unified commerce

Kapil Dabi and Ann Ruckstuhl

Unified Commerce Benchmark: How Manhattan Associates and Google Transform Retail Excellence at Shop Talk

Welcome to this episode of Talk Commerce Live from Shop Talk, featuring an insightful conversation with Kapil Dabi, Americas Market Leader for Retail and CPG at Google, and Ann Ruckstuhl, Chief Marketing Officer at Manhattan Associates. The discussion centers on unified commerce and the groundbreaking partnership between these industry leaders.

Key Takeaways

  1. The Unified Commerce Benchmark (UCB) evaluates 300+ attributes across eight shopping trips
  2. Top-performing retailers see 3x faster revenue growth and 31% lower fulfillment costs
  3. Companies using generative AI witness 14% increase in average order value
  4. Customer lifetime value improves by 11% through AI implementation
  5. Store associate empowerment leads to 1.25x higher customer lifetime value

About the Guests

Ann Ruckstuhl

As Chief Marketing Officer at Manhattan Associates, Ann leads the company’s marketing initiatives for their supply chain and omnichannel commerce software solutions, including order management and point of sale systems. Manhattan Associates specializes in cloud-native solutions built on the Google Cloud platform.

Kapil Dabi

Serving as Americas Market Leader for Retail and CPG at Google, Kapil oversees Global Retail Strategy, Industry Solutions, and Partnerships. His expertise focuses on helping retailers leverage technology for digital transformation and enhanced customer experiences.

Detailed Episode Summary

The conversation begins with an introduction to the Unified Commerce Benchmark (UCB), a collaborative initiative launched two and a half years ago. The UCB evaluates 220 brands across North America, examining various aspects of retail performance:

Benchmark Categories

  • Leaders (top performers like Sephora and Apple)
  • Advanced
  • Developing
  • Basic

The discussion highlights how modern retail requires managing customer experiences across multiple channels:

  • Traditional stores
  • Online presence
  • Social commerce (TikTok shop, Instagram)
  • Mobile platforms

The speakers emphasize that customers typically interact with brands through ten touchpoints before making a purchase decision. This multi-channel approach necessitates seamless inventory visibility and consistent customer experience across all platforms.

Personal Commentary and Analysis

The partnership between Manhattan Associates and Google represents a significant advancement in retail technology integration. Their focus on measurable outcomes—such as the 30% reduction in customer service call volume through agent AI implementation—demonstrates the practical value of their solutions.

Memorable Quotes

“Most retailers have stores, have online presence and lately shop fill in the blank, TikTok shop, Instagram. It’s all becoming part of your go to market and your store presence.” – Ann Ruckstuhl

“The consumer is almost doing 10 steps or 10 touch points… they’re actually interacting with the brand almost 10 times before they’re actually purchasing it.” – Kapil Dabi

Engaging the Audience

Access the Unified Commerce Benchmark report at Manhattan Associates’ website to evaluate your retail organization’s performance against industry leaders. The comprehensive analysis provides valuable insights for digital transformation initiatives.

Final Thoughts

The future of retail success lies in unified commerce implementation supported by AI technology. As consumer behaviors continue evolving, retailers must embrace these innovations to maintain competitive advantage and deliver superior customer experiences.

Listen to more conversations about customer experience here

Resultiks

Resulticks SHOP Platform Bridges Digital-Physical Retail Divide with AI-Powered Innovation

Resulticks introduces SHOP, an AI-powered platform that unifies physical and digital retail experiences, enabling personalized customer engagement and improved attribution across all shopping channels.

Talk Commerce - Mike Micucci

The Future of Omnichannel Commerce: Insights from Fabric CEO Mike Micucci

I recently had the pleasure of hosting Mike Micucci, CEO of Fabric Commerce, on the Talk Commerce podcast. With his deep experience in ecommerce, including leadership roles at Salesforce Commerce Cloud, Mike shared fascinating insights into how composable commerce and AI are revolutionizing the omnichannel retail experience. In this post, I’ll highlight some of the key takeaways from our conversation.

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The Power of Composable Commerce

Mike explained that composable commerce provides retailers the flexibility to build the experiences they want while still benefiting from a unified backend platform. Fabric’s composable platform allows retailers to seamlessly manage the full commerce lifecycle, from merchandising to order fulfillment.

