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Tag: Lowes

  • Google Brings ‘Retail Search’ to Cloud Customers

    Google Brings ‘Retail Search’ to Cloud Customers

    Google is expanding its cloud services, bringing Retail Search to its clients in an effort to help them provide the best experience to their own customers.

    One of the biggest issues online shoppers face is finding the products they’re interested in. This can especially be apparent when comparing retail platform search capabilities with the Google Search features customers have become accustomed to.

    Google Cloud is now bringing the power of its search to retail clients, with Retail Search, which the company unveiled in a blog.

    This fully managed service is easily customizable, enabling organizations to craft shopper-focused search experiences. Our site search solution builds upon decades of Google’s experience and innovation in search indexing, retrieval, and ranking. Retailers can make product discovery even easier for shoppers, while optimizing for their business goals with advanced capabilities

    Retail Search gives clients the ability to offer advanced query understanding, meaning customers will have better success finding what they’re looking for even with the broadest of search terms. The service also includes semantic search, which matches product attributes with relevant products.

    Customers are already seeing the benefit of Retail Search.

    “With limited customer signals and no historical data, descriptive long-tail searches are some of the most challenging queries to understand,” said Neelima Sharma, senior vice president, technology, e-commerce, marketing and merchandising at Lowe’s. “We have been partnering with Google Cloud to give our customers relevant results for long-tail searches and have seen an increase in click-through and search conversion and a drop in our ‘No Results Found’ rate since we launched.”

    Google Cloud customers interested in learning more can visit Discovery Solutions for Retail or contact their Google Cloud field sales representative.

  • Lowe’s Goes the DIY Route For Software Development

    Lowe’s Goes the DIY Route For Software Development

    Lowe’s slogan is “do it right for less.” While that primarily applies to home repair and improvement, the company is also applying it to the world of software development.

    According to a report in the Wall Street Journal, Lowe’s is looking to retool its e-commerce solutions. The goal is to have 80% of the applications it uses be built internally by 2020. This will involve looking at their application portfolio and replacing commercial, off-the-shelf applications with custom replacements. This will involve hiring as many as 2,000 software engineers, data analysts and infrastructure specialists.

    As Mark Driver, research vice president at Gartner, Inc. told the WSJ, “we’re in an age where people have their clothes custom fit. The same thing goes with software; it’s about gaining that advantage.”

    This is just the latest move on the part of the home-improvement giant to modernize its IT infrastructure. Shortly after being hired as CIO, Seemantini Godbole told analysts and investors the retailer’s technology was “well behind leading retailers in terms of strategy, architecture, process maturity and capabilities.” Ms. Godbole helped unveiled a plan to invest $500 to $550 million per year through 2021, in an effort to modernize the retailer’s decade-old e-commerce system.

    The announcement by Lowe’s is just the latest in a solid growth trend for the custom software development market, as companies increasingly turn to custom solutions to achieve tighter integration, better performance and lower cost.

     

  • How to Use Data to Become Incredibly Customer Centric

    How to Use Data to Become Incredibly Customer Centric

    Steve Stone, former CIO of L Brands and Lowes, recently discussed how retailers can use data to serve their customers better and become incredibly customer-centric:

    Retail Grew Up Differently

    When you think about retail, retail grew up differently. We started with stores and then we eventually added e-commerce. We were also very much notorious best-of-breed in the way we build our applications. Over time, you’ve got this technical debt where information about the customer and information about the product is stored in many different places.

    When you’re trying to build an integrated seamless frictionless customer experience it’s very hard to do that if your information is disjointed. One of my favorite sayings is if the plumbing isn’t right it doesn’t matter how nice the experience is it just isn’t going to work. This is a huge challenge for retailers and it’s where technology really has to play a role, not only to combine the information but to find ways to add speed and agility to the entire process.

    Data Key to Meaningful Customer Experiences

    I’ve always said data governance isn’t exactly sexy but it’s it’s what really drives the ability to deliver those types of meaningful customer experiences. With the focus now today on the customer experience with the Internet of Things and with all these new technologies coming at us and especially with the advent of AI and machine learning, we now see that data has to be right, the hygiene has to be great. Suddenly, master data has become a vogue term in retail and in consumer products.

