Thursday, February 11, 2021

Latest Tech News

If you’ve grown up around the retail industry, you know that success in this space is almost entirely incumbent upon your ability as a retailer to develop strong relationships. At its core, the act of a retail transaction is built around the relationship between the customer and the retailer. But that’s just the tip of the iceberg.

Nationwide Marketing Group PrimeTime

(Image credit: Nationwide Marketing Group)

Retail relationships extend to the brands that line the store’s shelves, to the distributors they receive product from, to the services vendors that they call upon to help their store operate efficiently and even to the other businesses in their community. Of course, there’s also the relationship between the retailer and their buying group — which our team here at Nationwide Marketing Group knows a thing or two about.

See also: What is a Smart Home?

It’s those same relationships — and how you as a retailer can leverage them in your day-to-day operations — that are going to help you to stand out above their competition and excel in this new era of selling a connected in-home experience.

The Smart Home Opportunity

Whether we want to admit it or not, technology is quickly creeping its way into every corner of the home. At CES 2020, we saw sensors and smart technology in everything from major home appliances and toilets to mattresses, furniture and more. This technological transformation shouldn’t be cause for concern for the independent retail channel. Rather, smart home technology presents a massive opportunity for local businesses to get out in front of this market, educate their shoppers, and develop those relationships that help them create customers for life.

Oh, and there’s a buck or two that you stand to make as well.

Nationwide Marketing Group PrimeTime

(Image credit: Nationwide Marketing Group)

According to data from Google, the connected home industry represents a $490 billion annual market. But there’s tons of room for that number to grow exponentially. Analysis from Statista shows that just 32.4 percent of homes in the United States have at least one installed smart home device, and that number is expected to exceed 52 percent by 2024. What’s more exciting is the fact that more than 42 percent of first-time Google Nest buyers buy another connected home product within the first month of their initial purchase.

That’s a ton of potential revenue just sitting out there, waiting to be swallowed up by the independent retail channel.

To get there, retailers have two major hurdles they need to overcome: awareness around smart home technology and educating consumers on how all of this stuff works. Part of the challenge has been a lack of available tools and resources to help them close the gap with their customers. The first step there should be turning to your buying group to see what opportunities exist in the connected home space. What products — or groups of products — are available to you. Evaluate what’s available to you from a merchandising perspective, and don’t be afraid to dive into this new and quickly expanding category.

For Nationwide members, the Google Nest Prime Retail Program is an example of that level of access to products consumers actively seek. That includes things like security cameras, smart speakers, smart doorbell cameras, Wi-Fi routers, hubs, thermostats, smart plugs and more.

Nationwide Marketing Group PrimeTime

(Image credit: Nationwide Marketing Group)

The connected home is a talking point with the customer, and it can turn your store into a smart home destination in your market.

Smart gadgets only tell a portion of the story when it comes to the connected home, however. In order to actually connect all of those products within the home and then control them, you need an Internet connection and wireless service. Consider stepping slightly outside of your comfort zone and explore opportunities in the wireless service and in-home internet categories.

Without that connectivity, the smart home cannot exist. Nationwide Marketing Group’s solution, in that regard, was to partner with AT&T to bring members a program that allows them to sell smartphones, wireless service, broadband internet, entertainment services and more. Being able to paint that full picture of what the smart home looks like, how it comes together, and how it actually functions is imperative for the retailer.

An Evolving Retail Experience

Smart home technology has had a tremendous impact on the in-home experience. But it’s also had a tremendous impact on the retail experience, from the way consumers research these products, to the physical purchase process, to how products are serviced.

Nationwide Marketing Group PrimeTime

(Image credit: Nationwide Marketing Group)

Technology will continue to change at breakneck speeds, and retailers that are going to succeed in this day and age need to evolve right alongside it. Special consideration needs to be given to everything from how these products and services are displayed in your store, to how you help deliver and install them in the customer’s home, to the type of response you can give when that customer experiences technical difficulties with their system.

Whether it’s through vendor partners that you’ve teamed up with or programs available through your buying group, it’s crucial to have the entire customer journey mapped out. Serve as the bridge between your customer and the promise of a truly connected lifestyle. To the unaware and unassuming shopper, this technology can be truly daunting and perhaps even a little off-putting. Change that narrative for them. Show them why the connected home matters. And don’t be afraid to call on your partners, perhaps even Nationwide Marketing Group, to help you capture a slice of this enormous business opportunity.



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Latest Tech News

With more employees working from home than ever before, cloud storage services such as Microsoft OneDrive have become an essential tool for staying productive.

By using OneDrive instead of local storage, an entire team can have access to all of the files and documents they need in one place. However, what happens when you accidentally delete a file?

In an update to its Microsoft 365 roadmap, Microsoft has revealed that it is currently working on a new feature which will display a dialog when files are deleted from OneDrive. This feature will hopefully prevent users from losing track of their important files when it launches later this month.

Restoring OneDrive files

Once the feature rolls out, a user will be shown a dialog when they delete a file or even multiple files for the first time. The reason for this is due to the fact that like in Windows 10, OneDrive files aren't actually deleted but are instead moved to a recycling bin.

