Shopify Inc. and Google Cloud today announced a new integration that enables retailers using Commerce Components—enterprise Shopify’s retail solution—to take advantage of Google-quality search capabilities and AI innovations. Shoptalk 2023 is one of the most noteworthy events for the retail industry.
Today, Shopify enterprise brands can directly utilize Google Cloud’s Discovery Al products through Commerce Components, the platform’s forefront, composable enterprise retail stack. This integration expands access to Google’s cutting-edge search and browsing capabilities so that businesses can provide their customers more seamless and fruitful purchasing experiences. It is now available to Shopify merchants worldwide and is available in the majority of languages.
The latest partnership between Shopify and Google Cloud gives enterprise companies access to product discovery tools powered by artificial intelligence (AI) that solve a variety of practical business problems, including:
By effectively matching product attributes with website content, Google Cloud Retail Search, which offers advanced query understanding, can deliver better results from even broad queries, including non-product and semantic searches, allowing for quick, relevant product discovery.
An AI-powered explore feature that, when customers select a category, such as “women’s jackets” or “kitchenware.” utilizes machine learning to choose the best ordering of products on a retailer’s e-commerce site. Using past data, the AI gradually learns the ideal product ordering for each page on an e-commerce site, optimizing how and what products are displayed for accuracy, relevancy, and the possibility of closing a deal.
a form of artificial intelligence-driven personalization that alters the outcomes users see when they search and explore retail websites. The AI that powers the personalization feature analyses a customer’s activity on an e-commerce site, including their clicks, cart contents, purchases, and other data, to establish their likes and tastes.
Retailers can give tailored recommendations at scale with the use of a Google Cloud Recommendations AI service. The ecommerce properties of a shop can become even more tailored, dynamic, and beneficial for certain customers as a result of recent improvements to recommendation AI.
A retailer’s data is segregated with strict access controls and only utilized to generate appropriate search results on their own properties thanks to advanced security and privacy policies.
The president of Shopify, Harley Finkelstein, expressed his excitement about continuing their long-standing cooperation with Google Cloud. World-class search and discovery for the online store is a complex and expensive problem for corporate retailers, therefore we are combining the best in commerce with the best in search to solve it.
According to Thomas Kurian, CEO of Google Cloud, “Shopify integrating Google Cloud’s Discovery AI technology into its enterprise retail solution puts the power of AI directly into the hands of merchants and brands to solve everyday problems,” With better product discovery experiences, businesses can now improve their digital assets and give their customers more satisfying purchasing experiences.
With Google Cloud search technology, Rainbow Stores creates a better consumer experience.
With more than 1,000 locations, Rainbow Stores is a well-known retail apparel chain that uses Shopify. It has integrated Google Cloud’s Discovery AI for Retail technology straight into its own online spaces. Rainbow Shops approached Shopify about leveraging Google Cloud’s search and browse features after running into issues with alternative search and product discovery solutions.
When compared to other specialized search engines, internal testing conducted by Rainbow Stores revealed that Google Cloud’s solution consistently provided useful answers to a range of test questions. Together with increased accuracy, Rainbow Stores also noticed a decrease in the time and effort that its teams had previously spent manually modifying search results, setting up redirects, and utilizing up to 50 additional levers to obtain helpful results.
In addition, Google Cloud’s AI capabilities were successfully integrated into Rainbow Shops’ online store and mobile app in less than a week, just in time for the retailer’s busiest shopping period of the year, Cyber Week. Rainbow Shops is now leveraging Google Cloud’s Retail Search engine.
“Our search engine can now handle practically any request made by our users, returning useful product results for both specific queries like “lbd” (little black dress) and highly broad ones like “Mardi Gras.” We have also made significant progress in our capacity to deliver pertinent results when a customer makes a mistake in their search, which is a common occurrence among the numerous customers who are now shopping on mobile devices, “David Cost, vice president of marketing and e-commerce at Rainbow Shops, said. “Google Cloud’s AI tools are being used by Rainbow Stores to give our consumers an unquestionably superior purchasing experience. We have already witnessed a 48% increase in search volume in just three months, and our bounce rate has dropped by three times.”
Retailer search experiences are inconsistent, which causes search abandonment.
Despite the ongoing growth of online shopping, many customers complain about difficulties while trying to find products on businesses’ ecommerce sites. According to new research from a Harris Poll survey commissioned by Google Cloud, search abandonment costs retailers more than $2 trillion annually worldwide1 and more than $234 billion in the United States alone. Search abandonment occurs when a customer searches for a product on a retailer’s website or mobile app but does not find what they are looking for.
Consumers in the United States most frequently use the search feature or search box to look up products on retail websites (69%), closely followed by general internet surfing (63%). Just 1 in 10 American customers think they consistently receive exact results for their inquiries (12%) or good alternatives (11%), which highlights the inconsistent nature of retailers’ search experiences. In reality, 76% of American shoppers claim to have used a search engine or box on a retail website in the previous month but were unsuccessful in finding what they were looking for.