    I think the biggest problem a lot of companies find is they’ve got to find a place to start. You’ve got to get that starting point. Picking an experience, an experience that you want for the customer, and then flowing back through, where are all the interaction points of data, where does it originate, and where is it getting corrupt? Cleansing that and building that one experience we’ll start you on your journey.

    Be Customer Centric, Not Product Centric

    After that, it’s really getting into the plumbing and understanding your data and understanding the customer. It’s always amazing when we build these great customer experiences, but they’re built more for us and not for the customer. At L Brands we always put the customer first. Be customer centric, not product-centric. How do we integrate, how do we become customer first in everything that we do?

    We’re really at the point now where the technology exists to do this right. The integration platforms such as MuleSoft are really strong now that allows you to stitch together your applications plus build an extensible layer where applications can change quickly. That experience becomes one where if I’m a customer and I walk into a store and you don’t have the product I want there’s no problem. The product will still be at my doorstep the next day or hopefully that day.

    Knowing Your Customer

    I’m online and I want this product and I don’t want to have to wait for it to come from your distribution center in Detroit or Wisconsin. I want it and I’m in California and I get it in a couple of hours because the retailers are able to use the inventory in those local stores.

    As a customer, you know me regardless of the channel, whether I came to you via the call center or whether I came to you in a store or online. You know me and that’s to me where retailers have to be. I don’t think that’s differentiating as much anymore, instead, I think that’s becoming the table stakes.

    You can’t compete against the past, you’ve got to compete against what the future is going to be. I see retail changing so much from inventory, from the customer, and even the whole level of personalization that we’re trying to offer to the customer now. The customer is going to be asking for things that we would never have dreamed possible and yet in a few years we’re going to be delivering it.

    The Best Retailers Cater to Their Customers

    Retailers that I really admire are Costco, Lilly Pulitzer, Ulta Beauty, Tractor Supply, they have a really great connection with their customer. They cater to that customer and they’re building out technology capabilities that really allow that customer to operate on their terms, not on the retailer’s terms, and I just think that’s so powerful.

  • Black Friday 2014: The Best Deals

    Black Friday 2014: The Best Deals

    Black Friday, which historically has occurred on the day after Thanksgiving (the fourth Thursday of November), is often regarded as the beginning of the holiday shopping season.

    Some of the most notable deals from various businesses include:

    Best Buy, which opens at 8 a.m., local time, and closes at 10 p.m.:

    – a Panasonic 50″ Class LED 1080p HDTV for $199.99
    – a 15.6″ Dell Touch Screen Laptop for $299.99
    – a 7″ DigiLand Quad-Core Tablet for $39.99
    – a Samsung 55″ Class LED 4K Ultra HD Smart TV for $899.99

    Regarding the 50″ Panasonic HDTV for $199.99, a Greenville, South Carolina man has been spotted camping outside a Best Buy store since Monday, in hopes of snagging the television.

    Kohl’s Black Friday deals include:

    – a Toshiba 40″ 1080p LED HDTV for $329.99
    – a 7″ Polaroid Tablet for $59.99
    – a Beats Pill 2.0 Portable Bluetooth Speaker System for $179.99
    – a Toshiba 50″ 1080p 120Hz LED HDTV with Smart TV for $549.99
    – a Vizio 15.6″ Thin + Light Ultrabook Laptop for $1,169.99

    Walmart’s Black Friday event commences at 6 a.m., and lasts through the weekend. Select merchandise is 30% off from 6 a.m. until noon. Items include Samsung TV’s and home audio, all music CD’s and all artificial Christmas trees and lights.

    Black Friday Walmart deals include 20% off all firearms, 30% off all hunting apparel and discounts on Goodyear tires.

    Notable Sears Black Friday deals include:

    – an RCA 52′ 1080p HDTV for $379.99
    – an RCA 40″ 1080p HDTV for $249.99
    – a Kenmore stainless steel refrigerator for $999.99
    – a Kenmore washer/dryer duo for $799.98

    Home Depot is selling poinsettias for $.99 all day, and expects to move roughly 3.75 million of the plants this Black Friday.

    Lowe’s is offering:

    – a GT 35-inch steel firepit for $39
    – a Studio Sync Speaker Shelf for $49.98
    – a SHOP-VAC 12-gallon 6.0 PEAK HP VAC for $39.98
    – a 6.5-foot Pre-Lit Color Changing LED Artificial Tree for $59

    Here enthusiastic consumers challenge one another over underwear:

    Amazon’s electronics deals include:

    – a Samsung 40-inch Smart 1080p LED TV for $328
    – a Samsung 55-inch Curved Smart 4K Ultra HD LED TV for $1,298.

