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7 tips to deliver better online grocery shopping

The boom of online grocery shopping has been a long time coming. In 2015, more than one third (37%) of shoppers in Asia-Pacific regularly shopped for food online, Nielsen reports. Although in the rest of the world online grocery shopping was less common, there was already a growing trend, which has only become more pronounced. According to projections by Deutsche Bank, online grocery shopping is expected to expand at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 28.2%, which is significant if compared with a 2.5% CAGR for total grocery sales. Supermarkets have had time to prepare for the shift to online, but not all of them have stayed on top of trends. When, due to necessity, consumers worldwide moved massively towards online shopping, some supermarkets found themselves suddenly out of the race. Today, the businesses who didn’t believe and invest in omni-channel are facing the harsh consequences of their decisions. Online shopping has been gaining ground quickly among all ages and geographies, and there is no reason to believe this popularity will fade in the upcoming months. This means there is no better time than today to invest in improving your e-commerce capabilities. Here are seven tips to get you started. 1. Focus on speed and ease of use Simplicity and usability of the platform should be your top goals: Make it easy for people to register, find the products they need, add items to the cart, review and edit the order and pay. Enable filtering per sub-groups of items to speed up search. Your customers would rather not have scroll through a hundred-item long list of “bread and pastries” to find the apricot-filled croissants they are looking for. Make sure you include all relevant product information. Feature high-quality pictures, and clearly label brand names, price, ingredients with nutritional value and allergens, and pack size. Include expiry dates wherever possible. If a shopper knows that the Greek yogurt lasts three more weeks, they might buy three packs instead of one. Support returning shoppers. Give customers the possibility to recreate previous orders quickly and activate shopping lists where people can add staples and family favorites. Allow registered customers to see their buying history and to share the basket with other family members. Ensure short page load times. If your site is too slow to load, buyers may abandon their cart without completing the purchase. 2. State the important information up front How annoyed will your online shopper be when he finds out that his postcode is not eligible for delivery, after he spent a full hour adding products to the cart? For retailers, it pays off to be clear and provide all needed information from the start. Buyers should be aware of shipping prices and times, delivery restrictions, geographical areas included in the service and special conditions before they have added a single item to their cart. When it’s time to check out, make sure that all the steps are clearly labelled, and that shoppers know what’s coming up in the process. Consider adding lines that clarify where the customer is at, such as “You can still modify your order in the next step” or “By clicking here, you confirm your order and accept to pay. You won’t be able to modify your order afterwards”. Consider adding a progress bar that shows the various steps (“Customer details” -> “Shipping” -> “Payment information” -> “Review order” -> “Complete and pay”). Once the order has been placed, include an “order completed” page where all the key information is summarized: items purchased, delivery and payment information, time of order, and what the customer should expect (an email? A call? A link to track the shipment?). 3. Think of the different platforms Today, more consumers access websites from mobiles than from computers. According to data from marketing site The Drum, last year 63% of traffic and 53% of sales on retailers’ eCommerce sites happened via mobile. As the preference for mobile shopping is only going to get more common, you should ensure that your website performs well on mobile devices. Here are some questions you should ask yourself: Is my e-commerce site responsive? Are the buttons big and easy to tap? Are the text fields large and easy to type into? Are pictures clear? Can people easily zoom in to see extra details? Is it easy to move through different images? Is all information visible on small screens, or do some lines disappear or end up off screen? Can customers easily move between items and categories? Is the payment process simple and easy to follow? Many consumers start a transaction on a device and continue it on another one. If when they resume the transaction they lose all the items they had already added to the cart, they may not be bothered to start over again – and you’ll lose that transaction. Enable saving the cart for logged in customers, so they can easily pick up transactions on different devices, at their pace and convenience. 4. Make it easy to navigate On your e-commerce site you can easily display a larger product selection than in your physical locations. If you decide to go for the “endless aisles” style, make sure you organize the selection so that customers can easily find what they need. Offer top-level categories that can be accessed from the top menu. Enable customers to filter and sort items by price, brand, group, review scores, etc. Make sure information is easy to skim through. Use bullet points and organize information consistently (first ingredients, then package size, then weight, then expiry date…) so users can find what they need at a glance. Make sure the “buy” button is clearly visible. Add a checkmark or confirmation text to clarify when an item has been added to the basket. Include a search function with predictive suggestions and auto corrects (“Did you mean…?”). Your customer may call “cilantro” what you call “coriander” on your site; you wouldn’t want her to leave without it just because the search gave no results. 5. Offer flexible delivery Offer several delivery options and time slots, and be specific with your delivery times. The best practice is to offer precise delivery windows, and allow people pick the one that best fits their schedule. The more precise you are, the more likely you are customers will decide to shop with you. Nielsen’s “Global Connected Commerce Report” advises offering 30-minute interval windows – provided you can

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Reduce supply chain disruptions with AI, IoT, and mixed reality

