Retail & Merchandising

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  • View profile for Vineet Nayar
    Vineet Nayar Vineet Nayar is an Influencer

    Founder, Sampark Foundation & Former CEO of HCL Technologies | Author of 'Employees First, Customers Second'

    112,471 followers

    IndiGo (InterGlobe Aviation Ltd) CRISIS WASN’T IN THE SKIES. IT WAS IN THE LEADERSHIP CABIN. Three things stood out. One: Employees were left alone to face furious customers. No leader should ever let that happen. If you don’t stand by your people in a storm, don’t expect them to stand by your customers in the sun. Customer experience collapses the moment employees feel abandoned. Two: In any crisis, honesty is the only strategy that works. This time, the communication wasn’t transparent. When leaders hide the full picture, years of goodwill can disappear overnight. A crisis can earn trust, but only if you tell the truth. Three: The belief that “we are too big to be ignored” has ended more companies than competition ever has. Customers always have a choice. And if they don’t, they will create one. We shouldn’t watch the Indigo crisis like spectators. This is a reminder for every leader to build their own crisis blueprint. Because crises will come, when they do, your response becomes your reputation. There is more to business than profits. There are people, trust, and how you show up when it matters most.

  • View profile for Alexey Navolokin

    FOLLOW ME for breaking tech news & content • helping usher in tech 2.0 • at AMD for a reason w/ purpose • LinkedIn persona •

    776,353 followers

    The most powerful sales tool isn’t a spec sheet — it’s a live demo. What do you think about this one? Across industries, the data is overwhelmingly clear: 🔹 67% of enterprise buyers say seeing a product in action is the #1 factor influencing their decision. 🔹 Demos shorten sales cycles by 30–50%, especially for complex solutions like servers and GPU-accelerated workloads. 🔹 In assistive tech—like mobility or handicap-support chairs—real-world demonstrations boost customer trust by 70%, because impact is immediately visible. 🔹 For AI/HPC hardware, customers who see workload performance live are 3× more likely to move forward compared to those who only receive documentation. Why? Because visibility removes uncertainty. A demo translates complexity into clarity. It turns “theory” into tangible value. Whether it’s: ⚡️ a next-gen server showing real performance under load, 🧠 a GPU pipeline speeding up an AI workload in real time, or ♿️ an assisted mobility chair transforming someone’s daily life… Seeing the product in action closes the gap between curiosity and commitment. This is the difference between telling and showing — and that gap is where conversion happens. #Innovation #Technology #HPC #AI #GPU #Servers #DataCenter #TechLeadership #Innovation #CustomerExperience #AIInfrastructure #AccessibilityTech

  • View profile for Alex Wang
    Alex Wang Alex Wang is an Influencer

    Learn AI Together - I share my learning journey into AI & Data Science here, 90% buzzword-free. Follow me and let's grow together!

    1,125,266 followers

    AI pricing is broken, and everyone knows it. Orb just analyzed 66 AI companies and found something interesting: 𝟗𝟐% 𝐡𝐚𝐯𝐞 𝐚𝐥𝐫𝐞𝐚𝐝𝐲 𝐝𝐢𝐭𝐜𝐡𝐞𝐝 𝐬𝐢𝐧𝐠𝐥𝐞-𝐦𝐨𝐝𝐞𝐥 𝐩𝐫𝐢𝐜𝐢𝐧𝐠. Quietly, completely, across the board. Why? Because usage is unpredictable, infra costs are high, and old SaaS pricing just doesn’t cut it anymore. We’re not pricing features anymore. We’re pricing intelligence. Some insights from the report: ◾𝐇𝐲𝐛𝐫𝐢𝐝 𝐩𝐫𝐢𝐜𝐢𝐧𝐠 𝐢𝐬 𝐭𝐡𝐞 𝐧𝐞𝐰 𝐬𝐭𝐚𝐧𝐝𝐚𝐫𝐝 – 92% blend subscription, usage, freemium, and tiers in one structure ◾𝐓𝐡𝐞 𝐦𝐨𝐬𝐭 𝐜𝐨𝐦𝐦𝐨𝐧 𝐜𝐨𝐦𝐛𝐨? Subscription + usage + freemium + tiered plans ◾𝐏𝐞𝐫-𝐬𝐞𝐚𝐭 𝐢𝐬𝐧’𝐭 𝐝𝐞𝐚𝐝, 𝐛𝐮𝐭 𝐢𝐭’𝐬 𝐧𝐞𝐯𝐞𝐫 𝐚𝐥𝐨𝐧𝐞 – 85% of companies using SaaS pricing now pair it with usage-based pricing ◾𝟏𝟐% 𝐫𝐮𝐧 𝐦𝐮𝐥𝐭𝐢𝐩𝐥𝐞 𝐦𝐨𝐝𝐞𝐥𝐬 𝐢𝐧 𝐩𝐚𝐫𝐚𝐥𝐥𝐞𝐥 – often segmenting between business and individual users … This shift is more than cosmetic. It reflects a deeper reality: AI products don’t fit cleanly into legacy monetization models. They need pricing systems that scale with usage, support experimentation, and reflect actual value delivered. If you’re building in AI, your pricing strategy isn’t just a detail, it’s a growth lever. 📊Full report https://lnkd.in/g-R3_cwU It’ll reshape how you think about monetizing AI.

