We’re living in an age that gives us glimpses of how smart connected technology is beginning to make lives in some parts of the world a little better and easier while in other parts, revolutionizing societies.
The connected ecosystem in which we live can initially provide excellent and memorable experiences, and soon, it will impact the way we live in profound and meaningful ways.
People want the memorable experiences, the comfort, convenience and care that comes with product personalization. They want this product customization experience to be as transparent as possible.
Think of the smart watch on your wrist subtly monitoring your daily habits, the activity tracker that encourages you to move or your child’s connected asthma inhaler that delivers medication adherence, health, environmental (air quality, temperature, humidity) and habit data to you and with permission, to her caregiver ecosystem.
Driving these 21st century capabilities are two key factors: people and data.
This is a win for everyone involved. This personalized service and customized care gives customers the products that make their lives easier, safer, healthier, comfortable and more enjoyable. Companies can increase their brand loyalty and customer trust with devicified products that are responsive, intelligent and highly individualized.
Think of these two key statistics from a recent Segment Survey that reveals the power of personalization:
Personalization leads to increased revenue: 40 percent of U.S. consumers say they have purchased something more expensive than they planned to because of personalized service.
Personalization leads to loyalty: 44 percent of consumers say they will likely become repeat buyers after a personalized shopping experience.
To enable this personalization, companies need a partner that has deep expertise in designing and manufacturing within the connected ecosystem. This partnership allows companies to deliver on customer expectations with responsive product design and delivery.
Enabling Customization and Personalization by Leveraging a Connected Ecosystem
We’re living in an age that gives us glimpses of how smart connected technology is beginning to make lives in some parts of the world a little better and easier while in other parts, revolutionizing societies.
The connected ecosystem in which we live can initially provide excellent and memorable experiences, and soon, it will impact the way we live in profound and meaningful ways.
People want the memorable experiences, the comfort, convenience and care that comes with product personalization. They want this product customization experience to be as transparent as possible.
Think of the smart watch on your wrist subtly monitoring your daily habits, the activity tracker that encourages you to move or your child’s connected asthma inhaler that delivers medication adherence, health, environmental (air quality, temperature, humidity) and habit data to you and with permission, to her caregiver ecosystem.
Driving these 21st century capabilities are two key factors: people and data.
This is a win for everyone involved. This personalized service and customized care gives customers the products that make their lives easier, safer, healthier, comfortable and more enjoyable. Companies can increase their brand loyalty and customer trust with devicified products that are responsive, intelligent and highly individualized.
Think of these two key statistics from a recent Segment Survey that reveals the power of personalization:
Personalization leads to increased revenue: 40 percent of U.S. consumers say they have purchased something more expensive than they planned to because of personalized service.
Personalization leads to loyalty: 44 percent of consumers say they will likely become repeat buyers after a personalized shopping experience.
To enable this personalization, companies need a partner that has deep expertise in designing and manufacturing within the connected ecosystem. This partnership allows companies to deliver on customer expectations with responsive product design and delivery.
Why Customization and Personalization?
Customization and personalization are more than marketing buzzwords. These two words let companies differentiate themselves with intelligent, responsive and supportive productization.
However, the lines between customization and personalization are often blurred, resulting in a muddied product offering that doesn’t quite live up to customer expectations.
Customization is the action of modifying something to suit a particular individual or task. This customization is defined by the user to enable the provider to make the product better suit their needs. Customization allows customers to have a say in the product design and services they are willing to pay for.
Personalization is defined by TechTarget as a means of anticipating and meeting the customer’s needs more effectively and efficiently making interactions faster and easier and, consequently, increasing customer satisfaction and the likelihood of repeat visits. This gives customers a responsive product that anticipates their needs and makes their lives easier, better, safer and more comfortable.
It is the perfect balance between customization and personalization that customers expect and want.
Mass customization describes the concept of producing single-batch, customized products at the same cost and speed of traditional volume manufacturing methods. Mass customization can be truly enabled with a good balance between customization and personalization. Digital technologies like data science, artificial intelligence with basic solid understanding of human factors and devicification can help accelerate that.
In a hotel guest’s mind, it’s not enough to offer amenities that allow her to manually adjust the in-room temperature or to order fluffier pillows from the front desk – she wants a dynamic hotel room experience that automatically adjusts the in-room temperature based on her home settings and a bed that knows her personalized sleep settings, providing a firm mattress with integrated cooling. Even better if the hotel can order her favorite aromatherapy kit – she is a customer for life.