Disruptions in global supply chains have significantly increased over the last decade, fueled by a myriad of triggers ranging from trade wars, demand surges from social marketing, natural disasters, and most recently, the recent COVID-19 pandemic. Updates to Microsoft Dynamics 365 Supply Chain Management in the 2020 release wave 1 help organizations proactively transform every aspect of manufacturing and supply chain operations to reduce disruptions. These new and updated capabilities drive automation and reduce downtime using IoT and mixed reality, and provide the agility to re-plan production in real time to dynamically changing demand. In fact, the agility enabled by Supply Chain Management is currently being leveraged by a consortium of major UK industrial, technology, and engineering businesses from across the aerospace, automotive, and medical sectors that has come together to produce medical ventilators for the NHS. Reducing the risk of supply chain disruptions As the threat of disruptions increase, companies are pressured to ask if the supply chain is ready for the next event, pushing them to build a more resilient supply chain to ensure business continuity for them and their customers in the most cost-effective manner. More companies will start buffering for risks and move from a “Just-in time” mentality to a “Just-in case” mentality. Factories will need to transform rapidly to adapt to change, serving a wider range of products produced in smaller batches with lower set up time, faster throughput, and the ability to quickly respond to fluctuating demand and customer expectations. Companies are likely to move from single supplier to multi-supplier and single location to multi-location models for mission critical parts even if it is cost prohibitive in order to reduce the impact of supply chain disruptions. To reach this optimal state of agility and delivery speed, manufacturers need to adapt every aspect of the supply chain to enable tools, equipment, and people to become instrumented, interconnected, and intelligent—a state of persistent adaptive learning and optimization as more data is available to tighten links between manufacturers, suppliers, and customers. The latest release from Dynamics 365 Supply Chain Management enables customers to reach this optimal state by proactively transforming their manufacturing and supply chain with predictive insights and intelligence from AI, IoT, and mixed reality—across planning, production, inventory, warehouse, and transportation management—to maximize operational efficiency, product quality, and profitability. Train workers faster with integrated mixed reality learning experiences Dynamics 365 Supply Chain Management is now integrated with Dynamics 365 Guides to help mainstream mixed reality for manufacturing. Companies can deliver a faster ROI by getting the workforce trained sooner with fewer trainers and with an interactive learning experience. Workforce efficiency can skyrocket with step-by-step instructions that guide employees to the tools and parts they need and how to use them in real work situations, available at a glance on a Microsoft HoloLens device that keeps their hands free to do the work. Dynamics 365 Guides can not only eliminate costly errors in production but also improve workforce safety. Companies can significantly reduce asset downtime by making asset maintenance skillset-agnostic and avoid costly waiting time for a specific expert to perform maintenance on an asset. The guides are extremely easy to author and do not require any coding. A guide can be authored by simply writing the step-by-step instructions on a PC followed by picking and placing the holographic parts and inbuilt icons on the machine where the work is happening. Introducing Dynamics 365 Guides for HoloLens 2 Dispatch the right resources at the right time Dynamics 365 Supply Chain Management is now integrated with Microsoft Dynamics 365 Field Service. Customers can significantly reduce downtime of geographically dispersed mission critical assets by automating field service operations so that the right resources—workforce, machines, parts, and tools—are available at the right place, at the right time, to proactively maintain them. Companies can improve the overall equipment effectiveness (OEE) of their geographically dispersed mission critical assets by performing predictive maintenance based on real-time performance data from IoT and field data from Dynamics 365 Field Service. Traditionally, disparate systems hinder the ability to accurately forecast demand for critical and expensive parts frequently used in both service and new production. Due to lack of forecasting for service demand, companies constantly take parts from production to fulfill the service demand, and vice versa, to deliver good customer service. This often creates a shortage for new production and significantly impacts on time delivery to new customers. As a result, the company is unable to deliver a delightful customer experience on both fronts. This integration will eliminate the need for disparate systems and significantly improve the forecast accuracy of these mission-critical parts due to real time tracking in the service supply chain. Seamlessly integrate IoT capabilities Dynamics 365 Supply Chain Management now offers out-of-the-box IoT capabilities that leverage Microsoft Azure IoT Hub to connect signals from mission-critical assets with business transaction data. Manufacturers can improve uptime, throughput, and quality by proactively managing shop floor and equipment operations with a real-time view of their entire production and stock. This will significantly reduce costly downtime of business-critical equipment by performing predictive maintenance before disruptive failures occur. There is no coding required to implement these out-of-the-box IoT scenarios on your manufacturing floor today. Dynamics 365 Supply Chain Management and IoT Intelligence customer spotlight with Majans Improve on-time delivery with real-time production planning The Planning Optimization Add-in for Dynamics 365 Supply Chain Management enables companies to improve on-time delivery by performing production planning in real time, accounting for dynamically changing customer demand, material availability, and capacity constraints across multiple sites and warehouses. It also enables customers to improve inventory turns by right-sizing inventory levels based on dynamically changing customer demand and capacity constraints. This helps eliminate excess and reduces slow moving inventory. Planning Optimization Add-in for Retail and Distribution is available and Production planning is currently in preview.

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THE TOP 10 REASONS WHY SMBs SHOULD INVEST IN THE CLOUD

Small to medium-sized businesses (SMBs) are lagging behind their enterprise counterparts when it comes to cloud adoption. With the new year (and new decade) fast underway, a recent Microsoft study showed that more than 96% of enterprises are using the cloud, compared to only 78% for SMBs. And while the use of cloud-based productivity apps like Office 365 has steadily grown among these smaller companies, their continued reliance on legacy software in key business applications such as ERP or accounting is impeding them from competing effectively with today’s top players. Given this situation, moving to the cloud should be an obvious priority for SMBs, but many myths and misconceptions still exist regarding the benefits of cloud technology. Below are the ten most crucial and game-changing benefits that SMBs have reported after investing in cloud solutions. 1 –  Greater profit and ROI Simply put, companies that move to the cloud make more money. And not by a small percentage, either. SMBs that invest in the cloud report up to 25% growth in revenue and up to 2x the profits over those who don’t. Embracing the cloud is simply a better path to faster growth. Additionally, cloud deployments provide a greater return on investment (ROI) than traditional on-premises software projects, especially in ERP and CRM. For example, Nucleus Research determined that companies that use Microsoft Dynamics 365 see a return of $16.97 for every $1 spent. That’s well above the average for on-premise ERP and CRM applications. 2 – Lower costs and CapEx Cloud subscription models eliminate up-front capital expenditures (CapEx) like the high cost of hardware and software licenses for projects like ERP software implementations. They also eliminate server and infrastructure setup, update, and maintenance fees—not to mention the resources saved on software upgrades, energy costs, and underutilized computing resources 3 – Unparalleled business flexibility Cloud software allows small businesses to remain always-on regardless of location. In today’s mobile and cloud-first world, the ability to be productive on any phone, tablet, or laptop provides the flexibility required to quickly adapt to changing information and business needs. This means more agile operations and happier customers 4 – Faster IT innovation The hassle and cost of routine IT maintenance tasks can be effectively offloaded to the cloud, enabling IT resources to focus on more strategic tasks like addressing problems, improving user experiences, fostering user adoption and best practices, and getting more value out of systems and processes 5 – Seamless, automatic software updates With cloud computing, all software updates are handled automatically, so critical systems always have the latest functionality and security features. This effectively ensures that all the benefits of a vendor’s ongoing R&D nvestments are transferred to their customer’s business, without that business having to dedicate any time or additional resources 6 – Cost-effective scalability SMBs need increased flexibility to grow and scale without hassle. With the cloud, as an SMB adds users, generates more transactions, or adds more data, services dynamically scale to manage the workload. This eliminates the need to pay for more hardware or maintenance to support business growth. As a bonus, SMBs only use the energy they need for their cloud apps. Since servers aren’t running idle waiting to be utilized, operations become more energy efficient, reducing the carbon footprint of the business. 7 – Improved collaboration and productivity Digital, cloud-based workspaces offer the opportunity to collaborate more effectively and remove data silos to enable greater employee productivity. Additionally, cloud-based office productivity suites and all-in-one business management solutions possess integration capabilities that simply can’t be matched by on-premises software. Cloud computing also allows teams to be productive, regardless of their location. This enables businesses to offer flexible working arrangements that create a healthier work/life balance and happier employees without sacrificing productivity. 8 – Seamless software integration Cloud applications are typically compatible with Application Programming Interfaces (APIs) that simplify integration, while automation tools like Microsoft Flow facilitate stitching them together without any custom code. Data and systems can be connected like never before, resulting in new levels of speed and efficiency. 9 – Superior security and data protection Small businesses are the most common victims of security breaches. In a recent study by ComScore, over 40% of small businesses were worried about data security before moving to the cloud. After making the switch, 94% of businesses reported security benefits they had been unable to achieve with their previous on-premises resources. Furthermore, physical hardware protection has always been a challenge for SMBs. Laptops get lost or stolen all the time. In addition to the replacement costs, there is the even greater cost of losing important or sensitive data. When storing and backing up data in the cloud, however, data is available and protected regardless of what happens to personal devices. 10 – Increased competitiveness Moving to the cloud gives SMBs access to enterprise-class technologies that were previously only available to the industry’s top players. With the cloud, any business can run on the exact same systems used by the largest, most sophisticated companies in the world, enabling them to innovate and act faster than competitors that manage on-premises legacy systems. In conclusion, with cloud software now available that is purpose-built for SMBs to run their sales, marketing, service, accounting, operations, supply chain, and project management activities—all from a single, connected solution infused with AI and advanced analytics—there’s never been a better time for small and medium-sized businesses to make the move to the cloud. Connect with our cloud expert for any query or requirement at –  info@tridentinfo.com

