Final thoughts (TL;DR)
Although the panel wasn’t able to get to the dozens of questions that were asked in the time allotted, there was still a huge amount covered during the session.
The common thread of the main conversation was, for me, the importance of niche expertise. It’s incredibly easy – especially during periods of economic uncertainty – for businesses to broaden their offering beyond the limits of their expertise in order to offer tangentially related services to boost revenue. However, what AVON’s digital transformation shows is the importance of area expertise – AVON were able, at each step on their Shopify Plus journey, to select a specific expert where they needed them.
This is not only what attracted them to the partners they selected, but also to the Shopify platform itself – Shopify’s app ecosystem allows brands to work with partners that are dedicated to the problems they are experiencing and who, thanks to this niche focus, are able to offer a tried and tested solution which not only answers their needs in the short-term, but is feeding into the custom CMS that they are developing within the wider business.
In terms of the panel’s answer on upcoming trends, it’s difficult to argue with the answers given by Phil and Gavin. Generative AI is now probably somewhere around the peak of what Gartner refers to in their as the Peak of Inflated Expectations – just a little further along than where Gartner placed it last year, while I’d say AI for marketing is somehow both overhyped and under-used, making its place in the Trough of Disillusionment difficult to assess. In reality, AI in general seems to exist in a kind of superposition between the peak and the trough.
As for loyalty – the cost of keeping a customer has historically been estimated at anywhere between 5 and 25 times less expensive than winning a new customer and, during periods of economic turmoil, that can be the difference between a brand that survives and one which thrives, making efforts at customer retention among the most important for any business.
Finally – the internet is overflowing with horror stories about brands of all sizes from sole traders to multi-billion dollar enterprises that have mismanaged a site migration and destroyed their visibility and, once it’s gone, it’s no simple matter to win it back. As Phil said, SEO is essential for a good migration – or to put it another way:
Overall, we were really pleased with how the event went and will look forward to more in future. If, in the meantime, you’d like to chat about working with an expert Shopify Plus agency – get in touch!