After several months of piloting smart fitting rooms at a single store, a global sports apparel retailer is now installing the technology at 350 of its stores across Eastern Europe. The solution consists of a touchscreen and an RFID reader within each fitting room, as well as software to manage the data and smart watches for employees. It enables customers to view content about each item they try on, and to request additional garments automatically, while the store gains analytics regarding which products are generating the most interest, both individually and paired with other products. The retailer has asked to remain unnamed.
The solution is provided by European retail software company Detego, in the latest phase of the retailer’s UHF EPC RFID deployment that began two years ago. At that time, it began tagging garments at the point of manufacture, and tracking those tags as they move through the supply chain and at the store. Fixed readers (Detego has declined to indicate the specific make and model) were installed to track the movements of goods from the back room to the store front, and that information could be compared against point-of-sale data to ensure that garments were restocked on store shelves. Staff members use handheld RFID readers twice a week to conduct inventory counts at each store.
The retailer has since tagged more than 80 million pieces of clothing and footwear, and has achieved nearly 100 percent inventory accuracy as a result of the RFID system’s deployment. The company’s goal, according to Uwe Hennig, Detego’s CEO, is to have the RFID system installed within all 350 fitting rooms during the next 18 months.
The initial tagging of goods was intended to ensure that customers could find the products they wanted on the store shelves, Hennig explains, while allowing for omnichannel sales by enabling the company to ship goods from the online shopper’s nearest store. “With high stock accuracy,” he says, “they are able to improve their customer satisfaction rate.”
Last year, the retailer began exploring how it could expand the system to provide benefits to in-store customers, while also gaining analytics. In December, Detego installed fixed Intel readers and tablet-based touchscreens within five fitting rooms.
During the pilot, the company reports, the system improved sales by making it easier for customers to request a different size of a garment they were trying on, as well as recommending other products to them. So this year, the firm began deploying the technology across 350 stores and factory outlets, within a total of 1,200 fitting rooms. These stores and outlets represent the largest of the retailer’s locations.
Each tagged item is already tracked from distribution center to store, and handheld readers are used to capture inventory data at the store. Each fitting room has its own wall-mounted touchscreen tablet computer connected to Detego’s inventory-management software.
With the new smart fitting room function, Detego explains, RFID allows the opportunity to upsell, and to better serve customers trying on garments. As a shopper brings a tagged garment, such as a pair of golf trousers, into a fitting room, the reader captures the tag’s unique ID number and transmits that information to the software, where it is linked to the item’s stock-keeping unit (SKU) and other data. The software then prompts the mounted screen to display pictures and other content about that garment, and to provide a video of the clothing being worn—for example, an individual playing golf while wearing those particular pants.
Additionally, the system shows content about other garments, via a recommendations engine in Detego’s software. According to Hennig, this is the type of feature that customers are used to when shopping online. “The smart fitting room helps merge online and physical shopping,” he states.
If a garment’s fit is not quite right, or if a customer is interested in another product displayed on the touchscreen—such as a shirt that the system indicates would go well with a pair of trousers—he or she can select a prompt on the screen to place a request with store sales representatives. Each employee wears an Apple Watch running Detego’s app, which enables the watch to display the shopper’s request and indicate not only in which fitting room the customer is located, but also which items he or she wants delivered to that room. The sales representative can then use the smart watch to indicate that he or she is responding to the request, and that response is displayed for the shopper on the touchscreen.
For the retailer, the system is intended not only to boost sales but also to provide analytics. Store managers can view which items are brought into fitting rooms most often, as well as what other garments most commonly accompany them, and then compare that data against actual sales. In this way, they can determine which products interest shoppers, and whether those items are purchased after being tried on. This could help the retailer to understand how products are promoted at its stores—for example, when certain garments are displayed together, or when items are offered at a sale price.