Olvin has been named among the top 40 retail tech start-ups operating globally in Retail Week World Retail Congress’ (RWRC) second annual Discovery report.
Olvin’s platform is unique for many reasons, but it excels in understanding the changing physical world. By accessing the right insights for retailers and combining this with curated data sets, our platform Almanac delivers smart and complex insights that are easy to understand.
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It’s great to see the industry is recognizing the huge potential that AI can have on a brick and mortar retail
Leveraging trillions of data points, Almanac’s neural network architecture is able to bring predictive insights to brands and retailers on consumer traffic and trends in the same way that e-commerce retailers have had for years.
Physical retailers, product owners, and businesses need these insights to thrive in the post-pandemic world and with Almanac, it provides the tools for businesses to grow their revenue, increase customer loyalty and maximize their working capital.
Olvin’s founder and CEO Sam Amrani said, “We are very excited to be included in such a prestigious report, and it’s great to see that the industry is recognizing the huge potential that AI can have on a brick and mortar retail, particularly in enhancing the level of understanding businesses can get on their customers.”
He added, “This is an excellent opportunity for us to show how AI can help retailers get back on track after the pandemic, and it shows how predictive intelligence can benefit the smallest of retailers right through to larger brands and establishments.”
Most retailers know they need to work with tech start-ups to give them a competitive edge – it is understanding which firms are going to truly add value that is the challenge. Judged by a panel of retail and start-up experts*, the Discovery report tells retailers all they need to know.
Virtual try-on assistants, vertical farming, ‘save now, buy later’ payments, in-store marketing robots and bookable shop space are just a handful of fresh-thinking players featured.
And it is this fresh thinking that is required if retailers and brands are to remain competitive and balance bottom lines with customer expectations as disruption from the pandemic persists.
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Drawing on case studies from Discovery, the ROI from retailer-start-up partnerships is clear:
- M&S has trialed a partnership with instant virtual try-on start-up Texel to drive purchasing intent; customers that use the tool are five times more likely to purchase and 30% less likely to return items
- Samsung has benefited from a 20% increase in basket revenue and 28% uplift in items per basket from working with AI-powered product bundling start-up Increasingly
- Carrefour UAE is using Simbe Robotics’ inventory robots Tally to monitor all-important inventory availability and has now expanded this to 12 of its stores
- Lidl has used ParcelLab’s automated personalised shipping message service to engage 85% of customers receiving shopping emails to return to its website
Featuring solutions from supply chain and store innovations to personalisation, AI, data and marketing, the report looks at how retailers have benefited from adapting their businesses – and their thinking – to lean into a whole new set of disruptions, trends and challenges.
The start-ups operate across all parts of the world, from Europe and the US to Singapore and Israel, and have worked with more than 30 retailers and brands including Tesco, M&S, Nespresso, KFC, Carrefour, Samsung, Depop, AO.com and John Lewis Partners.
Ian Shepherd has been one of the Discovery judges for the past two years. Shepherd is non-executive director at Bensons for Beds, former CEO at retailer Game, author of The Average is Always Wrong and runs the consultancy Moving Tribes where he advises retailers, digital start-ups and consumer businesses.
Shepherd commented: “This year’s Discovery cohort – just like last year’s – are going to be critical to the future of our sector.
“A different retail sector is possible, a million miles from the old world of ‘how many stores are you going to open?’ and ‘what was your like-for-like last quarter?’ – a retail sector that marries the instinctive customer understanding any good retailer has with the innovation and laser-like focus that new technology allows.”
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