead of traditional consumer survey)
Consumer-centric closed-loop business to
improve business operations
Real-time closed-loop marketing to
improve marketing efficiency
Real-time forecast on sales and production management based
on consumer behaviors
CRM system integrates different sources of consumer data, reflecting the changing consumer needs to inform business operations
Screen targets with consumer profile
and purchasing behavior data, use
A/B test to improve ROI
14. Embracing China’s “New Retail” | Bain & Company, Inc. | AliResearch
Page 11
Let’s begin with distribution. Under the old and painful multilayered network, stores—especially traditional
trade—had limited control and transparency; there was a lack of meaningful data, and the costs of distribution
were high for limited channel penetration. Consider the traditional distribution path: A brand sells to multiple
levels of wholesalers and distributors at the province, city and county level, which in turn supply local mom-and-
pop stores. In addition to the many handoffs required, the markups at each stage and the lack of transparency on
consumer behavior, any single distributor may have offered only limited SKUs (and mostly local brands) to these
small stores. In recent years, this antiquated system started feeling the strains of China’s decelerating growth,
with many distributors exiting the business.
Now, leading brands are replacing those old networks with streamlined electronic route-to-market (e-RTM) mod-
els that help them reduce costs with fewer levels, expand their coverage, and gain visibility into real-time inven-
tory and sales data while improving point-of-sale and channel relationships (see Figure 11). Offering instant
access to point-of-sale data at mom-and-pop stores, these new digital platforms help both brands and retailers.
Brands are able to make quick and better-informed decisions based on channel sales activity and consumer
needs. These systems also arm them with the data needed to provide value-added services to each outlet. Retailers
receive a product mix tailored to the actual sales activity in their stores. Brands have learned a key lesson as they
build and adapt to these new digital route-to-market approaches: It is critical to hone brand strategies to gain the
most from e-RTM and to select business partners thoughtfully, based on the unique characteristics of their prod-
uct categories.
We see three different approaches to e-RTM based on a brand’s relationship with traditional distributors
(see Figure 12). The most collaborative model involves using the e-RTM system for placing orders but work-
Figure 10: Estée Lauder engaged with target consumers online and accumulated brand assets
Note: Interaction refers to revisit, research, browsing products and other related behaviors on e-commerce platforms
Sources: Brands' materials; Alibaba
Traceable consumer
behavior during interaction
Identify and convert high-potential
consumers and grow brand assets
Quick, wide-range and
targeted reach
Interact with target consumers
through diversified media/
content
Blend ads with content to
reach potential consumers in
multiple channels
Segment consumers with
universal Big Data to find high-value
and easy-to-convert
ones for targeted resell
“Seeding” to enhance awareness “Grassing” to build interest “Harvesting” to convert into sales
Consumer data flows to data bank to grow brand assets
15. Embracing China’s “New Retail” | Bain & Company, Inc. | AliResearch
Page 12
Figure 11: eRTM targets to lower costs by removing layers and enhancing channel transparency
Sources: Expert interviews; Bain experience
Traditional
model Brands M&P Consumers
Brands M&P Consumers
eRTM
Single distributor:
limited SKUs to small
stores, mostly local
brands
Wholesaler/distributor
at multiple tiers
(province, city, county)
Broad SKU selection,
including both local
and national brands
Data feedback Data collection/value-added service
Provide real-time
point-of-sale data so brands
can manage business in a
timely manner, based on
sales and consumer needs
Use technology to support traditional small
stores for e-transformation to obtain POS data
and offer VAS to stores (e.g., financial support)
Data-enabled
platform
eRTM
Figure 12: Companies use three mainstream eRTM models based on their relationship with traditional RTM
*Store shelf strategy, promotion and implementation
Sources: Expert interviews; Bain analysis
Collaborate with existing trade
partners, help improve efficiency of
order placing and logistics
Collaborative Platform Disruptive
Collaborate with existing trade
partners but control inventory and
delivery
Change existing distribution system
by playing a role similar to existing
trade partners
Description
Control
Order placing
Inventory
control
Warehouse
management
Delivery
In-store events*
eRTM eRTM eRTM
Existing distributors
Existing distributors
Existing distributors
Existing distributors or brands
eRTM
eRTM
eRTM
eRTM
Existing DTs
eRTM
Existing DTs
eRTM
Existing DTs
eRTM
Existing
DTs or brands
eRTM
Existing
DTs or brands
16. Embracing China’s “New Retail” | Bain & Company, Inc. | AliResearch
Page 13
ing with existing distributors for inventory control, warehouse management and delivery. In this model, retailers
rely on either the existing distributors or brands for in-store execution. A second model requires collaborating
with existing distributors but controlling inventory and delivery. A third, more disruptive, model relies on e-RTM
for the entire process—spanning order placement, inventory control, warehouse management and delivery—but
works with existing distributors or brands for in-store execution.
