consumer

Complimentary 1to1 Webinar Tuesday, May 24th | 2:00PM Eastern

Consumers are a fickle bunch, often swayed by flashy promotions and discounts. Additionally, advances in social networking and mobility have fundamentally changed the way customers behave. Fortunately, this transformation also opens the door to more direct relationships. Consumer packaged goods companies (CPGs) must engage consumers across channels and learn their underlying needs and preferences to create a connection that cements long-term loyalty and evangelism—and grows revenue.

CPGs must engage consumers based on their needs and preferences to create a connection that cements long-term loyalty and grows revenue. Our presenters will examine how to build consumer relationships and cut across channels.

Attendees of this exclusive webinar will also receive a complimentary copy of the new white paper by Peppers & Rogers Group, Social Loyalty: A New Way to Make Friends and Influence Business.

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Business Intelligence: Model Once, Deploy Everywhere

by C.R. Matín on April 19, 2011

Our colleague, David Dorf, wrote an interesting post at the Insight-Driven Retailing Blog. You might find these insights useful in your industry, especially if you need insight across CRM and other information repositories.


Business Intelligence has really grown up over the last decade. It has expanded beyond simple reporting to include advanced analytics, alerting, forecasting, collaboration, and even knowledge management. For retailers, many of these functions exist within the enterprise, but they are typically not connected and rarely use common semantics.

CSA BI.PNGWorking with Chain Store Age, we did a survey to find out where retailers need the most help. The results show that consolidation, consistency, and simplification are the main priorities. Most retailers know they own the data to make the right decisions, but they are frustrated at not being able to easily access that information.

The best approach we've found is to model the data once, in a common information model that is comprehensive to the business. Then there are opportunities to deploy the model in different ways to support different functions. But if you don't have that common information model to begin with, you risk complications.

Oracle provides a common information model across disciplines such as finance, labor, and supply chain for its BI Apps. To that we're adding industry domains like merchandising and banking so its possible to combine ERP and industry data yielding a complete view of the business.

Below are links to more information and an upcoming webinar on the topic.

Survey Findings

Webinar: Simplifying Retail BI: How to model once, deploy everywhere, and separate the necessary from the nonsense (Tuesday, April 26, 2011; 2 p.m. ET/ 11 a.m. PT)

Chain Store Age Interview at NRF





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