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New AI features connect and extend insights across the organization

Today we’re unveiling new and enhanced artificial intelligence (AI) capabilities across Dynamics 365 applications, as well as a new solution to help project-centric services organizations transform their operations. Joining more than 400 new and updated features in the 2020 wave 1 release, these new capabilities expand a fast-growing set of applications powered by AI-driven insights, and further propel our vision to empower every organization to unify data across the business and use it to power personalized customer experiences and processes. Personalize customer experiences with unified data and unmatched time to insight Customers expect personalized and consistent experiences across every touchpoint. Many organizations, however, struggle to modernize the customer experience, often due to disconnected systems and data siloes that can’t deliver the full picture of the customer’s journey across websites, purchases, service calls, and mobile apps. Updates to Microsoft Dynamics 365 Customer Insights, Microsoft’s customer data platform (CDP), will help solve these issues. We’re introducing new first and third-party data connections to further enrich customer profiles that can be updated and activated in real-time, as well as enabling deeper insights with Microsoft Azure Synapse Analytics. Customer Insights will now uniquely enrich profiles with a combination of proprietary audience intelligence and 3rd party data sources such as demographics and interests, firmographics, market trends, and product and service usage data. Customers can also integrate Microsoft Forms Pro, the simple, powerful enterprise survey solution, to bring in the valuable voice of the customer across channels, allowing organizations to act on insights based on changing customer behavior and perception. All of this comes together to create a holistic, 360-degree view of a customer and to update those customer profiles and activities in real-time enabling organizations to know their customers and improve engagement. Customer Insights is built on a powerful and flexible platform that enables full extensibility. Organizations can derive deeper insights by using Azure Synapse Analytics, which combines customer data with enterprise and streaming data to improve data completeness, run high-speed analytical processing, and build custom machine learning models. This allows organizations to predict customer needs with insights and get guidance on the next best action to reduce churn and capitalize on revenue opportunities for the lifetime of a customer relationship. Organizations can act upon these insights in real-time across multiple destinations through prebuilt APIs to enable onsite clienteling, website personalization, dynamic marketing campaigns, and effective ad targeting. As part of the wave 1 release, we’re expanding the availability of Customer Insights to government cloud computing (GCC) environments helping to improve the citizen experiences essential to modern government. This means our government and public customers with higher compliance needs can now leverage Customer Insights to better understand and interact with citizens, empower employees, and transform cities at scale. Automate sales forecasting with predictive analytics In addition to expanded AI capabilities on our customer data platform, we’re extending the ability for sales professionals to forecast sales more accurately and introducing a new, unified engagement center for inside sales representatives. Available now for Dynamics 365 Sales and for Dynamics 365 Sales Insights, new manual and predictive forecasting capabilities empower sales organizations to have a better understanding of the pipeline, more accurately predict results, and gain visibility into future performance. The predictive forecasting capabilities enable the proactive decision-making needed to meet sales goals. Dynamics 365 does this by extracting patterns from customer relationship management (CRM) data, current and historical leads, won or lost opportunities, contacts, accounts, customer interactions such as emails and calls, and more data sources, and then projecting these patterns into the future. Best of all, anyone can access the insights, no data scientists or tech experts needed (a big change from some other forecasting systems). With a new engagement center designed to accelerate sales, we’re giving each inside seller a streamlined way to quickly triage, research, and engage new leads or opportunities. This provides them with their own prioritized work queue to take action on the highest priority leads and tasks based on built-in predictive scoring from Dynamics 365 Sales Insights and new, configurable sales cadences. The experience helps sellers stay in the context of Dynamics 365 and quickly move from one lead or opportunity to the next in an AI-prioritized work queue, without needing to switch views to take the next best action. Additional embedded AI capabilities offer sellers a path to a warm introduction, and guidance from the assistant. Transform the back office with AI-infused finance insights Not only are we expanding AI capabilities for customer and sales insights, we’re also bringing the power of AI to the finance department. Microsoft Dynamics 365 Finance Insights, coming to preview in May, accelerates your digital transformation by bringing the power of AI into your finance processes. As organizations look to make decisions rapidly, reduce risk, and focus on strategic initiatives, it’s critical to free finance from repetitive, time consuming and low value daily activities. Leveraging the power of AI, Finance Insights enables you to not only quickly understand and act on your company’s cash position, but also to take proactive action to improve it. Menial tasks are automated or removed, the barrier of developing or hiring AI-expertise is bypassed, and you’re left with insights to move your business forward. Our continued investment in expanding AI capabilities across Dynamics 365 helps your organization accelerate digital transformation initiatives while empowering employees with insights to drive better business outcomes every day. Optimize project success and profitability with the ability to drive operational excellence across service-centric organizations How people work today has changed, as has the way organizations run their business operations. Companies across all industries are innovating business models to support project-centric service offerings. And while business optimization has gotten easier with the rise of mobile and cloud technology, organizations continue to stitch together systems and struggle with managing data across disparate systems. These data silos within project-centric businesses and teams are negatively impacting business model transformation, customer acquisition, employee retention, project delivery, and business profitability. Today we’re announcing a new Dynamics 365 application that connects cross-functional project teams, providing the visibility, collaboration, and insight needed to drive the success of project-centric organizations. Microsoft Dynamics 365 Project Operations, which will be generally available on October 1,

