Business Standard

How AI is changing the retail game

Capillary Technologi­es building AI-backed products to empower offline retailers

- SAMREEN AHMAD

In an e-commerce store, if you want to buy a black kurti, you do the search and use a few filters such as size, style and material to find the apparel of your choice. This data then gets stored by the company and is used to improve customer experience subsequent­ly. However, offline stores are at a disadvanta­geous position as data never gets stored with them and, as a result, they end up depending on informatio­n provided by store staff and on their insight, which are not always so accurate.

Bengaluru-based Capillary Technologi­es is providing offline retailers the power to improve staff effectiven­ess and convert the customer queries into product sales through artificial intelligen­ce (AI) and machine learning. Harnessing the power of AI, the company is building a series of products for its in-store vision to empower retailers.

"We will be coming out with a product called Campaign Personalis­ation by August for which we will be using machine learning algorithms to boost discovery and personalis­ation, whether over SMSs, emails or push notificati­ons," said Aneesh Reddy, Cofounder and CEO, Capillary Technologi­es.

The technology looks at the past behaviour, when the person bought a product, when the individual responded to the campaign and then starts suggesting about the product and the time slot in which it needs to be marketed.

"We have been able toge ta 30 percent higher hit rate from these campaigns ," saidGanesh Lakshmi na ray an an, Chief Operating Officer.

Textile manufactur­er Arv ind Lifestyle has already started using Campaign Personal is at ion as a pilot and has seen twice the customer response rate as compared to traditiona­l marketing. Capillary would expand the technology to about 40 brands, including Bat a and VF Corporatio­n, and will run about 60 marketing campaign sin July. However, it will be ready for commercial launch in August, said Reddy.

The Warbug Pincus and Sequoia Capital-backed company is also working on the store staff segment and will be coming up with a solution dubbed as store sense in the next quarter, giving a sense of what's happening at the retail store, to the brands. It will provide insights into each customer's behaviour pattern in a store based on their interactio­ns with the store employees to understand their requiremen­ts, category preference­s, and propensity to purchase. "It is like a personalis­ed trainer for the staff. We are building each user's offline clickstrea­m using computer vision and speech detection to provide personalis­ed engagement and recommenda­tions to each user in an offline world," explained Reddy. The company has already launched the first product for its in-store vision called the VisitorMet­rix Plus earlier this year. It provides a detailed store visitor analytics, including the footfall trend, visitor demographi­cs, visitorfas­hion profiling to help brands optimise their store operations, to increase sales and conversion from each store. The technology is already being used by clients such as Wrangler, Lee and Shoppers Stop across 1,500 stores around the globe.

The company is also toying with the idea of facial recognitio­n on the same lines as Chinese messaging app WeChat. In this new retail method, shoppers in China can create an account before they enter a store and link it to their WeChat account paying only with a face scan.

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