Digital Transformation in Retail: Building Better Outcomes for Merchants and Consumers

Digital Transformation in Retail: Building Better Outcomes for Merchants and Consumers

From hyper-personalization to compliance automation to product management, the digital transformation in retail bears many similarities to the digital transformation taking place in financial services.

In both instances, greater digitization and enabling technologies like AI and machine learning, are empowering businesses to better know and serve their customers, build innovative solutions and services, and secure their operations and their customers’ data against cybercrime.

We caught up with Lohith Kumar Paripati (LinkedIn), Product Lead at Walmart, to talk about the digital transformation in retail. In our extended conversation, we discuss Walmart’s efforts to make ecommerce more effective for merchants, the pain points retail customers are currently facing, and how innovations in AI and an emphasis on personalization are helping enhance the customer experience.


At FinovateSpring earlier this year, you were involved in a discussion on digital transformation in retail. What were some of your key takeaways?

Lohith Kumar Paripati: I was privileged to be part of this event as a panelist and speaker at FinovateSpring, where I discussed how AI and LLMs are revolutionizing retail through improved operational efficiency and personalized customer experiences. My reflections touched on the impact GenAI is having on the industry with its hyper-personalized recommendations as well as robust payment offerings, thus changing the purchasing experience.

What caught my attention was the buzz throughout. FinovateSpring has always been known for its exciting ambiance, and this year’s event was no different. There were live demos from various innovative companies that kept me tuned in while networking opportunities were unrivaled. From my fellow panelists, I heard insights about bridging ecommerce and in-store experiences for Gen Z consumers who want seamless technology-driven relationships.

The event reiterated that Finovate isn’t just about presentations but is also a forum where leaders in the industry converge towards innovation, networking, and learning.

You spearheaded the Walmart Seller Savings Platform. What are its goals? How do you measure success?

Paripati: The Seller Savings Platform has been built around the idea of seller success and offers financial incentives that promote best practices on the marketplace. The platform encourages sellers to offer affordable pricing and delivery speed, as well as maintain product listing quality, which are important drivers of sales growth for them.

Through the platform, we introduced a various programs such as Pro Seller, which gives visible importance and credibility through a badge and also reduces referral fees by 5%. Furthermore, with the Pro Listing program, sellers who have the ability to deliver their items fast and on time, or at low prices, can get an extra 10% discount. For new sellers, the New Seller Savings Program offers up to 25% fee reduction for the first 90 days while providing them with tools like Walmart Fulfillment Services and Sponsored Search ads that help them grow more quickly.

The key aim of this platform is to encourage sellers by offering resources and incentives that contribute towards better business outcomes. Success is measured by seller performance metrics: delivery rates, customer satisfaction levels, and program participation. At its core, however, it is all about helping sellers reach their goals, boost GMV figures, and improve overall marketplace experience for all.

How did your experience at technology companies like Microsoft, Intuit, and Samsung inform the work you did for Walmart?

Paripati: Microsoft, Intuit, and Samsung gave me a strong foundation in product management, strategic thinking, and customer-centric innovation skills that I’ve applied to multiple projects for Walmart. At Intuit, I developed deep expertise in fintech and commerce which has been invaluable in shaping initiatives like the Walmart Seller Savings Platform.

In my tenure with Microsoft, I was able to lead and drive solutions within large organizations structures. That experience empowered me to build comprehensive payments data infrastructure of Walmart sellers. From Samsung, I learned how to drive innovation in big firms so that every fresh thought is effectively integrated into previous systems. This enabled me to introduce more payment/billing options available to Walmart sellers in multiple geographies.

A combination of creativity, tactical planning, and working together are what have shaped my ambition for creating a suite of products and tools for merchants within the walls of Walmart Marketplace.

Were there any interesting challenges on the road to launching the platform?

Paripati: Managing the scale and complexity of Walmart’s vast marketplace was one of the greatest obstacles I faced when building the platform. We had to have a system that can manage personalized saving programs for thousands of sellers and millions of items while at the same time be accurate, transparent, and responsive in real-time, especially during peak times like holidays.