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Business team using CRM software to manage sales, customer data, and communication workflows.

5 Clear Signs Your Business Needs CRM Software in 2026

Here is a question most business owners ask too late: at what point does managing customer relationships in spreadsheets, email inboxes, and memory become a liability rather than a system? The honest answer is — sooner than you think. Customer Relationship Management (CRM) software is not just for large enterprises with complex sales teams. It is for any business that wants to grow its customer base, retain the customers it already has, and make sure no opportunity falls through the cracks. The challenge is recognising when the moment has arrived. Here are five clear signs that your business needs CRM software — and why Microsoft Dynamics 365 is the platform most businesses choose. What Is CRM Software and Why Does It Matter? CRM software is a centralised system that manages every interaction between your business and your customers — from the first marketing touchpoint through the sales cycle, the initial purchase, ongoing service, and renewal. Done well, CRM gives every team member a complete, real-time picture of every customer relationship. Sales knows what marketing has sent. Customer service knows what sales has promised. Management knows exactly where every opportunity stands. Without CRM, this information lives in individual inboxes, personal spreadsheets, and people’s heads — and every time someone leaves the business, some of that knowledge leaves with them. 5 Signs Your Business Needs CRM Software Now Sign 1 — You Are Losing Leads Without Knowing Why Leads come in through your website, social media, phone calls, and referrals. But if you are managing them manually, some of those leads are simply not being followed up — because they were logged in the wrong place, assigned to the wrong person, or forgotten during a busy week. A CRM captures every lead automatically, assigns it to the right team member, sets follow-up reminders, and tracks every interaction. Nothing gets lost. Every opportunity gets the attention it deserves. If you have ever discovered a warm lead that was never followed up weeks after it arrived — your business needs CRM. Sign 2 — Your Marketing and Sales Teams Work in Silos Marketing generates leads. Sales closes deals. But when these two teams work from different systems and different data, the handoff between them is where opportunities die. Marketing does not know which leads converted. Sales does not know which campaigns generated their best prospects. Neither team can make decisions based on the complete picture — because that picture does not exist in any single place. CRM creates a shared view of every customer and every lead — so marketing can see which campaigns produce sales-ready prospects and sales can engage leads with full context on their marketing journey. The result is better targeting, higher conversion rates, and a measurable improvement in revenue. If your marketing and sales teams regularly blame each other for pipeline problems — your business needs CRM. Sign 3 — You Cannot Easily Create Quotes and Track Invoices For businesses that sell through a quotation process — professional services, manufacturing, technology, or any B2B operation — the ability to create, track, and follow up on quotes directly impacts how quickly deals close. A CRM with a built-in quoting and invoicing module connects the entire opportunity-to-cash process: If your team is manually creating quotes in Word documents and tracking them in a spreadsheet — your business needs CRM. Sign 4 — Customer Service Issues Are Falling Through the Gaps Customer service quality is directly tied to information quality. When a customer calls with a problem, the speed and accuracy of the resolution depends on whether your team can instantly see their complete history — what they bought, when, what issues they have had before, and what was promised. Without CRM, this information is scattered across email threads, support tickets, and different team members’ notes. The customer ends up repeating themselves. Issues take longer to resolve. Satisfaction drops. CRM centralises customer service management: If customers regularly complain about having to repeat their issue to multiple people — your business needs CRM. Sign 5 — You Cannot See How Your Business Is Really Performing Good management decisions are built on good data. But if your sales pipeline lives in a spreadsheet, your customer data is in email, and your service records are in a helpdesk tool — getting a clear, current picture of business performance requires manual compilation that takes hours and is outdated the moment it is finished. CRM provides real-time dashboards and reports that give every level of the organisation instant visibility: If your management team regularly makes decisions based on instinct because the data is too hard to access quickly — your business needs CRM. Why Microsoft Dynamics 365 CRM Microsoft Dynamics 365 is one of the world’s most widely adopted CRM platforms — and for good reason. It covers every scenario described above in a single, unified platform: lead management, marketing automation, sales pipeline, quoting and invoicing, customer service, and real-time analytics — all connected on the same data model. Key advantages over standalone CRM tools: Why Trident Is India’s Trusted Dynamics 365 CRM Partner As a certified Microsoft Dynamics 365 partner, Trident Information Systems has helped businesses across sales, marketing, manufacturing, retail, and professional services in India implement CRM solutions that close the gaps described in this article. Our CRM implementations are configured around your specific sales process and customer management requirements — not a generic template. Ready to find out how CRM software can transform your customer relationships? Book a free Dynamics 365 CRM assessment with Trident today. For more insightful content and industry updates, follow our LinkedIn page.

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Retail ERP and e-commerce integration dashboard managing inventory, orders, and online sales.