  • Ace Metrix Ranks Top 10 Holiday Ads

    Ace Metrix Ranks Top 10 Holiday Ads

    Television and video advertising analytics firm Ace Metrix announced the top 10 highest scoring holiday ads heading into Thanksgiving.

    “As is true throughout the year, advertisers develop ads based on a variety of creative strategies. During the holiday season, however, it is even more challenging to break through the clutter and to grab the attention of increasingly distracted consumers,” said Ace Metrix CEO Peter Daboll. “Many of the ads on this list not only generated product passion and delivered on persuasive components, but they demonstrated extraordinary breakthrough power necessary to rise above the noise of the season and to drive performance for the brand.”

    These are determined by the Ace Score, which is describes as the measure of ad creative effectiveness based on viewer reaction to national TV ads. A sample of over 500 people, which the firm says is representative of the U.S. TV viewing audience, scores each ad. Results are presented on a scale of 1 to 950, and take into account attributes like Persuasion, Likability, Information, Attention, Change, Relevance, Desire and Watchability.

    Here’s the rankings at a glance, followed by a few of the actual ads.

    Image via BusinessWire

  • Jimmie Johnson Wins NASCAR’s Coca-Cola 600

    Jimmie Johnson Wins NASCAR’s Coca-Cola 600

    Jimmie Johnson, 6-time series champion of NASCAR’s Sprint Cup, has experienced his fair share of pressure and stress over the years. In his 14 years as a NASCAR competitor, Johnson has competed in 447 races and has won 67 of them, with the most recent coming in Sunday’s Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway. With Johnson’s 15 percent winning percentage, however, comes much responsibility toward the fans and media to win often, and win early.

    Coming into Sunday’s race, Johnson faced a tragically-long losing streak – at least for his own standards – of 13 races. Johnson’s lack of success midway through the 2014 Sprint Cup season had many media outlets wondering if this year marked the end of the Johnson dynasty.

    In response to all of the media attention he had garnered through not winning, Johnson only had one line for the media following Sunday’s race: “What the hell are y’all going to write about now?”

    While Johnson’s statement may have seemed a bit antagonistic, his performance on Sunday proved exactly why there was nothing to worry about to begin with.

    Charlotte has always been one of Johnson’s most successful tracks, having previously won six races at NASCAR’s longest race of the season.

    Johnson started the race Sunday in a familiar position – on the pole. Out of the seven total races Johnson has won at Charlotte Motor Speedway, three of them have come from the lead position, lending even more credence to Johnson’s dominance at the track.

    On Sunday, Johnson was able to lead a race-high 165 laps, 65 more than his second-place competitor, Kevin Harvick. Johnson secured his victory on Sunday by passing Matt Kenseth with 9 laps left, while holding off Harvick to cross the finish line with over a second margin of victory.

    In discussing his slump with the media, Johnson claimed he was never worried: “I guess we’ve created this environment for ourselves. I honestly wasn’t stressing. The fact that 12 races created that much buzz just means we’ve done a lot of great things over the years, so I’ll turn it into a compliment.”

    Coming into the Coca-Cola 600, however, Johnson’s story sat on the back-burner. The headlining act Sunday was fellow driver Kurt Busch, who was seeking to become only the second man in history to complete all 1,100 miles of both the Indianapolis 500 and Coca-Cola 600 in one day.

    While Busch experienced much success in his Indy car debut, finishing 6th, his night at Charlotte Motor Speedway ended on lap 273 after an engine failure: “It’s like the car just swallowed three cylinders all at once. Those things happen in motor sports. It was a good battle, though. I was hoping to do 1,100 miles today. I can’t let what happened here dampen the mood of what happened in Indianapolis,” stated Busch.

    Fortunately for Johnson, the media attention should now wane as his victory almost assures his qualification for NASCAR’s post-season playoffs. And, in more good news, the next Sprint Cup race is in Dover, a track where Johnson has won five of the last ten races.

