5 Signs Your Enterprise Needs a Robust PIM Platform

Today, accurate and consistent product data drives sales and generates revenue. It also adds value to customer experience and plays an essential role in the final purchase decision of the customer.
Product Information Management (PIM) System - Pimcore

Organizations still dependent on traditional means of handling product information must transform their systems across the value chain – from supply chain to commerce to customers. They must do it not only to break into new markets and offer superior product experiences, but to increase overall conversion, enable omnichannel marketing, and decrease time-to-market.

Here are certain telltale signs which indicate that an organization is in dire need of a product information management (PIM) solution:

1. Whose Data Is the ‘Right Data’?

A major shortcoming of working with legacy product data management systems (typically spreadsheets) is the lack of synchronized consolidation. In an extended value chain encompassing suppliers, partners, employees, and other external entities, product information is bound to be altered by various individuals at various points of time. With no centralized platform in place, often a miscommunication between disparate touchpoints is likely to happen. For instance, when one employee emails a spreadsheet containing product-specific data to another employee and they simultaneously make changes to it, the latest updated file with both inputs is often lost in the transaction.

This is what leads to inconsistent, obsolete, and inaccurate product information.

2. Employees Are Always Busy Monitoring Product Data  

The long-term impact of failing to manage product information directly hits the workforce efficiency. Since data is used by multiple systems in multiple locations and amongst siloed departments, even the loss of one ‘unit’ of information can cause huge chaos. And what could be worse than using unclean data? Any company that has dealt with tight product launches knows the impact of having a product in the market with discrepancies in information about it. Your entire rapport with the customers is on the line if inaccurate information reaches them. As a responsible organization, you must avoid such a situation at any cost. For this, your employees must monitor, track, and record all data transactions and filter out dirty data painstakingly.

This tedious job can be enough to overload your employees and hinder their productivity. Additionally, with more products and even more product-related data, setbacks like these can exhaust your workforce’s time and energy, leading to loss of revenue. Continuous data monitoring might result in employees deviating from their core jobs, and the impact will be visible in your profit charts.

3. Customer Support Ceaselessly Brims with Complaints

The manual process of updating spreadsheets at multiple touchpoints is prone to human errors and other unavoidable inaccuracies. The outcome is incorrect product information being disseminated to the customers. The impact, however, is the same in both cases – unhappy customers, poor customer experience (CX), bad feedback, and stacks of complaints.

The error can originate from anywhere in the value chain and in any form – it can occur due to old, not updated, expired, or outright wrong data. Inconsistencies in stock-keeping units (SKUs) can be the root cause for minor discrepancies to major blunders in ordering. From inventory management, to order placement, to order processing and ultimately delivery, if you are unable to govern and check data quality at every step, you will not be able to convert potential customers smoothly – or worse, lose the existing ones.

4. Analytics Never Gets It Right

Information and data are the strategic assets of a firm. As a result, unorganized, dirty, and inaccurate data is never healthy for the workflows of any organization. If not identified and rectified at an early stage, data that is erroneous, misleading, and without general formatting can cause serious issues. Unfortunately, no industry, organization, or department is immune to the chances of dealing with bad data.

The relationship between data quality and decision accuracy is tightly knit and quite intricate. It especially affects the departments that are instrumental in strategizing moves and deriving insights from the collated data. Management heavily relies on analytics and data usage to draw business acumen and decide on the required course of action. That’s because, wrong data will never point you in the right direction; in-fact it renders the entire analytics futile, contributing directly to failing profits. Be it prescriptive analysis of historical customer data, buying patterns, cost breakdown, and product catalogs or predictive analysis–correct data is the lifeblood of accurate analysis.

5. It is Chaotic to Manage Data Across Multiple Geographies

Data management might not seem too big of an issue when managing a small business with limited data resources spread across reachable locations. However, with warehouse expansions, as your enterprise products grow, more information starts getting processed throughout the systems. And when you are functioning across multiple regions, geographies, marketplaces, and storefronts, it can be a tedious task to manage a large number of products, with different SKUs.

It can be especially challenging for marketing and sales teams who deal directly with third-party clients and direct customers. Product data inputs come from multiple suppliers. Any updates in the attributes, quality, or orientation need to be consistent throughout the commerce channels. Organizations that can efficiently and dynamically manage all data, helps you secure a clear competitive advantage over others in the fray.

The volume and speed of data generation and consumption has increased many folds in a relatively small period. In the age of digital transformation where high-quality, accurate, standardized, and properly formatted data is a necessity for competitive retailers and manufacturers – user-friendly and scalable Product Information Management Solutions have become an essential tool for most businesses. PIM is a centralized software platform used to store and manage data related to descriptions, SKU numbers, pricing, images, and much more from a variety of channels.

If you feel that your business is at a stage where product content marketing, data handling, or catalog representation needs the professional help of a dedicated tool, it is time to try your hands at PIM.

Also Read: Replacing Legacy Product Information Management (PIM) System

 

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Author:Dietmar Rietsch
Dietmar Rietsch
  • CEO
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