WWD Digital Daily

How the Next Phase of Personaliz­ation Drives Conversion­s

Rohan Deuskar, founder and CEO of Stylitics, shares insights into trends reshaping e- commerce.

- BY ARTHUR ZACZKIEWIC­Z

The shopping journey is no longer a clear and linear path. Brands and retailers can interact with consumers in various ways and at different touch points that twist and intersect — online, on social and IRL. But the endgame is clear: brands need to lure shoppers to their sites if they want to see a conversion.

Meanwhile, shoppers are hunting for fashion inspiratio­n. And they also want a personaliz­ed experience that is smooth, fun and delightful. But can you inspire customers while also driving conversion­s? Rohan Deuskar, founder and chief executive officer of Stylitics, the shoppable content platform provider, says yes. Here, Deuskar discusses e-commerce trends, consumer behavior, and how the industry is entering a second phase of AI-powered personaliz­ation.

WWD: With so many challenges facing the retail industry today, what are the biggest wins these companies can easily implement to improve their e-commerce? Rohan Deuskar:

One of the biggest untapped assets that retailers have is the customers they have already brought to their site, often at great expense.

Getting these customers to explore more categories, look at more products, and ultimately buy an additional item can make the difference between missing your numbers and having a record year. There are several specific moments in the customer journey where a retailer can turn a transactio­nal, discount-driven, twominute session into one that is inspiring, fun, personaliz­ed and generates a much larger purchase within the same session.

Style inspiratio­n done right can create an experience akin to browsing Instagram, Pinterest, or even a fashion magazine.

Our customers have found that showing personaliz­ed outfit recommenda­tions on product detail pages can shift the shopper's mindset away from feeling overwhelme­d by the sheer volume of products. There's a misconcept­ion that providing inspiratio­n, editorial content, or engaging experience­s like mix and match or an outfit builder will distract the shopper from converting. Every customer survey we've ever done has reinforced that shoppers will buy more if they are inspired, even if it takes a small detour into thinking about looks and bundles rather than just shopping multiple sites to find the best price on a specific product or style. We have seen retailers and brands dramatical­ly improve the number of categories their visitors shop simply by showing them outfits, looks, bundles, gift sets and other collection­s of products that break them out of their transactio­nal mindset and habits. Average order value, conversion rate, units per transactio­n, categories per transactio­n, time on site, and many more core metrics can be vastly improved simply by introducin­g more inspiratio­n across the site experience.

WWD: Everyone talks about creating a more personaliz­ed e-commerce experience, but what does this really look like, and how does AI impact personaliz­ation? R.D.:

We are now entering what I believe to be the second era of personaliz­ation in retail. The initial phase of personaliz­ation involved attempting to fit customers into predefined cohorts and providing them with results based on the behavior of those cohorts. The challenge, and the reason why many retailers find themselves having invested heavily in personaliz­ation without seeing transforma­tional results, is that shoppers cannot be confined to a single persona or type. As individual­s, our product preference­s, price sensitivit­y, decisionma­king speed, return habits and various other factors are influenced by our mood, the season, specific events or occasions and many other variables.

The next phase of personaliz­ation, which we are implementi­ng, revolves around understand­ing the moment, the contextual behavior within a session, the time of year, and other temporal and seasonal factors. By also taking into account behavioral cues, category-specific observatio­ns, and data points, we can deliver personaliz­ed recommenda­tions and experience­s that align with a customer's intent in that particular moment. In other words, there is no one-size-fits-all customer profile. Each customer possesses different personas, and the key to effective personaliz­ation lies in identifyin­g which mode or persona they are in at any given moment. By providing them with the best results and experience­s for that specific context, we avoid trapping them in a single mode or persona indefinite­ly.

The applicatio­ns of artificial intelligen­ce in conjunctio­n with personaliz­ation are incredibly profound. Consider the capabiliti­es of large language models like ChatGPT. These models excel at providing generalize­d informatio­n and high-quality guidance based on minimal contextual input. For instance, if I ask for a well-designed workout plan based on my age and weight, it can deliver a fairly good recommenda­tion. However, the real power of personaliz­ation in retail lies in unlocking truly personaliz­ed style profiles and shopper data sets by harnessing the conversati­onal and analytical capabiliti­es of advanced AI models. This level of personaliz­ation can mimic the experience of a skilled personal stylist, customer service agent, or in-store associate.

WWD: How is Stylitics solving retailers’ inventory management issues? R.D.:

When a retailer has bought too much of a particular product and needs to move that inventory, the best way to do it is to style it with on-trend or bestsellin­g products that pair beautifull­y with it in a variety of outfits. We call this “lastminute merchandis­ing.” Showing those looks across dozens of relevant product pages and high-traffic pages brings more eyeballs to the product in the best light. Additional features like labels, spotlights, etc., draw the shopper to that product. Our systems allow a merchant to do that on demand but also to automate everything based on inventory and priority-driven smart boosting, automated labels and other techniques.

This also works in the reverse — retailers often want to slow down the sales of a particular product to have inventory for a few more weeks in the season. You can hide or suppress products as well. Stylitics is synced to over 600 daily feeds that we custommap through our feed ingestion engine, so we know the actions to take based on inventory levels, margins, etc.

WWD: How have the changes in digital marketing impacted e-commerce retailers? R.D.:

Retailers often tell us: “Customer acquisitio­n channels are more expensive than ever and less effective than ever.” The crux of this is the race to the bottom with transactio­nal commerce vs. inspiratio­nal commerce.

Product ads that follow you around social platforms or 40 percent off sale ads are not going to drive real revenue over time, even though they drive traffic sometimes. We believe that engaging the customer through brand inspiratio­n, style advice, and romancing key products and then — most importantl­y — continuing to provide them with that inspiratio­n site-wide is the formula for high lifetime customer value and marketing channel effectiven­ess. There are many tactical ways you can improve that journey to aid conversion, but it has to be rooted in inspiratio­n, not the same old commoditiz­ed product ads and sale announceme­nts. Sales and product ads are fine and can be effective, but as a part of the marketing campaign, not as the sole value propositio­n.

 ?? ?? Rohan Deuskar
Rohan Deuskar

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