Real personalization connects and shares data, with the user’s acknowledgment across devices and environments to offer products that give individuals experiences that improve and enhance their day-to-day.
This can be as simple as a connected toothbrush that advises you on your brushing habits and maybe notices when the toothbrush head is worn down and then triggers a digital order for new toothbrush heads. It can be a connected asthma inhaler that enhances compliance, resulting in trickle down impacts of improved health, better caregiver communication and further advances in asthma treatment. A wearable disposable ECG patch can untether and enable remote wellbeing monitoring, while flexible hybrid electronics sensors in smart beds can monitor heart rate and weight distribution.
While these devicified products offer people immediate tangible benefits to improve adherence and treatment outcomes, the data can be leveraged for efficient clinical trials and also open up the opportunities for customized medicine recipes or personalized therapy schedules – all portable to the comfort of the patient’s home or office. With devicification, the options are limitless, including democratization of technology.
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The Trends Driving Customization and Personalization
Community in the digital age has changed where people live, how they access and process information, how they commute to work or enjoy activities. This has given rise to a global, but increasingly dense, connected and knowledgeable demographic of people who know what is available and possible.
There is an expectation and understanding that it doesn’t matter where we live – we should all have access to the same value from products and experiences at prices we can afford. Combine this with the impacts of global urbanization on the growth of the middle class and we are seeing a wide range of buying power that places demands on companies for global product availability.
Consumers
This shift in society has given rise to consumers who have new expectations from the products they buy, the companies they support and the experiences they cherish.
They’re looking for products and brands that mesh with their personal goals and ideals, such as prosperity, comfort, luxury, sustainability, social and environmental impact. This is forcing companies to rethink how they design, package, manufacture, deliver, service and repurpose their products.
Think of the simple fact that everyone, regardless of location and income, has a phone. Grandmothers in India are buying their groceries online with their feature phone, parents in Tokyo are using their sleek smartphones to order pre-cooked meals from their local food delivery service (and then sharing these meals on social media) and youth in Africa use their locally manufactured phones to stay socially active.
Conduct
Memories are increasingly more important than possessions. Sharing is the new norm and sustainability is cool. Rather than being satisfied with a flat product experience, consumers want products that give more –a personalized experience that they can share with their friends and cherish as a memory. This has forced brands and companies to become more than a logo or a slogan.
Now consumers want to support brands that they believe in and that give them products that they can feel good about supporting. The nature of social media and sharing our product experiences means we want to be associated with brands that in our minds are “doing the right thing” for us and for the general good of others.
The product experience has become at least equally as important, if not more than the product features when it comes to a buying decision. 49 percent of customers bought items they did not intend to buy due to a personalized recommendation from the brand, according to a recent Segment Survey.
We know that consumers are ready and willing to pay for products that make them feel and look good. Data from a recent Bain & Company survey of more than 1,000 online shoppers provides some key buying insights:
Customers who personalize products online tend to visit the company website more often and are more loyal to the brand.
Of the more than 1,000 online shoppers surveyed, 25 to 30 percent said they are interested in online customization options.
Consider what this data translates to with this example from the Bain & Company survey report: if 25 percent of online sales of footwear came from customized orders, that would be equal to a market of $2 billion per year.
A Connected Ecosystem Enables Customization and Personalization
The Internet of Things (IoT) and a connected ecosystem make it possible to go beyond basic product offerings. A watch that tells the time is no longer enough; customers want a smartwatch that measures their heart rate, reminds them to pick up the dry cleaning, tells them about traffic slow-downs, helps them sleep better, records an electrocardiogram, allows them to breeze through public transport and shares audio messages from friends and family members to brighten the day. This is one small example of how using the power of the IoT, AI and insight into consumer desire, allows companies to use devicification to deliver a new generation of product and customer experiences.
While the trend for consumer connected systems is rising, a similar transition is happening in the manufacturing world. With the transition to digital manufacturing, products for a consumer connected system are being manufactured and delivered on a connected supply chain (i.e. a digital procurement manufacturing and delivery system). It is interesting to see the intersection of this connected ecosystem emerging in the use and manufacturing of the products that enable customization and personalization.