  • View profile for Maya Moufarek
    Maya Moufarek Maya Moufarek is an Influencer

    Full-Stack Fractional CMO for Tech Startups | Exited Founder, Angel Investor & Board Member

    24,962 followers

    One image just disrupted a £22 billion fashion empire more effectively than a thousand sustainability reports. 🔥 This isn't an official SHEIN campaign gone wrong. It's artist Emanuele Morelli's AI creation—a haunting visualisation showing what fast fashion's "affordability" really costs us. The image speaks volumes: a SHEIN billboard where the model's flowing dress transforms into a cascade of textile waste. Art communicating what statistics alone cannot. 5 uncomfortable truths this image forces us to confront: 1. The scale of fashion waste is staggering → 92 million tonnes of textile waste produced annually  → The equivalent of one rubbish lorry of textiles dumped every second  → Most fast fashion items designed to be worn fewer than 10 times 2. The business model depends on our amnesia → Constantly changing trends keep us buying  → Ultra-low prices remove financial friction  → Digital marketing creates artificial scarcity and FOMO  → We're trained to forget yesterday's purchases 3. The true cost isn't on the price tag → Environmental damage from production chemicals  → Microplastics shedding into water systems  → Supply chain ethics compromised for speed and cost  → Communities near production sites bearing health consequences 4. Our definition of "affordable" is broken → When clothing is cheaper than a coffee, someone else is paying  → True cost spread across communities, environments, and future generations  → Psychological cost of constant consumption never factored in 5. Solutions exist but require systemic change → Circular fashion models gaining traction  → Rental and resale markets growing rapidly  → Consumer awareness rising but needs to translate to behaviour While SHEIN isn't the only culprit in the fast fashion ecosystem, Morelli's artwork throws a spotlight on an uncomfortable reality we've normalised. What we wear reflects our values more than our taste. What is your wardrobe saying about yours? Image: Emanuele Morelli ♻️ Found this helpful? Repost to share with your network.  ⚡ Want more content like this? Hit follow Maya Moufarek.

  • View profile for Juan Campdera
    Juan Campdera Juan Campdera is an Influencer

    Creativity & Design for Beauty Brands | CEO at We Are Aktivists

    77,356 followers

    When packaging becomes part of you Wearable packaging is no longer a futuristic concept it's a growing design frontier that merges functionality, fashion, and emotional connection. Beyond the shelf: packaging you can wear From fragrance necklaces to ring-shaped lip balms and refillable compacts designed like jewelry, beauty brands are transforming packaging into accessories. The product becomes not just something you use, but something you wear turning daily rituals into statements of identity. Why it works In a world saturated with options, wearable packaging offers immediacy, memorability, and emotional value. It adds a layer of meaning: a perfume worn around the neck is not just a scent, it’s a story you carry. A lipstick shaped like a pendant becomes both utility and ornament. It taps into consumers’ desire for customization, portability, and aesthetic expression particularly among Gen Z and Millennials who seek objects that are both functional and symbolic. A new layer of storytelling Wearable formats create a deeper connection between brand and user. They’re conversation starters, collectible, and often more sustainable built for reuse and ritual, rather than discard. Design becomes not only a visual differentiator but a tactile, emotional experience that enhances the perceived value of the product. From beauty to fashion and back again This blurring of categories also opens doors to cross-industry innovation. When beauty products act like accessories, they enter the realm of fashion making room for brand collaborations, limited editions, and viral potential on social media. It’s no longer just about packaging design. It’s about presence. Relevance. And creating a product people don’t want to put away — they want to put on. Featured brands: Rhode Bubble Yepoda Laneige #WearablePackaging #CosmeticAccessories #FragranceOnTheGo #LuxuryPackaging #EmotionalDesign #GenZBeauty #FutureOfBeauty

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  • View profile for Arindam Paul
    Arindam Paul Arindam Paul is an Influencer

