Amazon Omni-Channel opens a can of Bricks and Mortar

When Amazon launched in the late 1990s, I was finishing off my Undergraduate degree and distinctly remember sitting back from the desk and pondering how Amazon would change the world of commerce.

Amazons’ latest announcement has been a while coming, its now out there.  The link below gives you a nice tight overview of one of the newest initiatives by Amazon, the physical retail store without a “normal” checkout. The call it Amazon Go.

Basically, a consumer “logs” into the store via a turnstile-type arrangement. (Think HK Oyster rather than Melbourne MYKI at this point!) The person then picks up items from the physical shelf and the Amazon system adds that item to the consumers shopping cart. On store exit, the basket of goods are paid for via the Amazon online checkout system. Seamless, easy and scary if you are an Australian retailer without an omni-channel plan. (If you have e-commerce and don’t have buy-online-pickup instore then Click and Collect is one of your first defensive moves. See last paragraph for your next action on this point)

Amazon Go Video

This 1:49 video shows the Amazon Go user experience.

This is the link to the article on Wired Magazine. http://www.wired.co.uk/article/amazon-go-walk-out-shopping

Omni-Channel Retailing

Remembering that Amazons Revenue is now north of U$107bn, it would seem as though they have got a few things right in the past.

Omni-channel is about a friction-less buying experience and it applies to B2B in addition to B2C, the traditional e-commerce focus for Amazon and Australian organisations.

If your business has e-commerce up and running and now needs Click and Collect then lets have a confidential conversation on how to approach Buy Online and Pickup Instore.

https://www.linkedin.com/in/ewanwalsh

The Uber of Uber

The Ride-Share Startup That’s Competing With Uber And Lyft By Charging $1
A new Boston-based company called Fasten wants to prove there’s more than one way to reinvent ride services in the digital age.

Full article by Fastcompany on this link https://www.fastcompany.com/3065089/startup-report/the-ride-share-startup-thats-competing-with-uber-and-lyft-by-charging-1

Crowd sourced medical studies via iPhone App

Crowd sourced medical studies for larger sample sizes.

“The Parkinson’s app had 5,589 consenting users by Tuesday morning, according to Sage. Sherer said he didn’t know the cost of developing the app, but the foundation’s biomarker study, a traditional trial with almost 800 participants over five years, has cost about $60 million.”

“(Bloomberg) — Stanford University researchers were stunned when they awoke Tuesday to find that 11,000 people had signed up for a cardiovascular study using Apple Inc.’s ResearchKit, less than 24 hours after the iPhone tool was introduced.
“To get 10,000 people enrolled in a medical study normally, it would take a year and 50 medical centers around the country,” said Alan Yeung, medical director of Stanford Cardiovascular Health. “That’s the power of the phone.”

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-03-11/apple-researchkit-sees-thousands-sign-up-amid-bias-criticism

OBD-II Port opens up car connectivity to the world

Want to get a car connected to the cloud, to an app to a dealer or services provider?
Businesses like Delphi are already providing hardware and software solutions that can be leveraged for personal and commercial use. I can think of at least 20 ways to leverage this approach, what about you?

Read a little about Delphi
Article Update
Wired article on Delphi