Skip to main content

Walmart, Amazon talk retail tech at NielsenIQ event

Data, collaboration and personalization are key priorities
5/27/2022
Walmart's Whitney Cooper appears at C360 during a live podcast interview by The CPG Guys: Sri Rajagopalan (right) and Peter V.S. Bond.
Walmart's Whitney Cooper appears at C360 during a live podcast interview by The CPG Guys: Sri Rajagopalan (right) and Peter V.S. Bond.

What does the next generation of food retail look like? Walmart and Amazon offered a blueprint for the future at NielsenIQ’s annual Consumer 360 (C360) event in Orlando, Fla., last week.

Whitney Cooper, senior director of omnichannel transformation and commercialization at Walmart, and Justin Honaman, head, of worldwide CPG and retail go-to-market at Amazon Web Services, both spoke at C360 (back in person after a two-year hiatus) and detailed how retailers must better leverage data, collaboration and personalization to capture the new “phygital” shopper.

Cooper, who appeared as the guest during a live podcast hosted by The CPG Guys, said 69% of Walmart customers changed the way they shopped during the pandemic, and that the behaviour is new and sticky. For Walmart, she said, catering to the digitally enabled in-store shopper is now more important than ever.

“We have found that 82% of our food and beverage customers that are in the store are actually using their phone while they're shopping in the store,” Cooper said. “They are actually looking at reviews and looking at content on our site, in the store. So, when you think about reviews and you think about the power of reviews, I think a lot of people think about reviews like, ‘Oh, I don't need to have a review for a box of Cheerios. Everyone knows that. No one looks at that.’ That's not true.”

Cooper said retailers should have online reviews for fast moving consumer goods, as well as electronics and hard goods, because the data backs it up.

“And what's interesting about this, the 82%, it wasn't just once. They were viewing the data two to four times during the trip. So, when you're looking at the data in hand, it's kind of undeniable how important the content is,” Cooper said.

Cooper also spoke to Walmart’s new data business, called Luminate, which grew 75% during the first quarter, the retailer reported May 17. The shopper insights platform launched in October to provide a suite of data products to merchants and suppliers. Luminate joins the company’s other businesses such as Walmart Plus, Walmart Go Local and its retail media arm Walmart Connect, which all seek to leverage data to boost sales and margins over the long term.

“When it comes to the next generation of retail media, we've been in this thing now for three years. We've been super focused on creating best in class products for our advertisers to use to speak to our customers. Highly focused, obviously in the digital space,” Cooper said. “But when you think about what our value proposition is, the strength of our 4,700 stores and the network that we have, in order to really create awesome experiences for our customers, advertisers need to be able to speak to our customers in the stores.”

Amazon’s Honaman said the pandemic had created an opportunity for smaller brands to stand out and that retailers need to be focused on “creating an environment that gets the shopper in the store so then they're more likely to buy other products in the store.”

He also said some retailers will need to improve collaboration when it comes to data around forecasting, replenishment, merchandising and store ops.

“The legacy retailers have different silos and don't talk to one another, so that’s another big data challenge. The good news is the technology, analytics, and the skill sets have evolved pretty rapidly over the last couple of years, so I think you'll see a lot of evolution there. But that's an area that will be a priority for all of us in the industry over the next couple of years,” said Honaman.

A version of this article appeared at ProgressiveGrocer.com.

X
This ad will auto-close in 10 seconds