2019
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-030-36691-9_27
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Towards Analyzing High Street Customer Trajectories - A Data-Driven Case Study

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Cited by 4 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…The vast majority of progress in development of CJIS is considered for the retail omnichannel, drawing in part from e-commerce analytics platforms that may be extended to m-commerce (Chatzidimitris et al, 2020 ). Work by Berendes and colleagues, however, has examined what it would take to build CJIS that cover whole retail high streets, potentially with insight down to individual pedestrians (Berendes, 2019 ; Berendes et al, 2018 ). This opens up the possibility that CJIS could be extended, in concept, to encompass broader considerations of pedestrian behavior along high streets and streetscapes more generally (Torrens, 2016a ).…”
Section: The Customer Journey As a Framework For Knowledge Production...mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The vast majority of progress in development of CJIS is considered for the retail omnichannel, drawing in part from e-commerce analytics platforms that may be extended to m-commerce (Chatzidimitris et al, 2020 ). Work by Berendes and colleagues, however, has examined what it would take to build CJIS that cover whole retail high streets, potentially with insight down to individual pedestrians (Berendes, 2019 ; Berendes et al, 2018 ). This opens up the possibility that CJIS could be extended, in concept, to encompass broader considerations of pedestrian behavior along high streets and streetscapes more generally (Torrens, 2016a ).…”
Section: The Customer Journey As a Framework For Knowledge Production...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Chen, Li, and Sun ( 2017 ) have shown, for example, that mobile geo-targeting of customers (essentially, sending customers coupons and advertising based on their location while on the move) produces more firm profit than standard forms of targeting. Berendes ( 2019 ) made the highly relevant statement that a wealth of digital information from the omnichannel “has created new opportunities to learn more about customer behavior in high streets … While customers in a high street are unknown for the retailers, online retailers are situated with detailed knowledge about their customers” (p. 313). In particular, the fact that many customer journeys now begin their decision journey in e-commerce (comparing goods, assessing stock, checking prices, viewing product information) allows retailers to build large archives and anchors for individual customer journey data before a shopper even sets foot on the high street.…”
Section: Speculative Connections Between Walking In Retailing and Wal...mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Retailers refer to this as co-creation of the customer experience [36,37] with technology. While co-creation may traditionally have been a component of in-person sales and branding, increasingly retailers are relying on what others have termed to be a digital-physical servicescape [38], i.e., accentuation of physical stores and products with digital counterparts, so that retailing becomes cyber-physical [39]. For retailers, the benefits of cyber-physical servicescapes over purely physical settings are pretty straightforward: they help physical retailers to compete with e-commerce platforms by fundamentally lowering long-term costs by substituting technology in roles that would traditionally be staffed.…”
Section: The Technological Substrate Of the Smart Retail High Streetmentioning
confidence: 99%