Bestseller Fashion Group, which operates 8,000 stores in more than 500 Chinese cities, has used its new distri-
bution platform to create a seamless omnichannel experience for consumers (see Figure 13). The company
combines its online and offline loyalty programs to build an in-depth customer profile, merging information
from a consumer’s activity on social networks, Taobao, Tmall, its own website and other sites with data generated
from the consumer’s visits to physical stores. It uses data from the more than 30 million customer loyalty mem-
bers to build customized consumer operations and then engages consumers with differentiated content based
on their unique behavior. This approach has helped the company synchronize inventory between its online and
offline channels and spur activities that have streamlined logistics costs, such as order online and pick up in
store. These moves have helped Bestseller reduce its average delivery time from three days to one-and-a-half days.
These distribution changes are enabling leading brands to introduce retail formats that reduce communication
costs while increasing SKU productivity. Consumer data allows them to create more targeted retail outlets for
specific consumer segments, which helps brands optimize their communication costs by relying on tailored
messaging for similar stores. These brands also rely on the consumer insights generated from newly available
data to optimize the product portfolio within a retail outlet. The stores become centers for collecting consumer
data. Brands analyze the data to understand consumer behavior, identify select high-potential SKUs and generate
consumer insights to support brand communication.
Step 5: Transform the organization and operating model for digital
Building a framework and operations around customers and data is critical for brands hoping to master New
Retail. However, those big moves will not yield sufficient results without redesigning the organization to make
full use of New Retail’s power. Many brands entered the era of New Retail not only with limited capabilities for
acquiring and analyzing data, but also with organizational structures and operating models that make it difficult
to share and act on insights gained from that data. Winners understand the need to focus on organizing for data.
Among the most important considerations: The organizational structure must allow for seamless coordination
among functions, which is something that traditional organizations rarely accommodate. Consider that many
current models use different key performance indicators for marketing and e-commerce, and that reporting lines
do not support the cross-function work on marketing, sales, consumer engagement and data analysis. There is
often insufficient coordination between offline channels and e-commerce platforms, resulting in potential trade-
offs and conflicts. In addition, there’s often little attention paid to coordinating resources across different brands.