Also important was balancing technical requirements with wider business goals. We had to make sure that platforms like this supported objectives such as increased seller engagement or customer satisfaction without being too expensive. This meant working continuously with other people within finance, operations, and marketing–among others–ensuring that value is delivered at each level.

Another crucial aspect was building adaptability into our architecture. We needed an infrastructure that would not only satisfy today’s needs but also support future initiatives. The key takeaway points were learning about how scalability is important and how cross-functional collaboration can be powerful. Successful launch required seamless coordination between product, engineering, and business teams, resulting in both technological excellence and strategic impact.

You’ve been a Product Manager for technology companies for more than a decade now. How has that job changed over the years?

Paripati: Over the years, my role as a product manager has evolved from being feature-focused to becoming a central driver of business strategy. Early on, my work involved managing specific product features and ensuring their successful execution. As I progressed into leadership, my responsibilities expanded to include not just product development but also aligning those products with overall business objectives, balancing customer needs with strategic goals, and pivoting quickly when necessary to stay ahead in the market.

In the broader industry, product management has shifted from being a function focused on execution to becoming the core of business success. While stakeholder management and collaboration have always been key aspects, today’s emphasis is on creating a product-first culture. Product managers are now at the forefront of driving revenue, building scalable products, and contributing directly to the company’s financial success.

Today’s product managers must be agile, ready to pivot as market demands shift, and play a crucial role in shaping the company’s direction through data-driven insights and a deep understanding of customer needs. This evolution has made the role more dynamic, impactful, and integral to a company’s growth.

What role will enabling technologies – AI, machine learning, automation – play in the digital transformation of retail?

Paripati: AI, machine learning, and automation have altered retail by offering practical use cases that improve operations as well as customer interactions.

For example, AI-powered demand forecasting predicts product trends, thereby optimizing inventory levels and reducing costs. Inside stores, real-time shelf stock monitoring using computer vision driven by AI detects when items are running out, thus alerting attendants to restock before shelves go empty. Automated checkout systems make shopping faster by eliminating traditional checkout lines for frictionless shopping experiences.

Customer experiences are made more personalized by machine learning that result in product recommendations that continuously adjust prices. From the comforts of their homes, customers can virtually have a look at themselves with the help of AI-driven virtual try-ons.

In logistics, robotic automation accelerates order fulfillment, but delivery times are being reduced through automated delivery systems such as drones and autonomous vehicles. These technologies are revolutionizing retail, making it more efficient, agile and consumer-driven.

Where are the biggest pain points for retail consumers and how will this transformation in retail help resolve them?

Paripati: A major concern among retail customers is the disconnection between online and offline experiences. Several retailers find it difficult to provide customers with a seamless experience across all channels, even though that is what they expect today. Moreover, digital transaction fraud rates are very high, and payment security issues loom large as consumers become more concerned about security. Additionally, consumer retention becomes difficult when there are an overwhelming number of product choices due to a highly competitive landscape where retailers vie for customer loyalty.

The digital transformation of the retail industry addresses the problem by merging physical with digital channels to create an omni-channel experience. To achieve greater confidence from buyers, Artificial Intelligence (AI) and automation are used to secure payments while reducing fraud. In order to maintain customer loyalty in an extremely competitive market, retailers use their personalized offers alongside loyalty programs which improve shopping experience.

However, there are many countries where access to even basic goods remains an issue. It is an opportunity and a responsibility that retailers have to enlarge their reach and ensure that underserved consumers get hold of essential products. By using innovative distribution networks, technology can be employed by retailers to bridge this gap, provide more equitable access to goods, and ensure everyone benefits from the digital transformation in the retail industry.

What excites you most about what’s happening in the retail space right now that few people are talking about?

Paripati: Embedded finance has already been discovered as one of the greatest things happening in retail, even if it is not widely recognized. The ability to integrate financial services directly into the retail experience changes everything. On-demand lending at checkout, digital wallets, and buy-now-pay-later options are all instances of embedded finance which alters how consumers work with retailers.

