The Columbus Dispatch

Retailers step up personaliz­ation on their websites

- By Anne D’Innocenzio

NEW YORK — Shoppers will see more personaliz­ation based on where they are and what they’ve bought before on the Walmart website, as the retailer and several other stores try to build stronger connection­s with shoppers used to the customizat­ion of Amazon.

Walmart says it’s including a section that highlights top-selling items in a customer’s location, feature services like online grocery that are available in the area, and make it easy for people to buy again items they’ve bought most often in stores and online. It’s part of a site overhaul set for next month.

Building an emotional tie with shoppers starts with emotional content, and that will make people more likely to shop there, said Marc Lore, CEO of Walmart. com’s U.S. division. “We’re going to continue to get smarter over time,” Lore said, though he declined to offer details about further personaliz­ation.

Several retailers have made efforts toward personaliz­ing their websites for customers, but large-scale success has been elusive. Often, customers get deluged with offers based on an item they bought just once.

Amazon set the standard with recommendi­ng products based on what shoppers bought or searched for early in the dot.com years. But now personaliz­ation involves localizati­on and even customizin­g products, says Sucharita MulpuruKod­ali, an analyst at Forrester Research.

Some smaller online retailers are farther along in customizat­ion. At online clothing retailer Stitchfix, customers fill out questionna­ires that allow stylists and algorithms to find appropriat­e fashions. At Wayfair, shoppers who have been browsing modern furniture won’t be presented with more traditiona­l designs.

Still, some major brickand-mortar retailers are making inroads. Macy’s CEO Jeff Gennette said last month at a conference that the company will take “a big step forward” this year in tailoring its merchandis­e on the site based on the customers’ past shopping and searches. At Best Buy, customers who log into the website and have a local store selected can see if what they’ve searched for recently is available at a nearby location.

“There are different spins of personaliz­ation,” said Mulpuru-Kodali. “The challenge for retail is to figure out what, based on all the data, is actually useful.”

Walmart has been relying on Lore — who founded Jet.com, which Walmart later bought — to update its online feel. The company is trying for a more upscale look, and later this year will launch a dedicated Lord & Taylor page as part of their partnershi­p.

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