To effectively deliver a personalized product experience, companies must consider the key pillars of a connected ecosystem:
1. Satisfied Stakeholders
To make personalization and devicification work, the product must meet customer expectations for an advanced experience. These customers then meet the company’s need for paying returning customers, and the manufacturer’s vision to scale high volume production.
2. Accurate Data and Precise Analytics
Delivery on stakeholder expectations requires the collection of accurate data and the creation and visualization of precise analytics. The collection of reliable inputs and data is critical to shaping the connected ecosystem. This data collection and analysis must be fast, efficient, low cost and allow for seamless interconnectivity through the value chain.
The increasingly digital population and product devicification can enable the availability of correct data and accurate analytics – finally making customized and personalized products possible.
3. Procure and Process Data on the Edge
The best way to achieve the above is to procure and process data on the edge with the balance to leverage the capacity of cloud computing. With effective deployment, it is possible to really capture customer desire. This is necessary to tick three key boxes: ensuring that customers get what they want at prices they are willing to pay, giving providers insight into viable products and informing manufacturers of design and production demand. The balance between the many demands of either strategies is the key for the successful solution. One example is the choice to either have more processing of data on the edge, but increasing the processor complexity of the device versus using a higher data rate, and in effect, a larger battery source to transmit the data wirelessly and latently processing the data on the cloud
4. Machines and Devices
Devicification is the key enabler of all of this.
This means we need products that have the capability to collect and interpret customer data. Product providers need to understand why people are buying, what features they like and use the most and how the products are being used.
This product-level data helps companies pivot their brand and supply strategies to meet customer demand. And in turn, gives customers the confidence to consent to the sharing of information and to control the features they value.
Sensorisation and connectivity of machines on smart factory floors allows manufacturers to enable this for their customers. This seamless interconnectivity allows the customized configuration of supply chain and factory floors. Digital process developmentthat leads to intelligent manufacturing is critical – creating a digital thread that connects the customer voice to factory floors is a must-have.
5. Components and Technologies
To make devicification work, takes the ideal use of technology and design. Considerations such as sensor placement, software and hardware design, AI integration, human factors, an advanced understanding of manufacturing, seamless management of materials and services and packaging must all come together to enable the data collection and analysis that informs on customer desire. A solid information technology backbone is critical through-out the entire connected ecosystem.
It’s vitally important that devicification is not done for the sake of devicification. It’s easy to get caught up in forcing interactive features into products without improving the value of these products. This is why it’s key that there is a close collaboration with a partner who has the capabilities and experience to give your product and brand the comprehensive support it needs.
You require a collaborator who can look at your product from all angles and then give you everything you need to take your product in the right direction.
This means working with experts in engineering, miniaturization, design, additive manufacturing, printed electronics and packaging to give you a smart connected product that fulfills customer requirements for brand responsiveness, personalization and experience factor.
“An amazing tribe. I heard loud and clear, your message and Joe’s… I get it.” Barb Regis
“The positive energy in the room was wonderful.” Deb Caron
“I’m even more excited about creating my own show now and I enjoyed connecting with the other podcast / sponsors after the event.” Ethan Merrill
“When you spend 75 minutes in bumper-to-bumper traffic and the reward is this!” Sandie DeMarco
“Speakers were a wealth of knowledge. Well worth the two hour drive.” Enid Moore-Cranshaw
“It was very informative and everyone was so nice.” Tricia Marsh
These are just a few of the heartfelt comments we heard after the first quarterly “Best Practices” Breakfast Meeting on January 17, 2019 at the beautiful because – space for live venue in Phoenix. We offer media as a consultative service and the participants from this meeting truly get what that means for the success and longevity of their businesses.
In attendance:
14 members of our existing Phoenix Business RadioX Talent Team (our hosts / sponsors):
10 curious and interested business owners / entrepreneurs who are interested in learning more about podcasting and how our platform sets itself apart from the rest.
We laughed, learned, connected and celebrated.
This is what the Business RadioX experience is all about.
We are always happy to answer your questions and explore how this opportunity could help you reach your business goals. ~ Karen & the Phoenix Business RadioX Team
When you are a guest on a Phoenix Business RadioX show, it is truly your moment to shine. The studio experience provides a unique opportunity to share who you are, what you do, and what motivates you, in an authentic and casual, yet authoritative environment. We call it the “un-interview” because it really is a conversation, not a Q&A session. And it doesn’t stop when the On Air sign goes dark. While our broadcasts are live, they’re also wonderfully packaged and distributed for on-demand listening online, or via iTunes and your favorite podcast apps.