The convergence of AI with physical retail is another area that fascinates me. Advancements in AI are enabling us to introduce new approaches to improving the shopping experience, such as using AI-based tools to customize product displays or optimize store layouts according to customer behavior. This blend of digital and physical is establishing a new frontier for retailers – a world that allows them unlimited space for innovation.


Photo by Karolina Kaboompics

The 33 New Faces on the FinovateSpring Demo Stage

The 33 New Faces on the FinovateSpring Demo Stage

Finovate is best known for showcasing seven-minute fintech demos, and for this year’s FinovateSpring event (taking place May 21 through 23 in San Francisco), we have a lineup of fresh faces. Of the 40+ companies that will showcase their new technology during the conference, 33 companies have never set foot on the demo stage before.

That’s 33 companies that are new to us– and may very likely be new to you, too. Here’s an overview of the new-to-Finovate demo companies currently on the roster:

APIMatic
APIMatic helps banks and fintechs generate ROI from their API investments via automation and AI solutions. The company is headquartered in Auckland, New Zealand and was founded in 2014.

Ascent Platform
Ascent streamlines multiple new product experiences with less cost, less disruption, and less risk. The company simplifies and speeds integration of new point-of-sale experiences into a financial institution’s infrastructure, future-proofs the organization to launch new products and adopt the latest and greatest approach, collects and reuses customer data across all product lines in real-time, reduces due diligence and vendor management overhead, and provides greater control and security over point-of-sale data.

BaaSFlow
With BaaSFlow, users can achieve higher growth and better consumer experiences at a fraction of the cost of a legacy core, which is often not performant, flexible, or modern enough to scale in the digital age.

Blee
Blee helps organizations move to market quicker while increasing revenue and minimizing compliance risk. The company is headquartered in New York and was founded in 2022.

Bloom Credit
Bloom Credit helps banks and credit unions offer a deposit retention and credit building tool to their client base. The company is headquartered in New York, NY and was founded in 2016.

Borealis Global Analytics
Borealis Global Analytics’ virtual portfolio manager platform, powered by generative AI, aims to boost global equity portfolio returns by cutting costs associated with global equity data and research and increasing the efficiency of portfolio managers.

Candour Oy
Candour Oy provides secure, quick identity verification that improves reliability and consumer convenience for financial institutions. The company is headquartered in Oulu, Finland and was founded in 2020.

Cardlay Payment Systems
Cardlay Payment Solutions helps organizations with the growth and retention of their existing portfolios. The company is headquartered in Odense, Denmark and was founded in 2020.

Deeployalty
Deeployalty assists banks in creating new value for customers and acquiring new data that will help create offers to increase transaction activity. Merchants gain the ability to stop printing paper receipts and receive a tool to attract new customers through bank partners already connected to Deeployalty.

DYNATREK
DYNATREK looks to improve the timing and pricing of proposals, such as loans for customers, and enhance the administrative workflows centered on spreadsheets. The company is headquartered in Tokyo, Japan and was founded in 1999.

Endaoment
Endaoment enables nonprofit organizations to facilitate crypto and stock donations without having to accept the asset directly. The company’s platform modernizes donation practices, connecting organizations with new funding sources and a new, diverse donor base.

Eqvista
Eqvista’s cap table management tools enable companies, large and small, to optimize equity management and share values.

Foresight
Foresight helps organizations find the right private company to do business with, research everything about them, and learn how they can impact a portfolio once they are involved with it.

Hapax
Hapax uses technology to bridge the information access gaps between big banks and smaller banks. The company offers smaller FIs ubiquitous and immediate access to accurate and validated information to help them mitigate risk and stay compliant.

Instarails
With Instarails, organizations and banks can offer instant, inexpensive, and inclusive payments that will increase revenue, generate growth, and provide entry into new markets.

LiquidTrust
LiquidTrust helps banks and credit unions offer their business customers an improved customer experience (digital, self-serve), and helps them reduce the risk for buyers and sellers, grow their SMB customer-base, grow non-interest bearing deposits, and generate additional revenue (e.g. transaction and lending).