7 Reasons Your Retail Business Needs a Unified ERP and E-Commerce Integration Solution

Here is a scenario that will feel familiar to most retail operators: a customer visits your website, sees a product marked as available, drives to your store to buy it, and finds out the shelf is empty. Your website still shows it in stock. Nobody knows why. Or this one: a loyal customer who buys from you in-store every week places their first online order — and receives a “welcome, new customer” email. No recognition of their purchase history. No loyalty points applied. No sense that the business they have been giving you for two years means anything in the digital channel. These are not technology failures. They are integration failures — and they happen every day in retail businesses running separate, loosely connected systems for their physical stores and online channels. The solution is retail ERP and e-commerce integration — specifically, a retail-oriented integration solution designed from the ground up for the way retail businesses actually operate, rather than a generic middleware tool that treats your retail operation like any other business. This article covers the seven concrete reasons why retail-specific ERP and e-commerce integration delivers outcomes that generic solutions simply cannot match — and what to look for when evaluating your options. Why Separate Retail Systems Are Now a Competitive Liability Brick-and-mortar retail is not dead — but purely physical retail without a connected online presence is becoming increasingly rare. Today’s retail customer moves fluidly between channels. They discover products on social media, research them on your website, check availability through your app, visit your store to see them in person, and expect to complete the purchase on whichever channel is most convenient at that moment. Research consistently shows that 81% of consumers use mobile devices as part of their shopping research — and the majority of purchasing journeys now involve at least two channels before a transaction is completed. For retail businesses, every additional sales channel represents a potential revenue stream. But it also represents a new source of operational complexity — unless every channel shares the same data, the same inventory, the same customer records, and the same pricing. When they do not, the experience falls apart. And in a market where customers have endless alternatives, an experience that falls apart drives them to a competitor without a second thought. The Real Cost of Running Disconnected ERP and E-Commerce The cost of disconnected retail systems is distributed across every channel, every function, and every customer interaction — making it easy to underestimate until you try to measure it: Why Generic Integration Tools Fall Short for Retail Many businesses attempt to solve the integration challenge with general-purpose middleware tools — platforms designed to connect any two applications regardless of industry. Generic integration tools can technically connect a retail ERP with an e-commerce platform. The problem is that retail has specific operational requirements — BOPIS fulfilment logic, zip-code-based inventory routing, loyalty program data synchronization, multi-currency retail pricing rules — that generic tools are not built to handle natively. The result is months of expensive custom development to configure a generic tool for retail-specific scenarios, followed by ongoing maintenance overhead every time either connected system updates. A retail-specific integration solution — or better, a unified retail platform — delivers all of this functionality out of the box. 7 Reasons to Choose a Retail-Specific ERP and E-Commerce Integration Reason 1: Consistent Products and Pricing Across Every Sales Channel The most fundamental requirement of a unified retail operation is consistency — every channel showing the same products, the same prices, and the same promotions at the same time. When your product catalog, pricing structure, and promotional mechanics live in your ERP and distribute automatically to every connected channel, consistency is structural — it happens automatically rather than requiring manual synchronization. A retail-specific integration solution enables: For retailers managing hundreds or thousands of SKUs across multiple channels, centralized product management is not just a convenience — it is a necessity. Reason 2: True Omnichannel Fulfilment — Buy Anywhere, Deliver Anywhere The modern retail customer expects to complete their shopping journey on their own terms — and that means the fulfilment model needs to be as flexible as they are. Buy Online, Pick Up In-Store (BOPIS) is now a baseline expectation for omnichannel retailers — customers order online and collect from their preferred store, combining the convenience of online shopping with the immediacy of in-store collection. But executing BOPIS reliably requires real-time integration between your e-commerce platform, your ERP, and your in-store systems. A retail-specific integration solution enables the full range of omnichannel fulfilment scenarios: Each of these scenarios requires real-time data sharing between the e-commerce platform, the ERP, and store-level inventory — which only a retail-specific integration solution delivers reliably. Reason 3: Real-Time Inventory Visibility Across Every Location Inventory accuracy is the operational foundation on which everything else in omnichannel retail depends. Without accurate, real-time inventory data across every location, BOPIS fails, online availability is unreliable, and customer trust erodes. A retail-specific integration solution delivers inventory visibility that generic tools cannot: The business impact of real-time inventory accuracy extends beyond customer experience. Buyers make better purchasing decisions. Markdowns are more targeted. Overstock and out-of-stock situations are identified earlier and resolved faster. Reason 4: Unified Customer Data Across Digital and Physical Channels A customer who has shopped with you for five years should feel known — regardless of which channel they use. Their purchase history, preferences, loyalty status, and contact information should follow them seamlessly across every interaction with your brand. This only happens when your ERP and every connected channel share a single customer database — updated in real time by every transaction, regardless of where it occurs. A retail-specific integration solution delivers: Reason 5: A Single Loyalty Program That Works Everywhere Loyalty programs are one of the most powerful customer retention tools available to retailers — but only when they work seamlessly across every channel a customer uses. A loyalty program that earns points in-store but cannot redeem them online,

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Turn prospects into engaged customers with intelligent sales and marketing