As companies adapt their organizations to the changing needs of New Retail, it is critical that the organizational
design reflect the company’s stage in its digital transformation (see Figure 14). For example, in a company’s
early days—when digital’s major role is that of a new sales channel—the digital team will be most effective if it
operates within the sales unit. If digital is primarily used for marketing and consumer engagement, the digital
team can operate within the marketing department. Alternatively, if the company is slightly more advanced in its
digital transformation, that team can operate independently, with dotted-line reporting to both sales and market-
ing. This structure provides such benefits as the synergies created by combining digital and traditional advertis-
ing. However, for companies much further along, digital should be a standalone business unit that integrates
17. Embracing China’s “New Retail” | Bain & Company, Inc. | AliResearch
Page 14
Figure 13: Bestseller integrated omnichannel data, optimizing the consumer operation for a seamless
experience
*
Replacement can only be processed in non-department stores
Sources: Brand interviews; Bain analysis
Combine online and offline loyalty system and customize
consumer engagement strategies
Provide convenient omnichannel
shopping experience
Sync inventory between online and offline
channel to realize seamless experience
Combined loyalty system for
in-depth consumer profiling
Engage consumers with differentiated
content based on their behavior
Offline store
O2O delivery
Self
pick-up
Offline store
members
Consumers shop
in offline stores
Consumers
Content
Product
Refund/replace1
for omnichannel
Online
Offline
Data management platform to connect
online and offline loyalty system
Tmall
Taobao
Official
website
Social
network
Other
Online
Offline
B
A
D
C
Figure 14: Brands’ view of the organization should evolve as they move through the digital transfor-
mation journey
Sources: Expert interviews; Bain analysis
Digital (e-commerce) is
a new sales channel
Belief
Digital is an important
lever for marketing and
consumer engagement
Digital is a virtual unit
with dotted line to
marketing and sales
Digital is a separate BU,
integrating resources
across functions
Sales Mkt. Finance
Digital team
CEO
Sales Mkt. Finance
Digital team
CEO
Sales Mkt. Finance
Digital mkt.
CEO
EC
Digital team
Sales
Digital mkt.
CEO
EC
Mkt. Digital Finance
Organizational
structure
18. Embracing China’s “New Retail” | Bain & Company, Inc. | AliResearch
Page 15
resources across all functions, with a decentralized and Agile operating model that fosters fast decisions. In
all situations, all functions should be closely connected to consumers, constantly gathering their input and the
information that serves as the lifeblood of New Retail.
While the ultimate goal is to be able to move quickly, brands need to recognize that developing enterprise-wide
agility does not happen overnight. A multistage journey typically takes two to three years to complete (see Figure 15).
The path begins by setting up technology, tools and other elements of a supporting infrastructure and empower-
ing a few Agile teams in selected areas. The next stage involves expanding those teams in waves to establish
Agile operations in complete business units or functions.
All Agile teams operate according to the same manifesto: Teams are cross-functional and empowered, activities
are time-boxed around specific outcomes, work is iterative and incremental, and problems are solved in a modu-
lar and adaptive manner. Digital requires many new or upgraded capabilities, so it is critical that brands clearly
define responsibilities (see Figure 16).
Step 6: Invest in new technology development
New technologies give brands the opportunity to boost their operational efficiency as they deliver a better cus-
tomer experience (see Figure 17). Today and tomorrow, companies face many challenges as they develop a
game plan for new technology, choosing from the evolving options for improving decisions and connecting busi-
ness operations. For example, a brand laying plans to upgrade its R&D and supply chain capabilities can look to
AI for more accurate demand, production and supply forecasting. It could rely on the IoT to identify and track
the real-time status of cargo or remotely manage equipment. It could deploy augmented reality or virtual reality
Figure 15: Developing enterprise agility is a multistaged journey; a complete transformation generally
takes 2–3 years
Note: The key timing of different buiness unit’s Agile transformation may be different
Source: Bain analysis
20
40
60
80
100%
• No Agile teams in place
• Supportive infrastructure
(e.g., tech, tools)
beginning to be set up
• Few Agile teams operating
in select areas (~2–4 per pilot)
• Supportive infrastructure
partially in place
• Expansion of Agile teams in waves;
goal to establish Agile operations in