Lloyd Tevis Investments
Lloyd Tevis Investments offers a smarter way to invest and a more intuitive, higher value-add way to engage with clients. The company is headquartered in Lafayette, CA and was founded in 2015.

Method Financial
Method Financial’s platform helps financial institutions, fintechs, and lending institutions access liabilities held at over 15,000 institutions in the U.S., through real-time data and payment access for consumer liabilities by simply using a consumer’s PII, with no authentication required.

Modernbanc
Modernbanc’s reconciliation software allows finance teams to leverage the power of AI and no-code automation to build complex reconciliation without the need for developers. This allows companies to increase leverage per employee, scale their finance and payments function, and increase profitability, without increasing their total headcount.

Nav.it
Nav.it aids organizations in transforming and growing their businesses by enhancing employee financial wellness, leading to increased productivity and engagement. Its data-driven insights inform strategic decision-making, while its focus on financial health contributes to a positive organizational reputation and a culture of financial mindfulness. By integrating seamlessly with existing HR systems, Nav.it offers a scalable solution to improve overall workplace efficiency and employee satisfaction.

Parlay Protocol
Parlay Protocol’s product can increase the chances that a loan applicant will gain access to small business funding while helping banks convert new customers and attract new borrowers.

PayToMe.co
PayToMe.co automates and optimizes financial tasks like invoicing, payments, and compliance, allowing businesses to focus on strategic initiatives and growth. The company’s platform can be tailored to meet the specific needs of businesses at various stages of growth, ensuring they can scale effectively and efficiently. PayToMe.co ensures that businesses can offer seamless financial interactions, increasing customer satisfaction and loyalty.

Remynt
Remynt can help creditors achieve higher recoveries and recapture defaulted consumers as customers when their financial position improves. The company is headquartered in San Francisco, CA and was founded in 2022.

Revelata
Revelata helps analysts at investment banks, asset managers, hedge funds, PE firms and beyond, become bionic at research and analysis by using AI to automate away the grunt work of surfacing structured data from unstructured sources.

Safari SOP
Safari’s built-in risk and compliance tools provide a single, auditable process to monitor served documents throughout their lifecycle. The company is headquartered in Bellevue, WA and was founded in 2019.

ScribeUp
ScribeUp is a subscription management solution directly behind consumer cards and banking products that offers streamlined controls over recurring bills for users and strategic and financial value for financial institutions.

Sherpas
Sherpas brings AI to the core of financial services processes to deliver efficiency and improve the quality of advice that advisors give their clients, which makes it a stickier relationship and allows advisors to charge for expanded scope of advice. Sherpas helps advisors keep clients informed and engaged in a way that still feels like a high-touch relationship, reducing the need for 1-1 meetings.

Stock Unlock
Stock Unlock offers an investment software platform helps retail investors make more informed decisions in the stock market. The company is headquartered in New York, NY and was founded in 2021.

Streetbeat
Streetbeat aims to deliver more information, more clarity, and more confidence to investors by leveraging AI and offering personalized investment strategies designed to align with each investor’s unique goals and risk tolerance.

Tennis Finance
Tennis Finance augments the work of compliance analysts and teams. The company helps banks understand issues in their products to increase customer satisfaction, which leads to higher deposits and new customers.

Tradery Labs
Tradery Labs empowers organizations to transform and grow their businesses by offering a scalable, no-code, AI-driven trading platform that democratizes advanced algorithmic trading tools.

Trice
The Trice platform offers off-core infrastructure and payments orchestration for real-time account to account (A2A) transfers, powered by Real-Time Payments (RTP). The technology enables direct connectivity for banks, fintechs, digital wallets, investing apps, lenders, credit unions, and payment providers to quickly deploy money movement experiences.

Winnow
Winnow is an automated compliance change management platform that empowers organizations to build accurate state and federal law surveys. The company is headquartered in Anaheim, CA and is founded in 2018.

We’re still placing the final touches on the FinovateSpring agenda, but this year’s show is shaping up to be full of the most relevant and impactful conversations you’ll have all year. If you don’t have your ticket yet, there’ still time to register.


Photo by eric anada