20 posts categorized "Kiosks"

04/06/2010

Industry Expert Opinions Needed

VDC is conducting its semi-annual survey of companies using, deploying, or evaluating the following systems:

  • Retail Automation (i.e.: POS terminals & workstations, Kiosks, Self-Check Out, Digital Signage, ESL, Imaging, Payment Terminals, etc.)
  • Bar Code (i.e.: All bar code scanning and printing solutions)
  • RFID (i.e.: All RFID related hardware, software, and services)

If you are involved in the evaluation, purchasing, use or maintenance of any of the above solutions at your company, this is your chance to have your voice heard.  Your perspective will improve the insights we deliver to the supplier community and help influence next generation solutions.

Every respondent who completes a survey will receive:

  • Instant access to a summary of the 2009 survey findings;
  • Entry into a drawing for one of five (5) $100 Amazon.com gift certificates (drawing to be held August 30th, 2010) ; and
  • An executive summary of our 2010 survey findings once the results have been tabulated


To begin the Retail Automation survey, go to: http://vdcresearch.com/survey/10raps_user.html
To begin the Bar Code survey, go to:http://vdcresearch.com/survey/10_aidc_eu.html
To begin the RFID survey, go to: http://vdcresearch.com/survey/10_rfid_eu.html

01/19/2010

The 'New' Retail - Pursuing Balance Between Strategies & Tactics That Influence The Point of Decision Experience

What's new in the retail & transaction automation equipment market?  That question was the focus of a webcast we hosted yesterday.   If you missed it, don't worry, we recorded it.

To sum it all up:  The recession accelerated the pace of change in an already tumultuous consumer economy.  As a result, the pressure for retailers and other b-to-c operators increased exponentially.  Apparel retailers working on out of stock issues suddenly needed to radically reduce inventory carry cost.  Sporting goods retailers training 500 associates on merchandising, saw their trainee corps shrink by 30%, and the focus for those teams shift to customer greeting.  

In an earlier time, these companies might have been able to make the transition without much fallout.  Inventory reduction goals would be met with perhaps some marginal rise in out of stock.  Promotions effectiveness might dip marginally, but, customer satisfaction levels might have risen at the same time.  

Today, in 2010, retailers cannot afford to sacrifice one capability for another.  They need to find a way to balance these competing requirements or risk continued revenue decline, margin compression, and share loss.  

In order to make progress on one dimension, and not fall behind on another, retailers and b-to-c operators, need even smarter solutions from ever more agile retail technology and transaction automation suppliers.  

To get more than just the summary, scroll through the slides.

01/15/2010

Market Update & 2010 Outlook - RFID, Barcode and Retail & Transaction Automation Equipment

What technical, commercial and operational issues will you have to address this year in order to remain competitive?  To help you answer these questions (& more), we've got two great webcasts coming up next week that we wanted to make sure to share with you. 

Retail & Transaction Automation Equipment – Market Update & 2010 Outlook
January 19, 2010 @ 1 p.m. EST

  • What are the macro economic trends that will impact future investments in retail automation technologies?
  • What are retailer and b-to-c operators strategic and investment priorities in 2010?
  • Which markets segments will provide the strongest near term growth opportunities?
  • Will the upgrade/ extension market be a more important source of revenue in the current/ emerging environment? Should peripherals and accessories lines receive a greater share of sales and marketing investment?
  • How has the recession-shaped current environment impacted self-service investment? Deployment? Operation?
Details & Registration

Barcode and RFID – Market Update & 2010 Outlook
January 20, 2010 @ 1 p.m. EST

  • Beyond the recession, what were the underlying causes of the 2009 market contraction? Was it something structural?
  • Which tech or customer segments of the AIDC market were most impacted?
  • Which market segments will provide the strongest near-term growth opportunities?
  • Where will barcode and RFID technologies most likely converge? Compete?
  • Which traditional & emerging sales and deployment models warrant serious investment consideration?
Details & Registration

If you cant make it to the live webcasts, please register anyway and we'll make sure to send you a link to the recording.