complete business units or functions
• Supportive infrastructure fully in place
• Removal of significant impediments
• Ongoing Agile operation in complete
business units or functions with a
single backlog
Mobilize
Create the conditions for success
Pilot
Generate convincing wins
Scale
Expand the insurgency
Embed
Fully embed Agile into the enterprise
1–2 months 4–6 months 12+ months 12+ months
Maturity Penetration
19. Embracing China’s “New Retail” | Bain & Company, Inc. | AliResearch
Page 16
Figure 16: Organizations to clarify responsibilities
Strategic direction
Development
Systems and infrastructure
Support functions
Digital strategy
development
Customer
experience design
(external and
internal)
Customer
analytics
and insights
Agile
innovation
and
DevOps
Digital
tools and
platforms
New
technology
development
Data strategy
and
management
Venturing/
partnering
and M&A
management
HR Finance Information
security
IP/legal/
regulatory
Digital portfolio
management
Source: Bain analysis
Figure 17: New technologies have increased brands’ operational efficiency and deliver better consumer
experience
Sources: Expert interviews; Bain analysis
Smart and interconnected business operations empowered by the value of data
Smart in algorithm
for decision making
Data: the
power to connect
Interconnected
things and
people
R&D &
supply
chain
AI Internet of Things 3-D/4-D printingAR/VR
Decision: smart Things: interconnected
Accurate
forecast of
demand,
production
and supply
by advanced
algorithm
Identify and
track real-time
status of cargo
and machines
to manage
equipment
remotely
Sampling
test with
consumers
to upgrade
products
based on
real feedback
Robots
perform
manual tasks
in the factory
Drones
deliver/pick up
goods
Offer
customized
products to
meet
consumers’
needs
AI-assisted
after-sale
services
Quickly
collect users’
feedbacks
Better
consumer
experience in
simulated
environment
with interactive
feelings
Robot-assisted
sales activities
to directly
serve
consumers
Plan optimal
product
distribution
strategy
More touchpoints
to enhance
RTM
transparency
via real-time data
feedback
More
touchpoints:
offline
unmanned
retail stores
Marketing
&
consumer
operation
RTM &
retail
Operation & experience improvement Data acquisition & analyticsMajor application themes
Technology
Scenario Robotic/unmanned
20. Embracing China’s “New Retail” | Bain & Company, Inc. | AliResearch
Page 17
to conduct sample testing with consumers to upgrade products based on real-time feedback. It could use robots
to perform manual factory tasks, or pioneer the use of drones for delivery and pickup. It could use 3-D or 4-D
printing to customize products for consumer needs.
Similarly, brands must consider the best approach for adopting a single technology across multiple functions to
deliver the most extensive benefits. For example, they can employ AI to obtain forecasts that are more accurate,
assist in after-sales service, collect consumer feedback and plan optimal product distribution. As a first giant step
to move out ahead of rivals in this new world of retailing, brands need to assess their current digitalization status
(their “point of departure”), set clear goals for their digital transformation (their “point of arrival”), and spell out
a clear implementation plan and roadmap (see Figure 18).
As New Retail takes root, the brands that thrive will acknowledge that the changes they make today—the new
capabilities they develop and the operating models they devise—won’t necessarily help them a year from now.
New Retail is a work in progress, requiring brands to constantly refine and reinvent themselves for new occa-
sions, new formats and the steady flow of new ideas that will define retailing tomorrow.
Figure 18: To achieve success, brands should devise a digital transformation roadmap and execution plan
Source: Bain & Company
Overall planning and Results Delivery®
Clear implementation plan and roadmap
Transformation elements
Core elements for transformation
Transformation period
Evolution period for
digitalization progress
Phase 1
Phase 2
Phase 3
Point of Departure (POD) of digital transformation
Review of current status
of digitalization
POD of
digital
transformation
Corporate vision and strategic choice
Clear corporate goal for digital
transformation
Accelerated Results Delivery
Be Agile for quick wins
Point of arrival of digital
transformation
Expected business vision in
the future
Corporate
operation
ideology/mgmt.
philosophy
R&D and
supply chain
Marketing and
consumer
management
Route
and retail
New tech
support
Organization,
talents andcapabilities
22. Embracing China’s “New Retail” | Bain & Company, Inc. | AliResearch
Page 19
About the authors and acknowledgments
Jason Ding is a partner with Bain & Company’s Beijing office. You may contact him by email at jason.ding@bain.com.
Bruno Lannes is a partner with Bain’s Shanghai office. You may contact him by email at bruno.lannes@bain.com.