We encourage sharing, and many guests create sound bites, blogs, articles, and social posts to get even more out of their appearance. We’ll even provide you with some great studio photos to share as you’d like. If you’re not sure how to take full advantage of the promotional aspects of the show, reach out to us. We’re always happy to give you some tips.
If you meet someone new on the show by all means, follow up and build a connection. You share a common bond through the studio experience and it’s a great place to start a working relationship.
Welcome to our first edition of The BRX Bulletin – your resource for learning about and connecting with other impactful Arizona business leaders in our flourishing community. Over the past 16 months since launching Phoenix Business RadioX, I’ve gained an even greater appreciation for the infinite amount of profound talent, brilliant minds and innovative products and services you all provide day-in and day-out.
The camaraderie in our business community is wonderfully inspiring. Our mission at Phoenix Business RadioX is to amplify the voice of your business and accelerate introductions that matter to you. As you know, our media platform is a great place to foster positive conversations and share stories, knowledge and opportunities …both in and outside of our studio.
We welcome your feedback, comments, questions, and collaboration. Thank you for being part of this vibrant community. We couldn’t do what we do without YOU!
It’s Just Good Business with Conscious Capitalism Arizona
Phoenix Business RadioX proudly broadcasts from its studio inside the MAC6 Conscious Workspace in Tempe, Arizona. We share similar values and work ethics, along with a deep appreciation for the work done by Conscious Capitalism and, in particular, the Arizona Chapter.
Phoenix Business RadioX, MAC6, and Conscious Capitalism Arizona joined forces last June giving us a new studio home and the opportunity to share more of our community’s fascinating and powerful stories.
We are grateful for our partnerships with MAC6 and CCAZ and feel a great synergy as, together, we continue to promote and inspire good business.
Immerse yourself in an experiential event designed to maximize creative collisions, meaningful connections, and practical pathways toward conscious self-discovery.
Join us April 23-25, 2019 at the Sheraton Grand at Wildhorse Pass Resort & Spa. Be inspired. Set your sights on impact. Grow in Community. Discover your story. Join the Conscious Capitalism global network of individuals committed to driving business as the greatest force for good to elevate humanity for generations to come.
“The Best of Business RadioX” was a one-hour program that aired on North Georgia’s News-Talk WDUN Radio (550 AM and 102.9 FM). The show replayed some of the top interviews each week from the Business RadioX studio in Gwinnett County.
August 24, 2019
Highlights: Two local college football and NFL stars scoring big in the business world (from Marketing Matters with Ryan Sauers); How Georgia’s Lt. Governor uses his days on the baseball diamond to help guide his political career (from Leader Dialogue); Inside the trucking industry and how technology is transforming today’s truckers (from TravelSafely with Bryan Mullifgan); News about a 25-year reunion and celebration for the championship Atlanta Knights hockey team (from Gwinnett Business Radio).
August 3, 2019
Highlights: An interior design superstore in Gwinnett County like no other (from Gwinnett Business Radio); Explaining population health and how it affects the healthcare industry (from Leader Dialogue); An inside look at the success and culture of Chick-fil-A (from Marketing Matters with Ryan Sauers); The “do’s and don’ts” of estate planning for those with disabilities (from Senior Salute Radio).
July 6, 2019
Highlights: Hear how to effectively sell the right way (from Marketing Matters with Ryan Sauers); Meet an Atlanta company developing an aircraft that will travel 5 times the speed of light (from TravelSafely with Bryan Mulligan); Experts weigh in on mental illness and why many won’t talk about it (from Gwinnett Business Radio); A tax expert shares common tax problems and how to avoid a visit from the IRS. (from The Bottom Line with Jacqueline Sheldon).
June 8, 2019
Highlights: Meet one of Atlanta’s most high-profile divorce lawyers and his new idea that allows you to get personalized videos from your favorite celebrities (from Gwinnett Business Radio); Someone suffers a stroke every 40 seconds in the United States. Doctors share insight on how the 2nd most common cause of death worldwide is preventable, treatable and beatable (from Gwinnett Business Radio).