[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text] The selling landscape is undergoing fundamental changes, many of them driven by the effects of B2B customers’ experience as everyday consumers. Many retailers have created personalized, nearly immersive, online experiences for each customer. Consumers shopping for goods and services continually experience fresh and delightful interactions, from highly customized offers and recommendations to frictionless channels to 24/7 interactions. Using Microsoft Dynamics 365 for Marketing and Microsoft Dynamics 365 for Sales organisations are improving  their profit margins. The impact of B2C on B2B Today’s B2B buyers have high expectations, and those expectations will not be met if B2B buyers are accustomed to sophisticated consumer interactions in their personal lives. Executive B2B buyers are not impressed by marketing driven by large, relatively impersonal data analysis that leads to inconsistent and conflicting interactions or sales outreach that doesn’t cater specifically to their needs at the right time. The source of the problem may be largely invisible to the companies perpetuating this issue. Many organizations believe themselves to be customer-centric, while their buyers may not agree. That’s a significant disconnect. Clearly, B2B has much to learn from B2C companies. Customer experience – the rewards for getting it right Many B2C organizations have strategically embraced modern technologies like customer data platforms (CDP) and artificial intelligence (AI) to gain a 360-degree view of their customers and follow through on those insights to optimize customer engagement. The rewards for getting this engagement right are substantial. Many buyers are willing to pay more for a better customer experience. In terms of the potential benefits a great experience can have on sales success, a McKinsey study reported that organizations can expect: 10-15 percent lower customer churn 20-40 percent increase in the win rate of offers Up to 50 percent lower service costs Take a new approach B2B companies must move away from their legacy approaches based on large, relatively impersonal data analysis and move to solutions that unify relationship data across the full customer lifecycle. That way, they can gain insights that help build credibility and trust with buyers. They can run multi-channel campaigns to increase sales-ready leads, create personal experiences, and use guided process and AI to anticipate and respond faster to customer needs. They can build the ongoing, high-quality relationships that are necessary for long-term success. Four principal goals Turning prospects into engaged customers is a process. In order to achieve these goals, organizations must focus on 4 key priorities: Nurture more demand Personalize buyer experiences Build relationships at scale Make insight-driven decisions Each of these drives results by using deep reservoirs of data in making technology feel more human. Nurture more demand Relying only on conventional, basic email marketing as the primary source of leads is simply not effective enough. In fact, the more focused and demanding the customer universe is, the more essential it is to gain deep insights into what those customers expect. Northrop & Johnson,  a leading global yacht brokerage, competes for multi-million dollar customers using technology its industry has been slow to adopt. Using Microsoft Dynamics 365 for Marketing has created a decided competitive advantage: Vital insights into their customer base have helped to drive a 70 percent increase in charter sales. In any industry, companies need to generate leads across multiple channels, nurture large numbers of leads while prioritizing each one, and use data-driven insights to deliver leads that are sales-ready. Nurturing more demand is critical to growth. Personalize buyer experiences It’s time to end friction, inconsistencies, and the “do you know who I am?” part of the customer experience. Companies can acquire a holistic view of buyers, predict buyer intent, and orchestrate a connected, personalized journey for customers. In an era where guests have more choices than ever for leisure and entertainment, Tivoli delights its guests by using Dynamics 365 Customer Insights to stay one step ahead of expectations and transform the guest experience. With its deeper understanding of guests, it can add new chapters to its long tradition of imagination and innovation. Build relationships at scale Mutually beneficial relationships don’t simply happen with more data. Companies need to build credibility to establish and grow relationships with customers. Together, Dynamics 365 and LinkedIn enable the company to have increased information about, and impact on the sales relationships that are added to its sales pipeline, even as that pipeline experiences exponential growth month over month. Make insight-driven decisions Here’s where sales and marketing can truly align: utilizing data to uncover insights that lead to better-informed decisions throughout the sales process. This can improve performance, empower employees, and enable the company to gain increasingly effective strategic insights. With more than 1,500 pubs serving guests throughout the UK, Marston’s launched a business transition by bringing together guest data that was scattered across multiple systems into Dynamics 365. With their locations’ guest data now unified, Marston’s will gain a complete view of guests, which can be harnessed to generate customer satisfaction and strategic insights. This approach helps drive improved performance throughout the company, including the opportunity to empower employees – an often-overlooked aspect of a company’s success. Aligning sales and marketing: The intelligent way to succeed It’s possible to create exceptional experiences, drive more qualified leads, and increase revenue if an organization has the vision, process, and technology to harness all the data available. This requires high-level technology with well-defined business goals and sales and marketing applications fueled by keen intelligence. We have a compelling offering to accomplish just that with Microsoft Dynamics 365. Get in touch with our representative to request a demo for Microsoft Dynamics 365 for Sales & Microsoft Dynamics 365 for Marketing Blog Reference : https://cloudblogs.microsoft.com/dynamics365/bdm/2019/09/19/turn-prospects-into-engaged-customers-with-intelligent-sales-and-marketing/[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row]

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Slash costs in your restaurant with the right software system

[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text]How do you manage costs in your restaurant business? Are you operating as efficiently as you could be? We know how difficult it can be to maintain optimal efficiency and make money in a time of razor-thin margins and intense competition. By their very nature, restaurants are characterized by predictable, seasonal factors as well as by unpredictable ones, including changing customer preferences and fluctuating running costs. But there are ways to get a better handle of your business, helping you to plan ahead more effectively, become leaner and reduce costs in the process. For many restaurant owners, the answer lies in choosing a modern unified technology platform that provides a complete overview of your business operations from Point of Sale (POS) to back office. Indeed, research by the National Restaurant Association in the US found that over 80% of restaurants are turning to technology like online ordering and reservations and restaurant analytics to help them run their business successfully and efficiently. The same report found that four in five restaurant operators agreed that: Technology helps increase sales Technology makes their restaurant more productive Technology provides a competitive advantage. If you’re in two minds as to whether a restaurant management system could help your business grow, rather than simply cost you money, here are some specific areas in your business where the right technology can make a real difference: Optimize staff management If your staff schedules are currently handled manually, in spreadsheets or even on paper forms, you could be missing out on a trick. Staff management software has the capabilities you need to ensure rosters correspond with table bookings and helps you plan for the right amount of labor you need. The result is optimized schedules, which means you don’t have too many employees at work during quiet periods, and yet you have enough on hand to see you through the busy times. If you select a unified system for your restaurant, the staff management functionality can be part of the same platform used to manage the rest of your business. This allows you to make truly informed decisions using historic sales data and drilling down by location, day of the week and time to see patterns emerging and better determine when you will be busy or quiet. Another factor to consider is how you can use the software to keep track of your budgets and make sure you’re not paying out more than you should be. We know how difficult it can be to check and confirm the hours worked by each of your employees, especially when you are likely dealing with so many. But a staff management system can automate this for you, confirming actual hours worked are the same as those planned and highlighting any discrepancies for you to follow up on, minimizing errors and costs. With the functionality to analyze how much you are spending by employee, work code, shift and role, you can compare actual costs and performance against your business plan, and minimize unnecessary extra expenses, such as overtime. Simplify staff training In this industry, we know that workers tend to be transient – maybe you have lots of students or temporary workers on your payroll. High staff turnover can be a real pain point and loss maker for your business, especially as recruiting and training staff is both time consuming and costly. But there are ways technology can help you control this better, and reduce the costs and pain of getting new staff on board. If the systems you use are intuitive and easy for all employees to understand, you won’t have to spend as long training them on how to use them in the first place. Some retail management systems allow you to set up your POS so it mirrors your menu, making it far simpler for staff to find their way around while also helping to reduce mistakes. To simplify training even further, it could pay off to choose a system that uses a logic your staff is already familiar with. The LS Retail restaurant solutions, LS First and LS Central, are built on well-known Microsoft technology. This means new employees can be up and running quickly, as any experience with Microsoft software such as Office or Windows means they already know where to find menus and information in the system. Having one enterprise-wide platform, rather than multiple software solutions strung together, also means you only need to train your staff up once. This not only saves time and cost but gives you greater flexibility too. If you need to move staff from the bar to the restaurant floor, you can do so with ease. No extra training required to use a separate system; no time wasted. Increase table turnover and order value Is your restaurant floor running as smoothly as it could? There are some steps you can put in place to subtly speed up the process, allowing you to serve more customers without making your diners feel rushed. Mobile POS devices are a great way of doing this. As they connect your servers directly to the kitchen, kitchen staff can act on orders as soon as they are taken at the table, speeding up food preparation. Your waiters can get an alert on their POS devices when orders are ready, and they can also take payments on the device as soon as diners are ready to leave – no waiting for card readers or an available cash register. If you select the right mobile POS, your staff can also handle conversational ordering, where they take orders in the same way that customers reel them off – extra cheese on their burger and no mayo, with large chips, for example. Everything can be quickly inputted into the POS, speeding up service time and reducing errors. At the same time, because staff have all menu information right in front of them, they can improve their upselling potential by suggesting upsell items and upgrades as they take orders. Streamline kitchen operations A unified platform complete with a kitchen management system could help your restaurant serve up food more quickly and efficiently than ever. In the kitchen, having Kitchen Display System (KDS) screens connected to the