    Building Atomberg, Author-Zero to Scale

    149,666 followers

    A very easy way to improve your Amazon ads efficiency by at least 10% Let’s say you’re spending ₹4–5 lakhs/month on Amazon ads. Your ACoS looks okay. Conversion rate seems fine. But your gut tells you—you’re still wasting some money on irrelevant traffic You’re not wrong At Atomberg, we had found that some of our Amazon spend was going toward search terms that had no business seeing our ads: - “cheap fan” -“rechargeable fan” - “usb fan under 1000” None of these users were in-market for a ₹3,000+ BLDC ceiling fan. But we were still showing up. And paying for those clicks. And it’s not just us. I’ve seen 6–7 brands' Amazon ad accounts across categories over the last few years—same problem, every single time The fix? N-gram analysis Takes less than an hour. You don’t need to be a performance marketing expert. But the results compound What’s N-gram analysis? It’s breaking down every search term into its word components—1-grams, 2-grams, 3-grams—and then identifying patterns that consistently drive waste… or conversion. Example: “cheap rechargeable fan for hostel room” turns into: 1-grams: cheap, rechargeable, fan, hostel, room 2-grams: rechargeable fan, hostel room 3-grams: fan for hostel, etc. When you do this across all your search terms, you start seeing the real picture. Why this matters more than just checking your search term report: Search terms ≠ keywords a) One keyword can trigger 100s of different queries. Some convert. Most don’t. You need to find the patterns. b) Waste is diluted across low-volume terms. Maybe “rechargeable fan for hostel” spent ₹300. You ignore it. But what if 12 other queries with “rechargeable” spent ₹6,000 in total with zero conversions? c) Long-tail is infinite. N-grams are finite. You can’t negate every bad search. But you can block the core terms—“cheap”, “usb”, “mini”—once and be done with it. d) It helps you scale campaigns too. You can find goldmine phrases like “white ceiling fan”, “silent BLDC fan”, “fan for living room”—with 5x+ ROAS. Those became exact match campaigns What you should do: a) Pull last 3 months of search term data b) Break them into unigrams, bigrams, trigrams c) Create a pivot with spend, orders, ROAS by N-gram d) Negate high-spend, low-conversion N-grams (e.g., “cheap”, “rechargeable”) e) Boost high-ROAS ones (e.g., “bldc”, “ceiling fan white”) f) Add exact match campaigns g) Rinse and repeat monthly Try it. Guaranteed to improve efficiency at whatever scale you are operating If you want to read an expanded version of the post, link is in the first comment

  • View profile for Andrew Dobbie

    Founder/CEO @ MadeBrave® | Branding from the inside-out | Helping leaders turn belief & their brand into their biggest competitive advantage | Star Marketing Agency of the Year 2024

    39,214 followers

    Brad Pitt’s new F1 film is a masterclass in how brands can show up in culture. A $300 million budget. Real F1 tracks. And luxury brands fighting to sponsor a team that doesn’t even exist. It’s entertainment, sport and marketing all blending together... and it’s re-writing the playbook for how brands embed themselves into culture. Here’s what makes it stand out: • A fictional F1 team, APXGP, filmed during real Grand Prix weekends. • Brad Pitt, trained in a modified F2 car, driving alongside actual F1 drivers. • Lewis Hamilton co-producing to capture the authentic essence of the racing world. • Real brands like Mercedes-Benz AG, SharkNinja, IWC Schaffhausen and Tommy Hilfiger actively sponsoring a fictional team. • Actual drivers, including Max Verstappen and Carlos Sainz, making cameo appearances. • All set for release in cinemas June 2025, followed by streaming on Apple TV+. This isn’t just clever product placement, it’s narrative integration at its best. Real brands woven into a fictional story, filmed in real-time at actual events. And it’s a glimpse of where brand marketing is heading. The film isn’t even out yet, and here we are talking about the brands already. That’s how you build long-term equity. This is the new standard in marketing: • Culture first, commerce second. • Stories over traditional advertising. • Integration, not interruption. If your brand isn’t part of the stories people care about, good luck buying their attention. Learn from this. Build worlds people want to be part of. Create stories they’d miss if they disappeared. And find ways to turn up in that culture and be part of the narrative. Rather than looking for ways to interrupt them.