01/04/2010

Self-Service’s Future within the Hospitality Vertical Market

We’ve all reviewed countless case studies on self-service applications in hospitality and the benefits these applications are providing to the enterprises that deploy them, their customers, employees and trading partners.  But what is the future of self-service in hospitality? What are some of the most compelling applications? And how is the technology and distribution paradigm for these applications changing?

Hospitality represents a huge, largely untapped market for self-service technologies.  VDC’s analysis suggests that less than 15% of hospitality enterprises with annual revenues greater than $100M have invested in self-service solutions, compared to 27% in the retail market, and trends bode well for increased investment.  The business imperatives of hospitality enterprises: maintaining customer loyalty, increasing share of wallet, reducing operating costs, and improving operating efficiency, align nicely with the value propositions associated with a short list of self-service applications that are receiving increased investment consideration.

But hospitality enterprises have a difficult tightrope to walk: ensuring world-class, personalized service while deploying technologies that enable their customers to serve themselves.  In VDC ’s experience, the best self-service solutions can do all that and more, enhancing the customer experience while providing valuable information back to the enterprise regarding the wants and needs of their most valued customers.  And leading operators are increasingly extending this functionality to gain similar insights into other core stakeholder communities, including employees and trading partners.

In fact, the list of customer-centric applications receiving investment consideration is growing, as commonly supported applications like rewards/loyalty programs, self check in/out, and bill payment are complemented by less penetrated emerging applications including wayfinding, age verification and table-side transaction processing.

What’s more, the core technologies, infrastructure and deployment models supporting these applications are changing, making the value propositions associated with them more robust and more compelling for the hospitality operator.
 
While the kiosk remains the primary mechanism through which self-service applications are deployed in hospitality, this is changing.  The infrastructure supporting kiosk installations is becoming more stable, as enterprises increasingly turn to integrators that can support multiple applications using a common, device agnostic platform that is integrated with supporting enterprise software and CRM applications, enabling key content to be lifted and replicated across multiple applications and insights captured during customer interactions to be aggregated with data secured during other customer facing events and analyzed holistically.  This is enabling hospitality operators to look beyond the kiosk at other technologies that can complement their self-service infrastructure.  For example, interactive displays, mobile terminals andsmartphones are supporting a growing list of application requirements as hospitality enterprises strive to make the applications more accessible to their costumers, employees and trading partners.

So, the first generation of self-service solutions were just that—stand alone systems designed to provide information and transact business.  The second generation of self-service solutions are branching out to cover a broader array of customer-facing and enterprise-centric interactions, all the time aggregating data captured to gain the insights required to drive service excellence and identify sources of sustained competitive advantage.  But what’s next?

VDC believes that the power of these applications will be further bolstered as systems integration extends beyond the enterprise, gathering insights from complementary systems that augment the enterprise’s knowledge of their customers, employees and trading partners.  Further, enterprises will continue to pilot the feasibility of new technologies that could dramatically address the needs of a new breed of customer—one who is increasingly short on time, wired and technology savvy.
Consider the following story: a health care consultant living in New York plans to visit a client in Chicago.  She books her flight, hotel and rental car on-line.  When she reaches the airport, her flight is delayed, but she finds an alternative flight, transfers her ticket and boards the plane, managing each of these transactions via her cell phone.  When she arrives at O’Hare Airport, she registers using a rental car kiosk in the baggage claim area. When her shuttle arrives at the garage, her preferred vehicle is gassed and waiting.  Upon her arrival at her hotel, she by-passes the concierge desk and enters her room using a 2Dbarcode symbology displayed on her phone.  In her room, she secures a dinner invitation from a former colleague also doing business in Chicago and staying at the hotel.  After a successful business meeting the following day, she returns her rental car at the airport.  Supporting systems record her mileage gas consumption and inspect her car for damages using telematics and imaging technologies.  Before boarding her shuttle, she receives her bill via e-mail, along with her boarding pass for her flight home.  She is alerted via text that she has left a bag in the backseat of her car and that this bag will meet her when she arrives in New York. 