In the same way that you can take deleted files out of your recycling bin in Windows to restore them, you can also do so OneDrive which can be quite helpful for those collaborating with others online using Microsoft's cloud storage service.

The dialog will continue to show up each time a user deletes a file in OneDrive to ensure that everyone is aware of the fact that OneDrive has a recycling bin. However, you can check a box if you don't want to see these messages and admins can turn off this notification entirely with a group policy setting.

The move to cloud computing has changed the way in which we work with files but thankfully OneDrive uses the same logic as Windows so that users can move their workloads to the cloud without having to change their workflows.



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Latest Tech News

By Filipe Oliveira, senior market analyst, Futuresource Consulting

Smart home had another year of fabulous growth in 2018, with Futuresource estimating that shipments grew by 39 percent last year.

This consumer electronics category is now worth more than $12 billion globally and shipped over 100 million devices in 2018. The industry is tackling some important challenges like interoperability, but still lags in addressing issues that concern consumers and deter mass adoption, such as data safety.

Improved interoperability and ease of use can be counted among the industry’s more important successes, and voice assistants have been key to progress in this area. Smart speakers have become the seamless hub that directly controls a myriad of devices and appliances around the home. The quick adoption of smart speakers also matters for the wider industry because they are a common first step for consumers into the smart-home ecosystem.

See also: What Is A Smart Home?

This year, it is difficult to find a smart-home device that does not work with Amazon Alexa or Google Assistant. The widespread use of voice assistants in the home has occurred while the main smart-home use cases remain broadly unchanged: monitoring, diagnostics, remote control and automation, which have promised (and mostly delivered) convenience and security to consumers who have installed Cloud-connected security, climate control, lighting and power in their homes.

Where to next? The industry sees AI as the next big development. More than controlling the devices in their homes, consumers will be surrounded by technology that learns their routines and moods, and adapts accordingly. Another route for development is to continue to integrate connectivity to more areas of the home from living room and bedroom furniture to the kitchen and bathroom.

Futuresource believes there will be plenty of room for growth within the key established categories of security, climate control, lighting and power categories. We estimate that only 4 percent of global households own smart-home devices (excluding smart entertainment and smart speakers). The saturation rate is higher for the U.S. (19 percent) and Western Europe (6 percent), but even in those markets the runway is long.

Security and monitoring is the most established area of the smart home, and in the U.S. saturation is expected to pass the 50-percent mark this year. This is due to two key sub-categories: smart security cameras and video doorbells, the success of which is now spreading to other parts of the world, with video doorbell shipments more than doubling in Europe in 2018.

Climate control is the second most successful area of the smart home. Fourteen million smart thermostats shipped in 2018, with more than two-thirds in the U.S. and Europe. China, the leading market for smart appliances, including smart air conditioners, offers potential in smart thermostats, not least because unit prices are about half of those in the U.S. and Europe.

Lighting is less established than security and climate control but growing faster than either category. It also sells for lower unit prices and bundles well in retail with smart speakers, which have led to a new wave of smart lighting that does not require hubs or bridges.

Despite fast growth and a strong forecast (a 38 percent compound annual growth rate, or CAGR, through 2022), smart lighting has lost its fastest-growing smart-home category status, which it held in 2017, to power, which includes smart sockets and switches. Smart sockets are an easy and relatively cheap way of making any home a smart home and to control any electrical device remotely via a smartphone or a voice assistant.

The success of smart power is a symptom of one of the development branches in the smart home: settled use cases permeating new areas of the home helped by a decline in unit prices. CES is the right venue for big players to showcase their new connected devices. It is also the right place to see what possibilities AI can open for the industry in 2019.

Filipe Oliveira is a senior market analyst at Futuresource Consulting.



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Latest Tech News

In just a year and a half since it launched, Disney Plus is already on the verge of reaching 100 million subscribers – half of what Netflix gained in over a decade – in a tenth of the time.

According to Disney, its streaming service now has 94.9 million subscribers around the world, a number the company predicted it would hit sometime in 2024. 

That figure was announced today as part of Disney’s 2021 Q1 earnings report where the company said Disney Plus had gained around 8 million new subscribers in just the last two months, since its investor day event held in December.

Part of that, most likely, came from the season finale of The Mandalorian and release of WandaVision, as well as the Disney/Pixar hit, Soul. With more big-budget shows and films just on the horizon, Disney has some strong momentum and is closing the gap to Netflix quickly. 

Are more subscribers a good thing or a bad thing?  

This is a tricky one to answer, but basing it off of popular streaming services the answer is, well, both. More subscribers puts more money into the pockets of the streaming service company, who – more than likely – invests a good portion of that back into content. 

More content is, without a doubt, a good thing. 

The downside to all this is that, as streaming services get more subscribers, they tend to raise the cost of the service. That’s happened with Netflix repeatedly over the years, and is now happening to Disney Plus – which will soon cost $7.99 per month (£7.99 / AU$11.99) or $79.99 / £79.90 / AU$119.99 per year starting on February 23 in the UK and Australia, and March 26 in the US. 

Gaining even more subscribers could tempt Disney into raising the prices again sooner rather than later, especially now that the company has a half-dozen new Star Wars and Disney series in production.



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