  • View profile for Benjamin Braun
    Benjamin Braun Benjamin Braun is an Influencer

    Chief Marketing Officer at Samsung Europe

    52,723 followers

    Do this one thing with your team (and your CEO)! No budget needed. Get everyone, including your most senior bosses, to go mystery shopping. Get them to start with your website on their mobile phone. It will open their minds to what the real experience is for customers. Then go visit your stores and your competitors’ websites and shops. Don’t rely on reports and spreadsheets to understand your customers. They are helpful but cannot substitute the real thing. I learnt the importance of doing customer listening when working with Tim Copper at British Gas. With my team we spent one day every quarter in our contact centres taking calls from real customers. With Mark Vile and the late John Dalkiran at Compare the Market we read all the NPS commentary from customers and learnt how we could improve our service (and meerkat toy delivery). When I was at Audi UK with Andrew Doyle and Antony Roberts we went mystery shopping in car dealerships and constantly tested new ways to improve our website (as that is the biggest customer shopping window for most brands). One of the key targets at Samsung Electronics is NPS. We ask customers how likely they are to recommend Samsung to friends and family. We constantly review and improve to make sure we provide the best service possible. This is why Samsung TVs are the no.1 choice by consumers for 19 years in a row. Marketing isn’t just about ads and pretty pictures. It is making sure the customer experience lives up to the brand promise. More business stories can be heard on Jon Evans excellent podcast Uncensored CMO. The podcast is free on Spotify: https://lnkd.in/eGPak4GW #CMOUncensored #Samsung #CustomerExperience

  • View profile for Shewali Tiwari

    marketer under metamorphosis: creative. content-led. writer.

    22,990 followers

    At airtel, I ran an iPhone giveaway marketing campaign three times, and to my surprise, none of them performed. Logically, you’d think offering a prize as attractive as an iPhone, especially during the launch period, would drive massive engagement. The assumption is that everyone would rush to participate, download your app, engage with the campaign, and complete the required actions. But what actually happened was the opposite. Engagement was shockingly, embarrassingly low. In contrast, campaigns that offered much smaller rewards—like a ₹1,000 or ₹500 voucher, or even just a free mobile recharge—generated higher participation rates, more app downloads, and greater overall engagement. But why does this happen? This outcome can be largely attributed to consumer psychology. When the reward seems too large or unattainable, people instinctively doubt their chances of winning. The concept of *perceived probability* comes into play here. When the prize is something as high-value as an iPhone, people immediately think, "What are the odds that I’ll actually win?" This skepticism causes them to disengage and not even bother trying, as they don't see the reward as realistically achievable. On the other hand, smaller, more attainable rewards feel within reach. A ₹1,000 voucher or a free recharge doesn’t carry the same sense of improbability. People feel like they have a real shot at winning something smaller, which encourages them to take the necessary actions, leading to better campaign results. In essence, psychology plays a far more critical role in shaping consumer behavior than we give it credit for.

  • View profile for Matt Wood
    Matt Wood Matt Wood is an Influencer

    CTIO, PwC

    77,104 followers

    From the department-of-mythbusting: our Just Walk Out technology is not going anywhere but to even more locations worldwide. Let's walk through what's really going on here... If you want to optimize any experience, a great place to start is with the biggest, most egregious, inefficient part of that experience. For physical shopping - you don't have to look much further than waiting in line for a checkout. It's boring, and it's a waste of time for both the shopper, and the store. So when we started to look at how to improve physical shopping - we started with the question: how do we take out the line? This is a hard problem - but it led to inventions like Just Walk Out (an AI and sensor fusion system for checkout-free shopping), Amazon Dash Cart (where you scan items as you place them into your cart), and Amazon One (our palm-based payments and identity). These technologies are complementary, and serve a very different purpose depending on these store and shopping task: 🚶 Just Walk Out is great for really quick, "mission driven" shopping - like small-format convenience stores for snacks, drinks, and so on. You know what you want, and you don't want a lot. Enter. Grab. Just walk out. Even with relatively few items sold per visit, we have already sold over 18 million items in Just Walk Out stores, and there are now more than 140 third-party locations with Just Walk Out technology in the U.S., UK, Australia, and Canada. The response from shoppers to Just Walk Out in small-format stores has been so strong that we will launch more small-format third-party Just Walk Out stores in 2024 than any year prior, more than doubling the number of third-party stores with the technology this year. 🛒 In larger grocery stores, where customers are making a big weekly trip and buy a greater number of items, customers so far prefer Amazon Dash Cart. Dash Cart serves as a shopping companion that travels through the store with a customer, helping them locate items with an on-cart screen featuring maps and navigation, and receive personalized shopping experiences, all while tracking their savings and spending in real time. ✋ Regardless of the size or format of the store, shoppers tell us they like the security and convenience of Amazon One. Amazon One is in 500+ Whole Foods stores, other Amazon stores, and 150 third-party locations like stadiums, airports, fitness centers, and more. Just Walk Out, Dash Cart, and Amazon One - together - let us remove these pesky lines in more places than we could in isolation. They are complements to one another - like The Beatles. Stronger than the sum of their parts. So don't believe the headlines. Just Walk Out isn't going anywhere, except into more locations, in more countries, to help more shoppers, and more businesses. Now back to your regular scheduled programming... :)

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