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How Can Data Analytics Benefit Customers in Era of e-Commerce 4.0?

ShareHow can data analytics benefit customers in era of e-commerce 4.0?. State-owned airport operator Angkasa Pura II has teamed up with Astra...

Written by Erwin Prasetyo · 4 min read >
e-Commerce 4.0

How can data analytics benefit customers in era of e-commerce 4.0?. State-owned airport operator Angkasa Pura II has teamed up with Astra Digital International, a subsidiary of publicly listed diversified conglomerate Astra International, to provide more digital-based services at its airports after allowing app-based ride-hailing services to fully operate in the airports.

e-Commerce 4.0
Analyzing massive data sets will not only benefit e-commerce companies, but also customers, given that e-commerce companies will use data-driven insights to improve the way they cater to customer needs. How can data analytics benefit customers in era of e-commerce 4.0? (Shutterstock.com/one photo)

Terminal 2 of Soekarno-Hatta International Airport in Tangerang, Banten. (Antara/Rivan Awal Lingga)

The collaboration will provide services that enable people to access rental car services through rental booking app Movic and to search for a parking space and order valet parking service at the airports using parking app CariParkir. The two apps are developed by Astra Digital International. 

“When customers go to the airport, basically they don’t want complicated services. They demand hassle-free, stress-free and confusing-free services that are fast and simple. Digital-based services can provide that,” said Angkasa Pura II president director M. Awaluddin during the signing of the memorandum of understanding (MoU) with Astra Digital International in Cengkareng, Tangerang, Banten, on Wednesday.

“In the past, passengers were clueless about finding a parking space or getting valet parking service at the airport. Today, Astra Digital provides a solution to this problem and in the future, we will develop more digital-based services,” said Awaluddin.  

The recent collaboration with Astra Digital is in line with the firm’s vision to go digital by providing more digitalized services and experiences in its airports, he added. Since 2016, Angkasa Pura II has launched several digital services and features, including a digital lounge, chatbot, Indonesia Airports app, digital kiosk, e-payment, mobile check-in and an airport operation control center.

Soekarno-Hatta International Airport has shown its openness to embracing more ride-hailing services after years of resistance in the form of stringent regulations and restrictions that forced passengers and drivers to play cat-and-mouse with the official taxis operating at the airport.

Homegrown unicorn gojek – in collaboration with state-owned airport operator Angkasa Pura II (AP II) – has officially launched GoCar Instan while Grab Car also has its own designated pickup area in the airport.

Astra Digital president director Djap Tet Fa said Movic and CariParkir services would be available in seven airports operated by Angkasa Pura II, namely Soekarno-Hatta, Halim Perdanakusuma Airport in Jakarta, Adisucipto Airport in Yogyakarta, Ahmad Yang Airport in Semarang, Central Java, Sultan Syarif Kasim II Airport in Pekanbaru, Riau, Husein Sastranegara Airport in Bandung, West Java and Hang Nadim Airport in Batam.

“In the future, we believe these services will be available in more airports operated by Angkasa Pura II,” he said. 

As of today, Angkasa Pura II operates 16 airports, mainly in western Indonesia. Within this month, the firm will manage three new airports, namely Fatmawati Soekarno Airport in Bengkulu, Radin Inten II in Lampung and HAS Hanandjoedin Airport in Belitung. 

Data analytics has played an increasingly crucial role in the e-commerce ecosystem.

Within a short period and by necessity, the use of data analytics has spread across all business departments, from IT and marketing to operations and logistics, to help process valuable customer and market data that will shape the strategies e-commerce companies adopt to provide their services successfully.

Indonesia’s e-commerce industry is currently transitioning into the era of e-commerce 4.0, in which offline merchants will integrate themselves into the online sphere and contribute new data into the existing pool. Additionally, the deployment of the Internet of Things (IoT) in warehouses and logistics fleets will further drive up the volume of data and the need to refine them higher on the analytics chain.

Analyzing these massive data sets will not only benefit e-commerce companies, but also customers, given that e-commerce companies will use these data-driven insights to improve the way they cater to customer needs. And as the technology behind data analytics goes through the course of technological transformation, the advantages that customers receive will surely increase.

From the universe of technology-driven transformations, three will have a significant impact on e-commerce and, therefore, on customers.

The first transformation is the growth of omnichannel technologies as offline merchants start using web/mobile applications, tablet point-of-sales (POS) and QR codes to integrate themselves into e-commerce platforms. Raw data from these new sales points will contribute to the additional surge of individual and aggregate data emanating from mobile devices that customers use to access e-commerce platforms.

This data explosion is as much a game changer for online and offline retailers as it is for customers. With more data, retailers can discover fresh ways to optimize their services to customers. For example, knowing the types of groceries customers like to buy online and the ability to pick them up directly at offline stores will help retailers ensure the stock availability of such items so that customers can always find the products they need.

The second transformation is the use of faster, on-demand processors at scale powered by cloud-based server virtualization. These powerful processors enable the capturing and analyzing of massive data sets generated by smartphones, personal computers and POS and QR codes in real time. Additionally, online retailers can adjust computing power as needed, spending significantly less during the first quarter of the year but rapidly ramping up server processing capacity during key 10.10 and 11.11 dates, also known as National Online Shopping Day (Harbolnas).

For customers, this translates into several benefits, one of them being deeper consumer micro-segmentation. Previously, consumers were lumped into basic categories of age, gender and income. Now, greater processing power means e-commerce companies can then use this data to design and analyze more granular segmentations that could more accurately determine customers’ tastes and moods, which would translate to better product recommendations. A common example of this is face care; two customers from the same demographic can have different preferences, such as with customers who love K-pop–some have a greater tendency to prefer Korean cosmetics. Coincidentally, this creative process in designing, evaluating and testing these segments is evidence that human creativity is still at the forefront of e-commerce 4.0, despite the heavy involvement of technology.

The last area of technological transformation that will enhance e-commerce data analytics is the continual rise of social media. Indonesians are avid social media users. Data from We Are Social shows that 150 million Indonesians are active on social media. E-commerce players have leveraged the popularity of social media by providing customer services over Facebook, Instagram and Twitter. On the marketing and branding sides, e-commerce companies are heavily collaborating with key opinion leaders (KOLs) with a substantial amount of social media fans. These two approaches have boosted customer engagement, with customers interacting with e-commerce companies through comments, likes and shares. E-commerce companies are keen to leverage this new media further for deeper interactions.

All these interactions on social media are essentially data. E-commerce players can intertwine this openly available data with those generated by machines–including web checkout carts and offline POS tablets – to truly understand what makes customers tick. Of course, the processing of data that customers publish on social media should fall within the perimeters of user agreements. It is also important for customers to determine the right level of sharing of their online activities.

What do improvements in data analytics mean to the industry? The answer is steeper growth of a retail and healthy consumer-based economy driven by rising customer satisfaction. A study by Morgan Stanley suggests that online sales would expand to contribute 18 percent to national retail sales by 2023, and as customers become increasingly satisfied with their online retail experience, they will be more inclined to transact online and, therefore, drive the economy. How can data analytics benefit customers in era of e-commerce 4.0? (Johan Sulaiman*, kes, The Jakarta Post)

One Reply to “How Can Data Analytics Benefit Customers in Era of e-Commerce 4.0?”

  1. Today’s technology have been driven the economy to the next level-globaly. Indonesian should be aware and being involve aggresively to compete the following measurements.

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