    Image via Twitter

  • Now That’s How A Brand Should Use Jelly

    Now That’s How A Brand Should Use Jelly

    Brands are already (unsurprisingly) looking for ways to take advantage of Jelly, the new mobile Q&A app from Twitter co-founder Biz Stone. Last week, after the app’s launch, we discussed how it might be useful for businesses out of pure speculation. Now we’re getting a glance at how brands are actually trying to engage. At least one appears to be getting it right.

    Do you think there’s a worthwhile way to use Jelly for business? Share your thoughts in the comments.

    Lowe’s may be the first to get it right (no surprise considering its earlier use of Vine). It’s at least the first we’ve seen, and it even got the attention of Jelly itself.

    Others have tried spammier approaches. Even if not entirely spammy, pushing too hard at a service like Jelly is simply going to annoy users.

    What Lowe’s did makes a lot of sense. It answered a question in a helpful way, which is the entire point of Jelly – to be helpful to people with real questions.

    It’s obviously way too early in Jelly’s life to truly know how businesses will be able to use it to their benefit. But Lowe’s illustrates a pretty solid example. Just be helpful. That speaks volumes about a brand.

    Earlier this week, Mashable looked at some brands that were kicking the tires on Jelly. They’re mostly using it to ask questions. With all due respect to the brands experimenting (and I suppose you’ve got to experiment), that’s annoying. People don’t want to be bombarded with questions because you want to engage with them. They want to ask questions and get meaningful answers.

    Giga Om’s David Meyer writes that he uninstalled Jelly because of the marketers. After listing some other annoying things about Jelly itself (some of which we also griped about here), he says, “No, the real deal-breaker is the marketing. The thing launched like three seconds ago and already I’m getting notifications for ‘questions’ from mobile phone companies, soft drink firms and so on.”

    He writes later, “When the notification is for a poorly-disguised marketing message, I get stabby. As a rough guess, going on how it currently feels to use Jelly, I would say that 1 in 7 ‘questions’ are tentatively trying to big up a brand or drive traffic to a site or post (around the same number are good questions, and the rest are just people messing around).”

    As a Jelly user (if you count having it installed as making one a “user”), I completely concur that the notifications are annoying. You can turn them off, but then, like Meyer says, you forget you even have it installed. It’s not that fun to just go to Jelly and look at questions. It wouldn’t be so annoying if Jelly would be able to pinpoint the relevancy of questions and your ability to answer and/or the likelihood of your interest in answering. As it stands now, users are just notified of seemingly random, mundane questions.

    This is one big reason that some remain skeptical that Jelly can generate a truly significant user base. The company had a pretty decent launch week. It shared some early numbers, but acknowledged that much of the use just comes from that initial curiosity period, and they expect the real growth to come slowly. Even in that peak curiosity period, only a fourth of questions were actually getting answered, according to some third-party data.

    But assuming Jelly can grow to cater to a significant user base, and it becomes something brands need to consider, Lowe’s would be a good example to follow, at least with the app’s current feature set. Jelly said it has a lot more features in the pipeline, though it didn’t give much in the way of hints about what these will be. Hopefully profiles (including web profiles) are in the cards. I’d also like to see embeddable “jellies,” which would make for a helpful replacement for screenshots like the one above. All of these could potentially help brands.

    One good thing about Jelly for brands is that it leverages networks that brands are already using and followers they’ve already established. You don’t have to accumulate followers on Jelly. You find your Facebook and Twitter followers via Jelly. That’s one of the reasons the Lowe’s approach could be powerful.

    Lowe’s didn’t jump in with a link to buy stuff on its website, though in some cases that might actually be appropriate if it’s accompanied by a helpful answer. The company didn’t try to directly sell products to the person in need of help, though it could potentially make a sale if the person takes Lowe’s up on its advice. There’s no guarantee that she’s going to purchase the items Lowe’s suggested she needs, and even if she does, there’s no guarantee she’s going to purchase them from Lowe’s. However, she will remember that Lowe’s was the one that helped her, and that could be enough to influence her purchasing decision.

    More significant yet is the fact that she’s very possibly already a Lowe’s customer given that Lowe’s even saw her question to begin with.

    It’s obviously very early days for Jelly. Right now, there’s a lot of noise. Some of this comes from the app’s lack of any real organization. Some comes from a bunch of people just trying out a new service and asking dumb or otherwise meaningless questions. This will likely get better in time once the newness wears off.

