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Enjoy the sun with our working lunches


It seems that spring has finally arrived and Mixing Digital & Ecommerce Club are happy to invite you to the most exciting networking events in town. 

IBM
SAP Hybris and Sprinklr invite you to join them at their exclusive annual Q2 conference at The Hoxton Holborn on the afternoon of Tuesday 24th MayDigital transformation of business is the critical step this days, speakers will share game-changing appreciation of how customers engage with your brands through digital channels and how this affects conversion and overall success of the business. This invitation only gathering, will see our expert speakers explore the SAP Hybris portfolio of products, as well as recent studies on their use and impact in the real world. They will outline your first crucial steps towards Cognitive Commerce, while Sprinklr will share their top tips into how social can play its part. In support of this Neil McGowan, CTO at Maplin, will talk about how the company has implemented change internally and reveal intriguing insights into their recent transformational experience. To support this, Maplin will talk about how they have implemented change internally and divulge intriguing insights into their recent transformational experience. Join companies such as Telegraph, Flubit and Dr. Martensat this great networking event. To register your seat please sign up here 

Join us on Thursday 26th May from 12:30pm to 3:00pm for the Ecommerce Club Working Lunch Manchester: Bridging Content and Commerce. In an increasingly complex landscape retailers face a number of challenges when bridging content and commerce. Including aligning the internal organisation around this goal, creating processes, and using technology to develop and deploy high-performing content. So the questions is how do you tackle this issue and find the most effective content strategy for your brand. Join Amplience and Mark Leach, Head of Ecommerce at Missguided to explore this topic. This lunch event is for ecommerce practitioners at retailers and brands only, no vendors. Please register here

attune & SAP Hybris invite you to join a private lunch at Hush Mayfair on Tuesday June 7th Fashion Forward: Seamless Systems for Omni-Channel Excellence. Enjoy a three-course summer lunch at one of the most renowned restaurants in London while networking with your peers from the Fashion and Lifestyle space. Industry insights will come from attune and SAP Hybris as well as Simon RaynesChange Management Lead at The White Company, who will give you an overview of how the company has managed and benefited from digital transformation. Sounds interesting? Please register your seat at the table alongside your B2C E-commerce peers here.


On Wednesday 29th June from 2:00pm to 6:00pm we would like to welcome you at Rich Mix for e-Innovation. This event aims to stimulate ideas, instigate discussion around optimising your relationship with your customer and how to embed innovation throughout the business and showcasing new tech. This is an event to not miss out on, for those who are interested in the evolution of digital and the need to stay ahead of the competition.
For more info, the agenda including futurist Doug Coutinho and longstanding ecommerce innovation expert Nick Lansley and to book your ticket please register here.

 




We look forward to seeing you soon 

All the best

Miss Charlie Lines
Director and Co-founder
Mixing Digital


The trials and tribulations of the niche retailer
Ecommerce Club Working Lunch Report
On Wednesday 20th April we were lucky enough to be joined by David Kohn, Customer & eCommerce Director at Heals, who talked about  the challenges that face niche retailers and how they can effectively overcome them.

On Wednesday 20th April we were lucky enough to be joined by David Kohn, Customer & eCommerce Director at Heals, who talked about  the challenges that face niche retailers and how they can effectively overcome them.

First of all we focused on the key challenges that every retailer faces: how to ensure that the business has the capability to effectively manage an ecommerce precence; the capacity of the business to manage the change in workload, new processes, logistics and sales; the marketing budget (or more usually the lack thereof); the investment budget (which is usually in the same state as the marketing budget; SEO; and, of course, the need to make money.

This is exacerbated by the fact that customers visit sites and while we can see that they leave without buying, we need to be able to do something about that.

The main issues for a small retailer are people and money. There is only so much you can do with a limited number. as you are up against companies that have masses of money and a large mass of employees. So David shared the key steps you need to take to ensure success:

  • Proposition
  • Prioritisation
  • Personalisation
  • People
  • Partners

Proposition/position: that means asking what purpose do you serve and to whom? Have a clear idea of what you are and where you stand. Where do you map against the competition.? Knowing this allows you to know what to sell/ put in the store. If it is something niche you are at you can use that as an advantage, enabling you to focus on advertising your unique products. Focus on SEOs.

Prioritisation: you must constantly evaluate against the effort/reward matrix.  What matters is being able to judge what is high reward and what is a lot of effort for little return.

Figure 1: the risk/reward matrix

heals matrix

Personalisation:  if you’re effective at prioritisation, then you should be bringing personalisation to your online platform, providing an excellent experience no matter what channel you’re selling on. With regard to Heal’s David explains how people in the stores are very important, as it is an opportunity to speak with real people, and gain feedback… Live chat is also useful & generates around 15 per cent of Heal’s sales.

People: there can never be too much said about the importance of the right people in terms of success. Skills and ability to work together are as necessary to success as investment, technology and the right product.

Partners:  The size of your partner company is important. Do not go with a partner who has bigger partners. You need to make sure that your size and ambitions are aligned.

Next sees sales shift from high street to online
The multi-channel retailer announced its results with news that sales had fallen 0.2 per cent but online continues to grow.

The company said that the weather had affected sales but continued to lower expectations for the full year, as it warned that there might be a wider slow-down in consumer spending ahead.


The company said that the weather had affected sales but continued to lower expectations for the full year, as it warned that there might be a wider slow-down in consumer spending ahead.

Full-price sales between January 31 and May 2 fell by 0.9%, with store sales down by 4.7% while its primarily-online Next Directory sales rose by 4.2%. The figures, said Nextwere “at the lower end” of its full-year sales guidance, which envisaged growth of between 4% and -1%.

The fashion-to-homewares retailer said sales had suffered by comparison with a much warmer Easter period in 2015. “We believe it is unlikely (but possible) that sales will deteriorate further, and we have seen a significant improvement over the last few days as temperatures have risen,” it said in a trading statement.

“However, the poor performance of the last six weeks may be indicative of weaker underlying demand for clothing and a potentially wider slow-down in consumer spending. Given this uncertainty, we think it is prudent to widen and lower our full price sales guidance range to -3.5% to +3.5%. The lower end of this range is based on sales for the rest of the year continuing to run at the rate of the last six weeks.”

Next set out at the time of its full-year results how it would develop its business in an increasing competitive market. It said that would see it improve and differentiate its directory business in particular, in areas from mobile apps to collection from third-party stores.

At the time, Next said it was acting as growth in its directory business inevitably slowed as the market matured. “Partly,” it said at the time, “this is as a result of competitors catching up with our delivery and warehousing capabilities; partly as a result of changes in the ways customers are shopping online. It is this last point that provides us with the opportunity to improve the business going forward.”

Featured Events



















Future Events


Etail Canada (16th-19th May)


Making Digital Transformation relevant to you and your customers (24th May)



Ecommerce Club Working Lunch Manchester: Bridging Content and Commerce (26th May)



Global E-commerce Summit (29th May-1st June)


Fashion Forward: Seamless Systems for Omni-Channel Excellence (7th June)


B2C Digital Lunch with eCommera (9th June)

 

Ecommerce Club: e-Innovation Day (29 June)



Etail Europe (21th-23rd June)


Performance Marketing Insights: Europe (4th-5th July)


Featured Events


















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