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How Trident’s Cloud Platform Can Manage Your Restaurant Effortlessly in 2026

Food costs are volatile, labor is expensive, and customer expectations keep rising — yet your margins stay razor-thin. Trident’s cloud restaurant management software, built on Microsoft Dynamics 365, gives you real-time inventory, AI-powered demand forecasting, and unified POS across dine-in, delivery, and takeaway — so you stop firefighting and start running profitably. Running a restaurant in 2026 is harder than ever — and easier than ever. It all depends on the technology you choose. Food costs are volatile. Labour is expensive and hard to retain. Customer expectations are higher. Delivery platforms, dine-in, takeaway, and QR ordering all need to work together seamlessly. And through it all, your margins remain razor-thin. The restaurants thriving in 2026 aren’t necessarily the ones with the best chefs or the biggest marketing budgets. They’re the ones running smarter back-of-house operations — powered by cloud-based restaurant management software. Trident Information Systems’ cloud-based restaurant management platform, built on Microsoft Dynamics 365, is designed specifically to solve this challenge. Here’s how it transforms the way restaurants operate — and why more restaurateurs are making the switch right now. The Restaurant Technology Reality in 2026 The numbers tell a clear story. <cite index=”18-1″>AI-driven forecasting tools have been adopted by 47% of large restaurant groups to improve demand planning accuracy and optimize staff scheduling efficiency.</cite> <cite index=”20-1″>81% of restaurant operators plan to expand AI usage in reservations and orders.</cite> And <cite index=”23-1″>cloud-based POS adoption has crossed a tipping point — legacy on-premise systems are increasingly becoming operational liabilities rather than assets.</cite> In short: the industry has moved. If your restaurant is still running on disconnected, on-premise systems, you’re not just behind — you’re losing money every day. What Trident’s Cloud Restaurant Management Platform Covers Trident’s solution is built to manage every facet of restaurant operations from a single, unified platform: All of it connected. All of it in the cloud. All of it accessible from anywhere. 7 Reasons Restaurants Are Moving to Trident’s Cloud Platform 1. Access Your Business From Anywhere Whether you’re on the restaurant floor, at home, or travelling between locations — Trident’s cloud platform gives you full visibility into your operations from any device with a browser or mobile app. No VPNs. No private networks. No dependency on being physically present. For multi-location operators especially, this is a game-changer. <cite index=”23-1″>Cloud POS platforms enable real-time access to sales, inventory, and performance data across locations, devices, and channels.</cite> Your numbers are always live, always accurate, always at your fingertips. 2. No Heavy Upfront Investment or Long Contracts Traditional on-premise restaurant systems require significant capital expenditure, long vendor contracts, dedicated hardware, and expensive IT maintenance. For a new or growing restaurant, that’s a risky bet. Trident’s cloud platform operates on a SaaS subscription model — meaning lower monthly costs, no surprise IT bills, and a clear ROI from day one. <cite index=”19-1″>The adoption of subscription-based software models is accelerating, allowing for continuous updates to features like digital menu management and marketing automation tools.</cite> You always have the latest version, the latest features, and the latest security — without paying extra for upgrades. 3. Flexible Payments That Suit Your Cash Flow Cash flow is one of the biggest challenges in the restaurant business. Trident’s SaaS model offers flexible payment terms — monthly or annual — so you’re not locked into arrangements that don’t suit your business cycle. More importantly, <cite index=”25-1″>POS systems, self-service kiosks, and chatbots are already reshaping the way the restaurant industry works</cite> — and Trident’s platform supports all modern payment methods, including UPI, digital wallets, contactless payments, and split billing, keeping your checkout experience fast and frictionless. 4. Scale Instantly as Your Business Grows Opening a new outlet? Adding a cloud kitchen? Launching a delivery-only brand? With Trident’s cloud platform, scaling is as simple as activating a new location within your existing subscription. No technician visits. No server installations. No lengthy implementation cycles. <cite index=”18-1″>Omnichannel order management adoption has reached 54% across the industry — platforms that can’t unify these channels leave money and data on the table.</cite> Trident ensures every new location is connected to your central system from day one, feeding the same live data across your entire operation. 5. Seamless POS and Third-Party Integration <cite index=”23-1″>POS systems have evolved into intelligent operating platforms. Cloud infrastructure, AI-driven analytics, advanced hardware, diversified payments, and automation are converging faster than many business owners realize.</cite> Trident’s platform integrates natively with your POS system and connects effortlessly with third-party delivery platforms, accounting software, CRM tools, and kitchen display systems via APIs. Every order — whether from dine-in, Zomato, Swiggy, or your own website — flows into one system, one set of reports, one source of truth. 6. Enterprise-Grade Security Without the Enterprise IT Team Storing your restaurant data on a local server is a serious risk. A hardware failure, a flood, a fire, or even a simple power surge can wipe out months of transaction data, customer records, and financial history. Trident’s cloud platform stores your data securely on Microsoft Azure — with built-in encryption, two-factor authentication, automatic backups, and disaster recovery built in. <cite index=”18-1″>AI-based analytics adoption has reached 49% and is accelerating as platforms embed machine learning directly into menu optimization, demand forecasting, and waste reduction workflows</cite> — all secured within the same enterprise-grade cloud environment. Your data is always safe. Always backed up. Always recoverable. 7. AI-Powered Insights That Drive Real Profitability This is where 2026 changes everything for restaurant operators. <cite index=”20-1″>Early adopters of AI report a 41% average ROI</cite> — and it’s not hard to see why. Trident’s platform, integrated with Microsoft’s AI and Power BI capabilities, gives restaurant managers and owners: <cite index=”24-1″>A casual dining restaurant can use AI-driven forecasting to prepare the right amount of ingredients for weekends, reducing spoilage while ensuring popular menu items never run out.</cite> These aren’t futuristic capabilities — they’re available today, built into Trident’s platform. Why Trident Is the Right Cloud Partner for Your Restaurant Trident Information Systems isn’t just a software provider — it’s a

