• A human-first approach to AI in retail

    From TechnologyDaily@1337:1/100 to All on Thu May 28 16:00:28 2026
    A human-first approach to AI in retail

    Date:
    Thu, 28 May 2026 14:55:07 +0000

    Description:
    As AI transforms retail, success depends on empowering people, not replacing them.

    FULL STORY ======================================================================Copy link Facebook X Whatsapp Reddit Pinterest Flipboard Threads Email Share this article 0 Join the conversation Follow us Add us as a preferred source on Google Newsletter Subscribe to our newsletter Artificial Intelligence (AI) is rapidly moving from the back office to the shop floor, reshaping how retail stores operate and support customers.

    But AI is not simply another technological upgrade. It represents a broader societal shift that raises a deeper question: how should technology support human capability rather than replace it? Beth Worrall Social Links Navigation

    CEO of VoCoVo. AI tools can process vast amounts of data, generate insights, and automate routine tasks at remarkable speed. Latest Videos From You may like The agentic future: Why AI's greatest power is amplifying human
    potential Closing retails AI ROI gap with end-to-end process networks AI can transform customer experiences when it lives up to its promise

    Yet meaning, ethics, and purpose remain firmly human domains. Intelligence
    can be automated, but judgment, responsibility, and values cannot.

    The success of AI should therefore be judged not by what it replaces but by what it enables people to become. The example of retail Few industries illustrate this tension more clearly than retail, where technology is increasingly shaping the daily experience of both customers and frontline teams. Stores remain economic engines, community anchors, and training
    grounds for essential human skills. At the same time, the sector is
    navigating intense pressures that increase the need for technologies that
    help teams work more efficiently.

    For example, labor shortages, rising costs, and changing customer
    expectations are forcing retailers to rethink how stores operate and how frontline teams are supported. In fact, recent research shows that 43.6 percent of retailers say operating conditions have worsened because of labor shortages and rising costs. Are you a pro? Subscribe to our newsletter Sign
    up to the TechRadar Pro newsletter to get all the top news, opinion, features and guidance your business needs to succeed! Contact me with news and offers from other Future brands Receive email from us on behalf of our trusted partners or sponsors By submitting your information you agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy and are aged 16 or over.

    On the other hand, despite rapid technological change, the fundamentals of retail remain deeply human. Shoppers still depend heavily on store staff during their shopping journey. More than half (62%) of customers seek help from staff when they cannot find a product, and 53% say poor or unhelpful service is the leading driver of negative in store experiences.

    This combination of operational pressure and rising expectations highlights
    an important reality. The future of retail will not be defined by automation alone. It will be defined by how effectively technology supports the people working inside stores. It must be understood that, while retailers are adopting tools like predictive analytics, incident reporting systems, and AI-driven monitoring, these technologies are also shaping how customers interact with and perceive the shopping experience. Technological shifts in the past History offers a useful lens. Every major technological shift, from agriculture to industry to the digital age, has expanded human capability while reshaping social structures. Tools are never neutral. They can liberate or constrain, empower or erode. The outcome has always depended less on the tool itself and more on the human intent behind how it is designed and governed. People thrive when they have real agency, a sense of capability, meaningful connection, and purpose. AI success must be measured against this standard. What to read next Cutting costs with AI misses the point AI in the warehouse: creating efficiency without leaving people behind AI is redefining product discovery, structured data, and trust critical for visibility

    In retail, a human first approach to AI can unlock three powerful outcomes.

    First, it can elevate human roles rather than replace them. When repetitive
    or transactional tasks are reduced, colleagues can spend more time on
    customer engagement, problem solving, and judgement. These are capabilities that machines cannot replicate.

    Second, it can strengthen talent development. By reducing cognitive load and freeing up time AI creates space for learning, leadership, and progression. Retail can become not simply a place of employment but a sector where people build valuable skills and careers.

    Third, it can reinforce community resilience. Physical stores remain vital social and economic hubs. Technology should enhance their human presence and local relevance rather than diminish it. Achieving outcomes Achieving these outcomes requires a shift in perspective. When AI is designed to augment
    human intelligence rather than override it, people remain firmly at the
    center of decision making. Systems that respect human cognitive limits
    deliver information that is timely, contextual, and actionable rather than overwhelming. In fast-moving store environments, even the best insights lose value if they arrive too late.

    For example, connected communication technologies allow insights from data systems, inventory platforms, and operational tools to reach the right colleague at the right moment. In many retail environments, this means staff can resolve customer questions more quickly, coordinate across the shop
    floor, and respond to operational challenges in real time.

    Yet the success of AI will depend not only on capability but also on trust. Nearly 80 percent of consumers say they are unsure how AI is used in stores, and discomfort rises when technology feels intrusive or overly surveillant. Transparent design and human centered implementation are therefore critical. Moving forward Ultimately, technology should free humans to focus on the capabilities that drive thriving organizations and communities. Judgment, creativity, empathy, and connection.

    Leadership at this moment is not about accelerating AI adoption at any cost. It is about ensuring that as technology grows more capable people do too. Progress that sidelines human skill, dignity, or judgment is not progress at all.

    The standard is simple. Technology must expand human potential, not quietly replace it.

    AI will undoubtedly shape the future of retail. The real question is whether it strengthens human capability or sidelines it. The answer depends on the choices retailers make today. We feature the best customer experience (CX) tools . This article was produced as part of TechRadar Pro Perspectives , our channel to feature the best and brightest minds in the technology industry today.

    The views expressed here are those of the author and are not necessarily those of TechRadarPro or Future plc. If you are interested in contributing find out more here: https://www.techradar.com/pro/perspectives-how-to-submit



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