As Mike put it, “Commerce doesn’t stop at checkout. It’s just getting started.” I couldn’t agree more. Composable commerce empowers brands to craft unique customer journeys that extend beyond the buy button.

Accelerating Omnichannel with Fabric

For retailers looking to enhance their omnichannel capabilities, Mike outlined two key approaches with Fabric’s platform:

  1. Incrementally add discrete services like real-time inventory or advanced promotions to their existing tech stack
  2. Implement a comprehensive omnichannel solution by leveraging Fabric’s pre-built “primitives” – mini-apps that accelerate time-to-market and reduce complexity

Having seen many retailers struggle with siloed systems and inconsistent experiences, I’m excited by Fabric’s vision for a unified omnichannel platform. It’s a game-changer.

The Transformative Power of AI

Mike and I also discussed the transformative potential of AI in commerce. While many retailers have adopted basic machine learning for product recommendations, Mike envisions AI driving significant operational improvements.

By harnessing data across merchandising, fulfillment, and returns, AI can enable dynamic pricing, intelligent inventory allocation, and proactive decision-making. As Mike noted, this was previously only possible for retail giants like Amazon. But with platforms like Fabric democratizing access to advanced AI, every retailer can now unlock this potential.

The implications are vast – I believe we’ll see AI fundamentally reshaping how brands operate and engage customers in the coming years.

Unifying Digital and Physical Retail

Finally, Mike emphasized the importance of blending digital and physical experiences into one cohesive customer journey. Fabric’s platform empowers retailers to offer seamless omnichannel scenarios – browse online, purchase in-store; buy on mobile, pick up curbside; endless aisles in fitting rooms – all on a single platform.

This unified approach powered by robust APIs is key to meeting modern customer expectations. I’m thrilled to see composable commerce and platforms like Fabric making this level of integration achievable for retailers of all sizes.

Boosting Performance and Flexibility with Fabric’s Ethos

One aspect of Fabric’s approach that stood out to me was their ethos of “boost what’s there, make it better and faster.” Mike explained how this allows retailers to incrementally adopt Fabric’s services to enhance their existing infrastructure, rather than ripping and replacing everything at once.

This modular approach, enabled by composable architecture, gives brands the agility to tackle their most pressing needs first, then layer in additional capabilities over time. From my experience, this agile mindset is essential for success in today’s fast-moving retail environment.

The Symbiosis of Composable Commerce and Omnichannel

Throughout our discussion, it became clear that composable commerce and omnichannel retail are intricately linked. The modularity and flexibility of composable architectures perfectly align with the demands of omnichannel selling.

As customer journeys increasingly criss-cross between digital and physical touchpoints, retailers need the ability to rapidly compose and recompose experiences. Fabric’s platform, with its comprehensive suite of APIs and pre-built components, makes this level of agility possible.

Empowering Store Associates with Clienteling

One exciting use case Mike highlighted was clienteling – equipping store associates with tools to deliver personalized, high-touch service. Historically, clienteling has been challenging due to disconnected systems and data silos.

But with a unified platform like Fabric, associates can now access customer profiles, past purchase history, product information, and inventory data in real-time. This empowers them to deliver the kind of consultative, omnichannel experiences that drive loyalty and revenue.

As brick-and-mortar retail rebounds post-pandemic, I believe clienteling will be a key differentiator. Composable commerce makes it achievable at scale.

As I reflect on my conversation with Mike, I’m struck by the vast potential of composable commerce to reshape retail. By breaking down monolithic systems into modular, API-driven components, retailers can finally achieve the speed and flexibility needed to thrive in the omnichannel era.

Moreover, the convergence of composable architectures and AI opens up exciting new possibilities. From dynamic pricing to predictive merchandising, retailers can now harness data and intelligence in previously unimaginable ways.

Of course, technology is just one piece of the puzzle. Retailers must also foster a culture of agility, experimentation, and customer-centricity. But with platforms like Fabric providing the technological foundation, I believe we’ll see a new generation of retailers redefining what’s possible in omnichannel commerce.

If you’re as passionate about the future of retail as I am, I invite you to listen to my full Talk Commerce podcast episode with Mike Micucci. And if you’ll be at Shoptalk, swing by the Fabric booth to see their technology in action.

The retail renaissance is here – and it’s composable. Let’s embrace this exciting new era together.

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