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Busy retail store during holiday shopping season using modern retail software to manage sales and inventory.

Don’t Let Your Retail System Destroy Your Holiday Season in 2026

The holiday season can make or break your retail year — but if your systems are outdated, it will break you instead. LS Retail, built on Microsoft Dynamics 365, gives you the unified, cloud-native foundation to handle Black Friday surges, real-time inventory, and omnichannel chaos without missing a single sale. The holiday season is the most profitable time of the year for retailers — and the most dangerous. Black Friday, Cyber Monday, Christmas, and New Year together pack months of normal trading volume into just a few weeks. Your systems either handle it or they don’t. And in 2026, the cost of “they don’t” has never been higher. A recent New Relic report found that the median hourly cost of a critical retail outage is $1 million. Nearly one in three retailers experience critical outages every single week — not just during peak season. Add to that the fact that global e-commerce sales are projected to hit $8.1 trillion in 2026, and the stakes become very clear. The good news? Every problem below has a known solution. Here’s what to watch for — and how to fix it before the rush hits. Issue #1: Your Technology Buckles Under Peak Season Volume The Cause Legacy retail systems were built for a different era. They were never designed to handle today’s transaction volumes across physical stores, e-commerce, mobile apps, and social commerce — all simultaneously. When Black Friday traffic spikes 10x overnight, disconnected systems that limp along the rest of the year simply fall over. The New Relic report found that retailers take a median of 30 minutes to even detect an outage — and another 42 minutes to resolve it. During peak trading, that’s catastrophic. In 2026, the problem has a new dimension too. Many retailers racing to adopt AI-assisted tools have introduced new failure risks. Even Amazon suffered high-profile outages in early 2026 linked to AI-generated code changes — resulting in millions of lost orders and a 90-day code safety reset across 335 critical retail systems. Scale doesn’t guarantee safety. The Solution The answer isn’t more patches on aging systems — it’s replacing them. Unified commerce removes silos and enables real-time coordination across stores, warehouses, and digital channels, providing a single source of truth that improves accuracy, speed, and customer satisfaction. A modern unified retail platform like LS Retail, built on Microsoft Dynamics 365, is cloud-native, scalable, and built to absorb holiday volume spikes without breaking a sweat. One platform. One codebase. No Frankenstein patchwork. Issue #2: Something Breaks and You Can’t Find — or Fix — It Fast The Cause When your retail stack is made up of five or six disconnected tools, a failure in one doesn’t just hurt that tool — it silently corrupts everything connected to it. Stock figures go wrong. Transactions don’t post. Customer accounts stop updating. And your team spends hours figuring out which part of the chain snapped. This is exactly what happened to Gallo Clothing one Christmas Eve — its busiest day of the year. Cash registers stopped mid-trade. With no way to quickly identify where the disconnect happened, staff were forced to process every transaction manually. Queues grew, customers left, and some never came back. In 2026, this scenario is more likely, not less. 60% of retail engineers spend at least a fifth of their time managing outages — and 14% said engineers spend half their time or more on incident response. That’s an enormous drain on resources that should be serving customers. The Solution Gallo Clothing implemented LS Retail‘s unified commerce platform and hasn’t experienced a system failure since. Their president said it plainly: “We’ve seen more customers, sold more products, and had much shorter lines.” Modern unified systems give you full visibility across every component in real time. When something flags, you know immediately — where it is, what’s affected, and what to do. Resolution time drops from hours to minutes. Issue #3: You Run Out of Stock and Lose Sales to Competitors The Cause Out-of-stock situations are one of the biggest revenue drains in retail. Research by IHL Group found that retailers globally lose nearly $1 trillion annually due to out-of-stock items — with almost a third of shoppers immediately turning to a competitor when they can’t find what they need. In 2026, the bar for inventory accuracy has risen sharply. Customers expect accurate availability and delivery commitments — unified commerce is becoming a requirement, not a roadmap slide. Shoppers check stock online before visiting a store. If your website shows “in stock” but the shelf is empty, you don’t just lose a sale — you lose trust. The root cause is always the same: no real-time inventory visibility, unreliable data, and demand forecasting that relies on weekly reports rather than live signals. The Solution Retailers leveraging AI for inventory management report 95% accuracy in demand forecasting, a 40% drop in inventory carrying costs, and 60% fewer stockouts. A unified retail platform gives you live inventory visibility across every store, warehouse, and channel simultaneously. When one location runs low, you see it instantly and can act — whether that’s triggering a warehouse replenishment, transferring stock between stores, or updating your online availability in real time. Luxury retailer Club 21|Armani Exchange experienced this firsthand after implementing LS Retail. On the first Black Friday post-implementation, their team spotted a surge at one store at 10pm, called the warehouse, arranged an emergency delivery, and tripled sales at that location over the weekend — something simply impossible without real-time visibility. Issue #4: Returns and Omnichannel Journeys Are a Mess The Cause Most retailers in 2026 claim to be omnichannel. Very few actually are. True omnichannel means a customer can browse online, buy on mobile, pick up in-store, and return via any channel — with every interaction reflected instantly across your entire system. What most retailers actually have is multiple channels operating as separate businesses with occasional, unreliable data syncs between them. Over 55% of Gen Z’s total holiday spend now occurs

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