This is the future of self-service in hospitality.  These solutions will become increasingly vital, bridging the gap between IT, operations and strategic planning for world class hospitality enterprises and smaller companies striving to differentiate themselves and grow.


For more commentary regarding this subject, please refer to the following article from VDC Research and Hospitality Technology: "What is Self-Service's Future in the Hospitality Vertical Market?"

11/24/2009

Navigating the Fragmented, Fast-Moving & Crowded Retail & Transaction Automation Equipment Market in 2010

It's no secret that the retail and hospitality industry was hit hard by the recession.  Players in these industries are under even more pressure than usual to better manage costs, enhance customer experiences, and retain/grow their customer base.  For these beleaguered industries, automation technologies can help address these pressures and aid in realigning their business to better meet the ‘new’ customer requirements (for retail, see: 'Jujitsu at the Point of Decision') and preferences.

In our opinion, retail and hospitality enterprises must continue to evaluate and invest in automation technologies because the value propositions associated with such technologies have proven to:
  • Aid in the improvement of product turnover;
  • Enhance stakeholder interaction;
  • Reduce costs;
  • Synchronize multi-channel strategies, and;
  • Develop competitive advantages/differentiators. 
As automation technologies mature and evolve, enterprises have more investment and deployment choices than ever before. The problem is, with more options come more questions.  The ability to effectively scope and manage such investments has become a major strategic initiative. Enterprises who invest in the wrong solution, could alienate their hard-won, fickle and expensive-to-replace customers. Suppliers who pursue the wrong market opportunity risk precious resources drilling a dry well, and join the ready-to-invest markets too late.

In order to be successful, suppliers of these technologies need to deftly navigate a fragmenting, faster-moving, more crowded market. In order to help suppliers find their way through this maze, VDC has recently announced the launch of our 2010 Retail & Transaction Automation Equipment  Market Intelligence Service.  This market research program will deliver the insight, analysis and data that suppliers need to make the most profitable product, market and channel development decisions.

Feel free to contact us to learn more about the research and the opportunity to be a founding sponsor of this research.

11/06/2009

NCR Augments Product Portfolio by Purchasing Netkey's Assets

On November 2, NCR Corporation (NYSE: NCR) officially announced purchasing the assets of Netkey, a leading provider of enterprise-class software for the development, deployment, management and security of self-service kiosk and digital signage applications.

The terms of the deal were not disclosed, but VDC believes that the deal is beneficial to both parties.  This acquisition comes almost immediately after NCR announced its mixed Q3 results that saw revenues and net income increase slightly from Q2 of 2009, but decline significantly from 2008.

As these enterprises look to establish strategic partnerships with entrenched, global solutions providers, NCR has strengthened their case for inclusion on a shrinking list of potential partners.  The question remains: “what’s next?”

In VDC’s opinion, the advancement of stakeholder interaction management and the proliferation of next-generation transaction and branding solutions is what’s next.  Put another way, anticipating how customers will want to receive information and transact business is only one part of the self-service equation, and one that NCR is even better positioned to address through the acquisition of Netkey.  The real source of competitive differentiation for enterprises deploying self-service solutions will come from using the information they capture from each customer interaction to create a source of sustainable competitive advantage.  NCR and a contracting list of competitors will be there to meet this challenge.

To view VDC's research note: NCR Aquires Netkey please click here.

10/28/2009

Despite limited current adoption, self-service’s future in health care remains attractive.

Within the highly fragmented health care vertical market, self-service penetration remains limited to select Tier I service providers (i.e., hospitals). In addition, the majority of these installations are still defined as being in the early phases of pilot or beta tests. Despite this limited adoption, suppliers and channel organizations are confident that such solutions are carving out their niche and will have bright futures within the vertical.    