Larry Zhu is a partner with Bain’s Hong Kong office. You may contact him by email at larry.zhu@bain.com.
Hongbing Gao: Vice President of Alibaba Group, Director of AliResearch
Liqi Peng: Vice President of Alibaba Group, President of UniOperation Unit
Fei Song: Vice Director of AliResearch, Senior Adviser
Zhengwei Jiang: Senior Algorithm Expert of AliResearch
Please direct questions and comments about this report via email to the authors.
Acknowledgments
The report is a joint effort between Bain & Company and AliResearch. The authors would like to extend gratitude
to all who contributed to this report, including Lily Shao, Evan Chen and Yinzhen Wang from Bain & Company;
and Chris Tung, Jie Jing, Kevin Lin, Max Zhang, Qiao Yan, David Ye, Kurt Li, Jian Yang, Tim Zheng, Will Zhou,
Rick Zeng, Mina Zhang, Lili Wang, Eric Wang, Peter Zhang, Menglin Xu, Anny Liu, Sherry Lang, Stella Wang,
Robert Huo, Sharon Yan, Zhao Yan, Kenny Wang, Wenqian Hua, Camir Wang, Eva Rao, Fred Wu, Simon Tu, Hai
Yang, Zhen Zeng, Meaning Guo, MuHua Zhang, Lily Shen, Jim Cao, Fudong Han, Jason Jiang, Yonghua Pan,
Joanna Lyu, Heaven Han, William Cheng and Sandy Xie from Ali Group.
23. Shared Ambition,True Results
Bain & Company is the management consulting firm that the world’s business leaders
come to when they want results.
Bain advises clients on strategy, operations, technology, organization, private equity and mergers and acquisitions.
We develop practical, customized insights that clients act on and transfer skills that make change stick. Founded
in 1973, Bain has 55 offices in 36 countries, and our deep expertise and client roster cross every industry and
economic sector. Our clients have outperformed the stock market 4 to 1.
What sets us apart
We believe a consulting firm should be more than an adviser. So we put ourselves in our clients’ shoes, selling
outcomes, not projects. We align our incentives with our clients’ by linking our fees to their results and collaborate
to unlock the full potential of their business. Our Results Delivery®
process builds our clients’ capabilities, and
our True North values mean we do the right thing for our clients, people and communities—always.
About AliResearch
Established in 2007, AliResearch (Alibaba Research Institute) is harnessing the scale and scope of the world’s
largest and most vibrant digital business ecosystem, consisting of e-commerce, logistics, cloud computing, big
data and entertainment. Adhering to the spirit of openness and sharing of the Internet, we have become a think
tank platform dedicated to new business, new economy and new governance through sharing of data, technology,
cases and ideas for researchers and think tanks. AliResearch covers microlevel research such as consumer
insights, digital transformation and business model innovation (C2B, future business organization), midlevel
research on industry digitization such as supply chain, e-commerce logistics and rural e-commerce, macrolevel
research on dynamics between new and old economy such as Internet and employment, consumption and
globalization, Internet governance research such as network regulation and e-commerce legislation, and future
research such as information economics.
24. For more information, visit www.bain.com
Amsterdam • Atlanta • Bangkok • Beijing • Bengaluru • Boston • Brussels • Buenos Aires • Chicago • Copenhagen • Dallas • Doha • Dubai
Düsseldorf • Frankfurt • Helsinki • Hong Kong • Houston • Istanbul • Jakarta • Johannesburg • Kuala Lumpur • Kyiv • Lagos • London
Los Angeles • Madrid • Melbourne • Mexico City • Milan • Moscow • Mumbai • Munich • New Delhi • New York • Oslo • Palo Alto • Paris
Perth • Rio de Janeiro • Riyadh • Rome • San Francisco • Santiago • São Paulo • Seoul • Shanghai • Singapore • Stockholm • Sydney • Tokyo
Toronto • Warsaw • Washington, D.C. • Zurich