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Does good CX mean jeopardizing security? Some retailers think so.

by | Jun 25, 2019 | Public Relations

Customer experience technologies may be helping retailers better serve and please customers, but are they putting their own business security at risk as a result? According to new research from UK-based application and security services firm Cybera, retailers are struggling to balance the challenges of bringing a greater number of people into their stores (footfall), bigger basket sizes, and an enhanced customer experience with their fundamental technology and IT security.

The survey revealed that offering a differentiated customer experience (31 percent) and increasing footfall (28 percent) are the biggest challenges for retailers. In addition, another recent report showed that poor customer experiences cost British retailers up to £102 billion in lost sales each year.

Retailers are well aware of the need to positively differentiate themselves

Eighty-three percent of respondents in the new survey said that delivering an enhanced in-store customer experienceis very important. The key to addressing all these new challenges is additional applications and services, the majority of which will rely on secure, stable, and scalable network technology. However, nearly one quarter (23 percent) of the respondents have not introduced additional services to their stores in the past 12 months.

What’s holding back these precautions?

The primary inhibitors included cost—25 percent said they thought it would be too expensive—followed by IT security concerns (19 percent) and a belief that their network would not support additional applications (14 percent). Moreover, many retailers noted the ever-evolving regulatory landscape—including GDPR, PCI, and the upcoming PSD2—as an added distraction. Nearly half (47 percent) said they were concerned about new regulatory demands, admitting it was time to review their technology and processes.

Interestingly, less than 10 percent considered IT security to be a key business challenge

This is particularly startling compared to the findings of the British Retail Consortium’s annual crime survey, which found that members are generally seeing a growth in the number of cyber-attacks, continuing previous years’ patterns. Nearly 80 percent of respondents in that survey said the volume of cyber-attacks and breaches had increased in 2018 over the previous year.

“Retail technology and customer demands are constantly changing, but one thing that will always be critical is customer experience,” said Cybera SVP and GM EMEA, Hubert da Costa, in a news release. “The growth of IoT in retail is staggering and it threatens the ability to deliver a consistent, high-quality customer experience. All of these network-enabled devices are disparate, which means separate management and requirements. This IoT growth is challenging for retailers—many of whom operate remote, smaller-footprint sites managed by a staff with limited IT expertise. The solution is to leverage a network platform that enables them to deliver these new breakthrough apps and services quickly, easily, and without compromising their security.”

Cybera surveyed 150 retail professionals in May 2019 at RetailEXPO 2019, Europe’s leading event for retail technology, design, and digital signage.

Richard Carufel
Richard Carufel is editor of Bulldog Reporter and the Daily ’Dog, one of the web’s leading sources of PR and marketing communications news and opinions. He has been reporting on the PR and communications industry for over 17 years, and has interviewed hundreds of journalists and PR industry leaders. Reach him at richard.carufel@bulldogreporter.com; @BulldogReporter

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