In general, healthcare organizations are evaluating methods to improve patient service and security, improve accuracy of information and reduce operational costs. Self-service and customer interaction management solutions are in position to remain a top priority for health care providers as they address these and other issues.

Self-service’s future within the health care vertical market remains heavily dependent on increasing acceptance and preference for the solutions by medical professionals. In order for the market to achieve its projected success, vendors and enterprises must work together to effectively motivate and train employees on interaction with such solutions.

Currently, several self-service suppliers have been leveraging completed installations as educational platforms to ease adoption for other departments, practices or enterprises.  It is extremely important that while educating employees on the use of such solutions, they be positioned as supplements and not replacements. If deployed appropriately, health care service providers will improve their ability to track, manage, and react to patients across locations.

Another way for suppliers to ease adoption of self-service solutions would be to improve the next-generation of their solutions by focusing on its ‘ease of use’ and ‘reliability.’ The ability to improve these two criteria will correlate directly to the success of an individual deployment, and more broadly, the market as a whole.

These issues and more are explored in depth in VDC’s most recent Transaction Automation publication, Self-Service and Customer Interaction Management Solutions: Vol.3 Health Care. 

10/25/2009

Jujitsu at the Point of Decision

The point of decision. In retail, it used to be the moment, on the retail floor, when the customer made their final commitment to buy, or to move on. It was at an aisle header, at a display, in the dressing room, at the check out counter. Often with an associate. Just as often without. 

During the past decade, the point of decision migrated from the retail floor to create a diaspora-like pattern of decision points. E-tailing produced nothing short of a seismic shift in b-to-c theory, strategy, reality. That story has been well documented … perhaps a thousand times. Retailers saw their web sites as a new point of decision equal to their centuries old, newly coined ‘bricks and mortar’ stores.

When consumers ‘returned’ to bricks and mortar, their expectations changed. They required more accurate information, in real time. They wanted to know what their options were. They had questions about how much customization was available to them. They demanded alternative payment terms and delivery options. Consumers learned a lot on the web. And they came into stores armed, and for the wrong retailer, dangerous. For retailers prepared for this, these informed consumers became better customers. 

Prepared retailers shared a number of common attributes – if not a thousand different tactics. One of the most powerful, common attributes, was the deft deployment of self-service solutions. These new internet age consumers – armed with so much real-time, accurate information were conditioned to help themselves. Especially after frustrating experiences with over-matched associates. The right kiosk implementation represented the bridge between consumers online and in-store experiences. 

And then, faster, cheaper network connections. And wireless. And the point of decision splintered into billions of intersections of space and time and location. At home on the phone. On PCs at home or at work. Cell phones in the car. PDAs on the street. The point of decision was wherever the consumer was. 

Retailers were learning this … some early, others late. Most with a fair amount of pain. And then … the recession. And every single retailer, except Wal-Mart, bled. Some profusely. Others to death. 

Consumers went into hiding. And when they returned – as they return – there are fewer. They have less disposable cash. Less credit. And yet, they still have extremely high expectations. They have even more access to information. They have more options. They have more leverage. 

The best retailers see this. They see the technical, financial and cultural changesthat have arrived them at a place where they no longer have leverage at the point of decision. Retailers do not want to regain point of decision leverage. They need to. It is not a matter of margin. It is a matter of survival.  And as b-to-c relations sort themselves out in this post-recession era, the smartest retailers are looking at strategies that synthesize the best elements of their traditional and information age operations. Some early success strategies involve the deployment of a wider range of next generation retail automation solutions. Think: self service solutions, interactive displays and digital signage or item-level inventory tracking solutions.  The objectives of these investments are many-fold – cost reduction, customer experience enhancement, revenue generation. 

However, retailers managing the most successful implementations are realizing that, perhaps the most powerful ROI lever is how these technologies are enabling the redeployment of a better trained, albeit smaller, cadre of customer-facing associates. With fewer associate rolls, powerful ROI is accruing to retailers who deploy solutions aimed at freeing associates from non-customer-facing tasks such asinventory management, receiving, replenishment, supplier management. The freed time is invested in support, merchandising, selling … the entire customer experience.

