How to Make Digital Personal, According to Nordstrom’s COO and Chief Technology Officer

While digital dominates every retailer’s strategy today, Nordstrom launched Nordstrom.com in 1998, a move that turned out to be prescient at a time when less than half of adults were online.

Ken Worzel, Nordstrom’s COO, has been with the company for more than 11 years and sees the through-line from its past to its future, with phases akin to tech-friendly software updates.

“[As] a retailer, we largely sell stuff that people can, if they want to put some effort in, find in other places. So there has to be a reason to have a relationship with us,” he explained. “With JWN 1.0, we delivered that through stores, one customer at a time through a salesperson connecting with the customer in front of them.” (JWN is Nordstrom’s listing on the stock market, after founder John W. Nordstrom.)

Version 2.0 stemmed from the department store’s investments in a “digital set of touch points with customers,” he said. In-store shoppers had human associates to help with product discovery and evaluation, but there were others who wanted discovery and service without stepping foot in a location. Nordstrom’s website, along with Nordstrom Rack’s online launch in 2014, begat mobile apps, and thus the contours of the retailer’s digital business started taking shape. Even in its nascent stages, Worzel said, one of the company’s key principles was that it would not try to dictate where customers shopped. That led to the decision not to break out its merchandising organizations or maintain distinct online product catalogs.

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Keen-eyed observers might detect the beginnings of what would become the “Closer to You” strategy. The campaign simultaneously boasts expansion and operational efficiencies across Nordstrom and Nordstrom Rack, along with a slew of digital initiatives, to bring the business closer to customers.

Therein lies Nordstrom version 3.0.

“The big opportunity we have now, and the big thing we’re really focused on related to 3.0, is to make digital personal,” Worzel said.

Fundamentally, it’s about connection and bringing the essence of the relationship-based business to the online world. Nordstrom “architected” itself to allow for that, said Worzel. In addition to acquiring technology companies like BevyUp, maker of digital sales tools — primarily style boards — and MessageYes, which developed an artificial intelligence-powered personalized product recommendations engine, it built out a responsive analytics platform capable of churning out deeper insights and predictions.

The system can work for different ends of the business, whether personalized experiences for customers or optimized processes in the back end — from inventory control to fulfillment and order routing. By the company’s count, it leverages more than 100 AI models a day.

Developing a system like this is no easy feat. According to chief technology officer Edmond Mesrobian, the process was three years in the making. When he joined the company in 2018, he quickly realized he had a lot of work to do. “When I arrived, I had this perspective of Nordstrom as being digitally advanced. We had our online commerce presence for decades-plus, and it was quite successful,” he recalled. “The words that people were using around the company were ‘data-driven,’ ‘Let’s make a data-driven decision.’

“I was puzzled, because to me, being data-driven is not the same as being a digital enterprise — it’s not connected,” said Mesrobian, a business and tech expert who has held executive roles at Tesco, Expedia and Walt Disney.

Thus began his campaign to break down the department store’s siloed data. Such isolated buckets of information are often a product of corporate thinking that treats online and offline businesses or other departments as separate entities. They’re fine for reporting straight facts, less so for more advanced insights.

The Nordstrom Analytical Platform treats the business as a single entity, not a collection of disjointed channels. With access to a greater amount and variety of data, NAP can paint a fuller picture of customers — a “customer 360 view,” described Mesrobian — and weigh the store’s bevy of product and inventory information across its own brands and those of partners. The end results are more personalized experiences and more predictive discovery, all in real time.

The major benefit looks like the competitive advantage NAP can bring. “The battleground today is not about reporting,” the CTO said. Reporting and KPIs, or key performance indicators, were big 10, 15, even 20 years ago. Not today.

Now it’s about one thing: “Being able to leverage predictions for what to do next,” he said. “Can you actually generate predictions and leverage predictions to drive action? Every digital enterprise has to face that battleground.”

At Nordstrom, that extends to both the main business and Nordstrom Rack, which run off the same tech platform. That seems more efficient, but it also brings challenges — namely feeling out the nuances of two types of shoppers, “the ‘bargainista’ customer versus the luxury shopper,” Mesrobian said. “We realize that one platform does not mean one experience.”

Not that NAP isn’t already proving valuable. For Nordstrom’s latest Anniversary Sale, it created personalized digital catalogs for hundreds of thousands of its best customers. Stories, merchandising and brand teams came together with data and AI to offer a blend of personalized content and product recommendations. The sales event also tapped Nordstrom’s so-called “fashion map,” which uses natural language and deep learning to get to know customers better through conversations.

With all of these initiatives continuing to quickly evolve, Nordstrom reported that more than half of its business came from e-commerce last year. That was a first for the department store, and now “we see a path where more than 50% of our business is digital, in terms of where the transaction happens,” Worzel offered.

That’s not necessarily the objective, he added. “But it’s imaginable now.”

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