May 18, 2019
Highlights: Get ready to experience Revel, the $900 million, 118-acre mixed-use and entertainment destination coming to Gwinnett (from Member Spotlight); The Gwinnett business leader who’s distributed over 10,000 back packs filled with school supplies to homeless children (from a live remote); Properly training security personal and improving the image of private security (from Case in Point); The growing trend of using movie theatres for private events (from Gwinnett Business Radio).
March 30, 2019
Highlights: Former UGA and NFL football star Matt Stinchcomb discusses the Gwinnett County Sports Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony and keynote speaker Nick Saban (from Gwinnett Business Radio); Scooters, bikes and the growing trend towards micromobility (from TravelSafely with Bryan Mulligan); A look inside the Atlanta Small Business Network (from Gwinnett Business Radio).
March 9, 2019
Highlights: A new Home Improvement SuperMall is coming to Atlanta (from Power Play); Who gets your stuff when you die? (from Senior Salute Radio); Life as a professional bull rider (from Gwinnett Business Radio); Tax mistakes that cost small business owners money (from The Bottom Line with Jacqueline Sheldon).
February 9, 2019
Highlights: Do videos on your business website really work? (from How’s Your ePresence?); How healthcare costs can lower your taxes (from The Bottom Line with Jacqueline Sheldon); A business owner explains how a local pro hockey team is promoting his business (from Power Play); Expert sales & marketing secrets to double your sales (from Gwinnett Business Radio).
December 15, 2018
Highlights: The annual tradition of The Nutcracker and the Gwinnett Ballet (from Case in Point); A restaurant that’s the “toast” of the town (from Shut Up and Eat!); How technology is helping private security firms keep you safe (from TravelSafely with Bryan Mulligan); A corporate attorney takes the fear out of starting your business (from Gwinnett Business Radio).
December 8, 2018
Highlights: The future of driverless cars and autonomous vehicles (from TravelSafely with Bryan Mulligan); Cybersecurity and the health industry – are your online medical records safe? (from Leader Dialogue); Tips and secrets from a top sales trainer on closing the big deal (from Case in Point); Here we grow again! Exciting news about Business RadioX (from Gwinnett Business Radio).
December 1, 2018
Highlights: The dangers of distracted driving (from Case in Point); A millionaire businessman who started with nothing (from Gwinnett Business Radio); An inspirational music school owner who’s teaching her students about more than music (from Gwinnett Business Radio); The only place in town to find chicken lips on the menu (from Shut Up and Eat!).
November 17, 2018
Highlights: The remarkable story of a young woman saving a non-profit organization after the founder passed away (from Beyond the Cupola); Throw away those cardboard boxes! A business that has you packing differently (from Gwinnett Business Radio); Expert tips to grow your business through digital media (from How’s Your ePresence?); A successful business owner shares his insight about social media (from Gwinnett Business Radio).
November 3, 2018
Highlights: A doctor discusses his medical practice and the business challenges he faces (from Gwinnett Business Radio); A restaurant that is well known for its food and live music (from Shut Up and Eat!); How to get free help to launch and manage your business (from Simon Says, Let’s Talk Business); A notable leadership company introduces its new leader (from Gwinnett Business Radio).
October 20, 2018
Highlights: How a staffing service uses video to place top candidates (from How’s Your ePresence?); Ground-breaking technology and “intelligent buildings” to deter school shootings, fires and other life-threatening situations (from Case in Point); A television reporter offers tips on how business leaders should speak to media (from Strategic Insights Radio); The newest workout rage that’s sweeping the nation (from Gwinnett Business Radio).
October 13, 2018
Highlights: You wanna rock? A musician-turned-business-owner who opened the area’s first School of Rock (from Gwinnett Business Radio); How technology is shaping the face of healthcare, allowing doctors to treat patients over the phone and through the computer (from Leader Dialogue); Tips and secrets criminals don’t want you to know (from Case in Point); Things you never knew about LinkedIn (from How’s Your ePresence?).
ABOUT WDUN: Popular news/talk station WDUN Radio is an award-winning broadcast media outlet which serves the North Atlanta and Northeast Georgia region. For nearly 70 years, WDUN News/Talk 550 AM and North Georgia’s 102.9 FM have offered radio listeners a diverse mix of local and syndicated talk programming, backed up by the AccessWDUN 24-hour Newsroom, which provides up-to-the-minute news, traffic and weather.