The goal is to re-establish more leverage at the point(s) of decision on the retail floor, and perhaps, with exceptional execution, deliver an unforgettable in-store experience that can exert influence on all the ever-expanding point(s)-of-decision diaspora.  Retailers may never be able to exert as much control over the point-of-decision as they did 30 years ago -- even 10 years ago. But with the right technical investments, and sharper retraining and reapplication of their associates, they might have a chance to enhance their influence in the ever-broadening definition of the point-of-decision.

10/21/2009

Consumer redefinition is forcing hospitality operators to adapt.

As hospitality operators continue to struggle through the current recession, an increased focus is being placed on their relationships with their consumers. Each and every interaction/transaction has become absolutely critical to an enterprise’s ability to survive during this challenging time.

Simply stated, hospitality customers are redefining themselves and their lifestyles. The purchasing processes and leisure activities that have been defining characteristics of this community have been drastically altered. In attempts to safeguard themselves, hospitality operators across North America must ensure they develop and deploy the ‘best in breed’ customer service, acquisition and retention strategies.

In order to achieve such a daunting objective, hospitality operators are continuously evaluating and integrating new automation technology capable of engaging their customers on multiple dimensions. One type of automation technology that helping realign the hospitality vertical market is self-service. Self-service solutions, such as interactive kiosks, digital signage, at-table/in-room terminals, and mobile devices, are allowing hospitality organizations to interact with their consumers via new and exciting applications (i.e., mobile ordering, virtual concierge, etc.).   

When evaluating their current self-service strategies, hospitality operators continue to focus the majority of their delivery platforms and applications toward serving their customers. The deployment of self-service solutions allows operators to address their customers in real time, presenting them with the opportunity to improve experiences and entice future interactions/transactions.

These issues and more are explored in depth in VDC’s most recent Transaction Automation publication, Self-Service and Customer Interaction Management Solutions: Vol.2 Hospitality.  

10/15/2009

Retailers seek balance between cost reduction strategies and customer service.

Hit hard by the current recession, retailers across North America are continuing to chart their course across the vertical market’s ‘turbulent waters’. At the heart storm remains an overextended and demoralized consumer community and an increasing need for retailers to improve cost management. Although the Consumer Confidence Index continues to indicate monthly improvements since March of this year, retailers and suppliers of self-service solutions remain ‘cautiously optimistic’ regarding the vertical’s immediate future.     

As consumer confidence continues to make a comeback, customer retention and growth strategies are quickly moving their way up the list of objectives for retailers. Across all sub-segments and tiers, retailers find themselves under overwhelming pressure to improve experiences/interactions, while reducing costs. 

Similar to other vertical markets, one way that retailers are attempting to do this is through continued investment and deployment of self-service technologies. Self-service technologies within retail are allowing customers to take complete control of their interaction by leveraging multiple delivery platforms (i.e., interactive kiosks, self-checkout solutions, and personal shopping solutions). Retailers are evaluating and integrating such a diverse set of platforms in order to take advantage of emerging applications such as: assisted shopping, coupon dispensing/validation, loyalty programs and self-service ordering. 
 
The key for retailers during this troubling economic climate is to empower their customers and then tie that to acquisition and retention strategies. That being stated, it is of the utmost importance that retailers do not cut too hard or too deep in to their customer service, specifically self-service, budgets while improving operations via cost reduction strategies. 

Input from retailers has identified ‘enhancement of customer experience’ and ‘retention and growth of customer base’ as the two most import objectives when deploying self-service solutions.  As illustrated below, the same respondents are only partially satisfied with their ability fulfill these objectives with their current self-service strategy. These discrepancies depict potential opportunities for self-service suppliers and channels active within the retail vertical market to enhance their next generation solutions.

These issues and more are explored in depth in VDC’s most recent Transaction Automation publication, Self-Service and Customer Interaction Management Solutions: Vol.1 Retail.