Remove Human Resources Remove Innovation Remove Merchandising Remove Technology
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3 Changes Retailers Need to Make to Survive

Harvard Business Review

Pioneers of new business models, such as Alibaba and Amazon, are launching innovations in rapid succession, such as voice ordering and real-time pricing, while simultaneously building scale and driving down costs. Danita Delimont/Getty Images. Few industries are being disrupted as drastically as the retail industry.

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4 Models for Using AI to Make Decisions

Harvard Business Review

The bad news: Petabytes of new data and algorithmic innovation assure that “autonomy creep” will relentlessly challenge human oversight from within. At one American retailer, an autonomous ensemble of algorithms replaced the entire merchandising department. The Autonomous/Autonomy Advisor. All-In Autonomy.

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Linds Redding’s Short Lesson in Perspective

In the CEO Afterlife

Time moved on, and during the nineties technology overran, and transformed the creative industry like it did most others. Our technology whizzes along at the velocity of a speeding electron, and our poor overtaxed neurons struggle to keep up. But even artists have to eat, and the fuel of commerce and industry is innovation and novelty.

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Why Your Company Culture Should Match Your Brand

Harvard Business Review

As the industry moved toward an emphasis on customer service and merchandising, the company fell behind, because its employees were focused more on increasing inventory turns and sales per square foot. For example, at a grocery store chain I worked with, employees were steeped in an operations culture that valued efficiency and productivity.

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