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How retailers can navigate consumer data analysis this holiday season

How retailers can navigate consumer data analysis this holiday season

Angela Limoncelli, director of marketing for Luminoso

To say that projections around the 2020 holiday shopping season are fuzzy is being generously optimistic.

On the heels of the global pandemic upending supply chains and forcing nearly all interactions to digital channels, retailers and consumers alike are still reeling. For insights professionals tasked with advising retailers on projected customer behavior during these uncertain times, look to these three steps for guidance on how to navigate consumer data analysis coming holiday season.

Work with the data you’ve got

In our current climate, the downside of reliance on annual forecasting is that last year’s data isn’t going to be of much good on its own in 2020. But there’s a huge benefit to the myriad interactions occurring online: retailers can now track and interrogate most consumer touchpoints.

Most retailers will likely want a better understanding of what consumers like and don’t like about their new, involuntary ecommerce-only experience. And over the last six months, it’s likely many brands will have already collected feedback on these new experiences as they made the sudden shift. Mixed datasets – those containing both numerical and qualitative data, like NPS—will be of utmost importance. By having both ratings and contextual, conversational feedback, retailers can intimately understand how customers feel, about what and why.

With this in mind, start by looking at your brand or your retail clients’ questions over the last six months and evaluate which yielded the most insightful feedback. Based on these initial observations and analyses, consider what types of holiday-specific questions would be most useful for moving forward.

Define what success is—and isn’t—according to 2020’s rules

One thing it seems forecasters can all agree on about holiday 2020: consumers will value other things overspending on themselves. Although this might seem anxiety-inducing, it doesn’t mean consumers won’t be spending at all but will shift where they use their money. There are standard benchmarks, metrics, and KPIs retailers have used year over year to create projections and forecasts to meet and exceed. But attempting to improve on a narrative you’ve written in the past won’t work now.

Before holiday shopping begins in earnest, work to reframe expectations and projections based on the feedback you’ve been collecting throughout the past year. Whereas past predictions probably centered heavily on pure spending projections or craze around the hottest new item, used the nuanced data you’ve amassed to understand how and where you can maximize success:

Equip your team with the right tools

Whether you work for a research agency or in-house at a retailer, data and analysis quality will be critical to your success for both projections and a retrospective on a historic holiday season. A lot of your data is likely in the form of open-ended text: reviews, comments, survey responses, forums—the list goes on.

The good news is that there are text analytics applications available to help you and your team uncover the critical insights you need for success. Here are two key things to consider before investing in a tool:

While there’s no way to know for sure what to expect in the 2020 holiday season, keeping these three themes in mind is a great start. A carefully-crafted strategy around data collection and analysis will bring focus to your team and holiday forecasting and reporting—and ensure you have powerful information to move forward for whatever’s next.

Luminoso provides text analytics applications for analyzing conversational text data like support tickets, open-ended survey responses and reviews.

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