
While 85 percent of retailers consider unified commerce a top priority, most are not making enough of an effort in upgrading their infrastructure to achieve a fully seamless shopping experience. According to a new report from Boston Retail Partners, retailers have attempted to reformat their outdated systems to accommodate cross-channel capabilities, leaving many with “faux omnichannel.” As the consumer comes to expect a uniform service across channels, retailers are at risk of losing clientele if they do not implement a more holistic system.
“There are several factors that have made 'faux' omnichannel a reality," said Ken Morris, principal at Boston Retail Partners.
"First, the accelerated and elevated customer expectations for a seamless experience has caused retailers to scramble to get omnichannel services in place as fast as possible," he said. "Second, retailers’ legacy systems were not designed to deal with the complex cross-channel visibility and access to data that is needed to support a seamless customer experience.
"Third, many retailers have been focused on other priorities lately, like payment security, and haven’t invested the resources to effectively develop a unified commerce platform. And lastly, retailers have made very significant investments in hardware, software and services to support omnichannel over time and they cannot simply write-off that investment but need to make the transition as investment dollars permit."
Holistic approach Of the 60 percent of retailers who say they are making inventory visible across channels, 80 percent say they could use improvement. When communication between channels is flawed, issues can arise that affect the shopper. In many cases, the retail system of today is a multichannel one, with brands aspiring toward omnichannel. Unified commerce is a step beyond omnichannel, when all channels will be interconnected. The Holy Grail of retail means that a brand will be able to recognize a consumer however she chooses to connect, allowing the retailer to deliver a customized experience catered to her. In practice, this would mean that if a consumer browsed online before going to a store, and then opted in via her mobile device when she got to the store, the retailer would be able to pull up her virtual shopping cart and use it to inform her bricks-and-mortar journey. This would work the other way as well, as ecommerce or a mobile application would be able to suggest a second look at items looked at in-store, allowing clients to easily buy through whichever channel is easiest for them.

“Without a unified commerce platform, retailers are limping along with systems that can’t effectively deliver what customers now expect,” Mr. Morris said. “These ineffective, disconnected systems and manual processes to deliver omnichannel capabilities are a recipe for disaster, as it leads to over-promising and under-delivering to its customers.
"The financial impact of lost customers due to poor service is significant, and it is significantly less expensive to keep customers than to acquire new ones," he said. "Retailers today are literally crossing a busy downtown street based on yesterdays traffic information."
Room for improvement The number of department stores displaying a real-time inventory has quadrupled since 2013, according a recent report by L2. The increase exemplifies the heavy investment that department stores are making in omnichannel to compete with Amazon, Net-A-Porter and other pure players. Although retailers are making advances on various fronts, a number of obstacles in both technology and implementation are impeding true omnichannel experiences (see story). When it comes to omnichannel retailing, department stores perform better on average than their monobrand peers, according to a new report by ContactLab and Exane BNP Paribas. Multibrand retailers as a whole are reaching 50 percent of their full omnichannel potential, higher than the collective mega brands such as Louis Vuitton and Gucci and beating out premium, jewelry and high-end labels. Consumers who shop both in-store and online spend 50 percent more in a year than those who buy in bricks-and-mortar boutiques alone, making it financially smart to create an omnichannel shopping experience for clients (see story).“Retailers can no longer afford to operate within channel silos,” Mr. Morris said. “Now is the time for retailers to transform the organization, business processes and technology to align with the new shopping behaviors and expectations of today’s customers.
"A unified commerce platform is the new imperative for handling orders, fulfillment and inventory across channels in real-time," he said. "Retailers still have a long road ahead to achieve a successful unified commerce platform, but increased customer satisfaction and profits will make it worth the effort.
"If they don’t retool, they will be replaced by more nimble brands that perhaps move from the eComm world to the physical store. Hello, Amazon.”