    Do you expect Jelly to become an important or at least helpful social media tool for business? Let us know what you think in the comments.

    Image via Jelly

  • Lowe’s Wins Vine with 6-Second Home Improvement Vids

    Twitter’s 6-second video app Vine is proving itself quite versatile. We’ve seen it used for promotion, politics, comedy, game teasers, short films, and even as a real-time news medium during the Boston Marathon bombings.

    But with the help of their ad agency, New York’s BBDO, Lowe’s has embraced the new 6-second video medium in a totally unique way. The home improvement chain has turned the short videos into fast-paced but informative how-to videos concerning everything from removing a stripped screw with the help of a rubber band, to cleaning your rusty knives in a lemon juice bath.

    “Historically the category can be thought of as incredibly complicated. We sell products but those products are components to a project, and a consumer needs all the information on how to complete the project,” Tom Lamb, CMO at Lowe’s told AdAge. “What consumer behavior is forcing us to do is learn to be incredibly concise. We’re making an effort to demonstrate that we know a little bit, so [consumers think] it’s worth seeing what else we know on our site and in store.”

    Not only are they well-executed and informative, but it’s a great way to not only provide an actual service, but to promote the brand and make something worth sharing too.

    Here are some of Lowe’s awesome home improvement Vines, aptly titled #lowesfixinsix:

  • Mobile Pay Options About To Increase With Merchant Customer Exchange

    A group of retailers, including Walmart, Target, 7-Eleven, Best Buy, CVS, Lowe’s, Shell, Publix, Sears, Alon, Darden, HyVee, Michael’s and Sunoco are teaming up to offer customers another mobile payments option. The initiative is called Merchant Customer Exchange (MCX).

    The group of retailers behind MCX, which will grow, seems to think that they have an edge over mobile payments competitors (like Google, Isis, etc.), in that they are retail, and therefore understand customers habits better. They will use this knowledge of customers to run their kinds of offers and promotions.

    “MCX will leverage mobile technology to give consumers a faster and more convenient shopping experience while eliminating unnecessary costs for all stakeholders,” said Mike Cook, corporate vice president and assistant treasurer at Walmart. “The MCX platform will employ secure technology to deliver an efficiency-enhancing mobile solution available to all merchant categories, including retail stores, casual dining, petroleum and e-commerce.”

    “We believe MCX is uniquely qualified to offer the most comprehensive mobile payment options for consumers,” said Terry Scully, president of financial and retail services at Target. “By participating in MCX, merchants are in a position to effectively deliver innovative payment approaches that aren’t available today.”

    “As merchants, no one understands our customers’ shopping and payment experience better than we do, and we’re confident that together we can develop a technology solution that makes that experience more engaging, convenient and efficient,” said Mark Williams, president of financial services for Best Buy.

    There’s no launch date or CEO for the MCX yet, but the companies are reportedly looking for a leader. The group says it expects to announce additional members during the coming months.

  • Linking to Lowes.com? Better Get Permission First

    Linking to Lowes.com? Better Get Permission First

    Don’t link to Lowes.com unless you have the time to fax a license request to them.

    Ars Technica has found that Lowes.com has a ridiculous policy on linking to them. They require that Web sites that link to them must fill out a form. The actual idea of having to receive permission to link to a Web site is pretty stupid. It’s a concept that has been dead for years.

    It gets even more insane when you see that Lowes has three different licenses that users must sign when wanting to link to the Web site in different ways. The three ways are linking to Lowes and using their logo, linking to Lowes without using their logo and if both you and Lowes are linking to each other.

    linktolowes

    Once again, may I add for emphasis, that the only way to receive permission to link to Lowes is if you fax them a license request. Oh, by the way, Lowes has the right to terminate your license at any time.

    Ars Technica contacted Lowes about this seemingly archaic policy to hopefully confirm that it’s just an old policy that they forgot to remove. Unfortunately, that is not the case:

    “Managing link agreements is part of protecting our brand,” is the polite reply I received. “The process we have in place to handle links to lowes.com is a business decision.”

    By the way, I found this awesome chainsaw on Home Depot that would be perfect for a zombie apocalypse. I hear Lowes has the better deal, but I’m awaiting to hear back on whether or not I have permission to link to it.

    To read the absolutely ridiculous link agreement in its entirety, check it out below:

    HypertextLinkAgreement_A