Retail Times — UK Retail News
NFU Mutual
ADVERTISEMENT
  • HOME
  • ABOUT
    • CONTACT & Press release submit page
    • ADVERTISING
  • PRODUCTS
  • TECH
  • DATA
    • Reports
    • Research
  • RETAILER
    • Manufacturer
    • Wholesaler
  • PEOPLE
  • SUSTAINABILITY
    • Fairtrade
    • Packaging
  • SERVICES
    • Events
    • Awards
    • Logistics
  • COMMENT
    • In My Opinion
    • Featured Article
    • Why It Works
  • RETAIL CATEGORIES
No Result
View All Result
Retail Times — UK Retail News
No Result
View All Result
  • HOME
  • ABOUT
    • CONTACT & Press release submit page
    • ADVERTISING
  • PRODUCTS
  • TECH
  • DATA
    • Reports
    • Research
  • RETAILER
    • Manufacturer
    • Wholesaler
  • PEOPLE
  • SUSTAINABILITY
    • Fairtrade
    • Packaging
  • SERVICES
    • Events
    • Awards
    • Logistics
  • COMMENT
    • In My Opinion
    • Featured Article
    • Why It Works
  • RETAIL CATEGORIES
Retail Times — UK Retail News
No Result
View All Result
Home Retail News Comment

Zebra Technologies’ retail industry director EMEA highlights top take outs from NRF 2026

by Fiona Briggs
January 19, 2026
in Comment
Reading Time: 5 mins read
Zebra Technologies
Thomson: practical ideas for AI were unveiled at NRF

AI, unified commerce, retail media, RFID and computer vision were the leading themes at NRF 2026. That’s according to Mark Thomson, retail industry director EMEA, Zebra Technologies, a leader in mobile computing, barcode scanners, RFID readers, thermal printing and retail task management software.

Exhibiting at this year’s event, Zebra Technologies welcomed delegates from around the globe including Latin America, North America and Europe, hosting retailers at its booth and across 10 meeting areas.

AI: use cases versus possibilities

AI, no surprise, was the buzz word at the event. JD Sports, for instance, picked NRF 2026 to showcase its AI-powered shopping collaboration, which enables shoppers to purchase products directly through AI such as ChatGPT.

The model bypasses traditional search engines. Thomson suggested the move, also seen at Walmart, meant search engines may be dead when it comes to retail. Search from within generative AI engines would be more focused and targeted, driving consumer trust, he said.

“AI was the big takeaway. Last year the theme was that AI might be able to help. This year it moved to ‘here is what we’ve developed for practical AI usage’,” Thomson said.

This ranged from applications for the consumer such as self-service kiosks in-store with improved interactions through to solutions that enhance or augment store staff.

“There was very little little talk around autonomous stores. It does seem to be palpable shift,” Thomson said. “Autonomous has its place but is not front of store retail. Rather, AI is there to augment staff and there will be a clear differentiation between those retailers that allow staff to be augmented with AI and those that don’t.”

Delivery or implementation is key, however.

“You can’t assume because staff access it [AI] at home that it translates to the work environment. It’s a change management process,” Thomson said. He stressed the need for retailers to remove scepticism that AI would steal retail roles with messaging that the tech would make jobs more enjoyable.

Unified commerce trend

Physical retail is also making a come back, especially for Gen Z Thomson reported. While Millennials are still doing more online, Gen Z is heading back to store and craves physical experiences, he said.

Multi-channel and omni-channel don’t really exist anymore and all routes to reaching the customer are symbiotic, Thomson argued. “It’s unified commerce with the ability to to go online and buy something, pick up at a store and possibly return it later to a physical store.”

The key is understanding the data around all of those touch points and the associated product inventory. With orders increasingly picked from store, stock accuracy is vital, Thomson maintained.

From the retailer’s point of view, operators want interoperable solutions that talk to each other, versus solutions that operate in isolation, he added. “They want one dash board where they can see what’s happening in stores.” Thomson likened it to a NASA operations room, where retailers can see everything across the store. The proliferation of devices and AI is starting to deliver the promise of connected stores, he opined.

RFID provides online-equivalent insights

18th Shopper Study Report Hero Photo

RFID is hot, especially in fashion but is moving into DIY and health and beauty channels but also the food space, where chip-based tech carries more detail than a barcode i.e. sell and use by dates.

On the fashion side, meanwhile, RFID creates smart and intelligent stores where all products are tagged and readers in the ceiling can detect if items are picked up, taken into a fitting, tried on, and whether one or more items are bought etc.

Thomson said that generated the same insights that retailers see online.

“We’ve not had that depth of information in a physical store before. The digital information that perpetual RFID gives us provides a layer of information we have not had before,” he said.

In practical terms, this tech gives retailers increased visibility on conversion rates across male and female fitting rooms, for example; as well as time of day and enables stores to plan staffing to cater for peaks etc.

However, the tech must enable better journeys and reduce friction across three key flows, Thomson said. These are:

  1. The shopper journey
  2. The staff journey
  3. The product journey

Nailing those three flows will create success, he said.

Computer vision cuts theft

RFID labels on boxes at pallet level help to avoid supplier errors

While RFID is great at providing visibility of products in fashion, in grocery computer vision is becoming increasingly important, to tackle shop theft but also maintain on shelf availability and accurate merchandising, which is important for the leading FMCG brands.

The trend to quick delivery/commerce, with products picked in-store, is putting further pressure on stores to understand their availability.

However, the trend to q-commerce, where orders are placed via aggregator apps like Uber Eats or Just Eat, risks retailers losing a direct relationship with the shopper, Thomson warned. In the future, white label solutions could take customers to the retailer’s app with the logistics element handled by the aggregator.

Retail theft and shrink was a big topic of conversation at NRF, Thomson said. Conversations were based on solutions that stop people stealing or making errors across the entire shopping journey. These include computer vision and RFID labels on boxes at pallet level to avoid supplier errors.

While computer vision can help to detect theft straight from the shelves, arguably the biggest area of loss in-store, the challenge is how to deal with that insight without putting staff in danger, Thomson said. As a result, the focal point for tech is at the point of sale, where shrink does happen but is more controllable.

Here, computer vision can detect when shoppers are not scanning bar codes, or stacking products to bypass scanning individual items or making product substitutes eg scanning more expensive Pink Lady apples as cheaper Red Delicious varieties; which causes further issues when linked to a replenishment system.

According to Thomson, more companies are now working in the computer vision space, which showed the tech is more mature and that a significant percentage of scanning errors – intentional or unintentional – could be solved with a nudge.

The online channel has an advantage in this respect, Thomson added. Here, operators have control of stock so there’s no customer shrink, although they could be targeted in other ways eg fraudulent cards etc.

Retail media and in-store interactions

Retail media was another hot topic across the booths at NRF including the use of upsell tools i.e. using AI to develop rapid scripts in response to a return, so that retailers don’t completely lose the sale; as well as to sell add-ons.

“Retailers have to find as much revenue as they can from all sales and AI can create that hype, sending messages to customers while they are shopping,” Thomson said.

This ranges from messaging on digital signage to targeting scan-and-go shoppers with special offers while they shop.

In addition, there are certain areas of stores where people need more help, Thomson said. In DIY stores, for instance, paint is one department with the greatest number of customer requests for help. Here, smart kiosks can provide the right customer information, using AI to narrow search results but also provide information  that is based on the actual stock available in that specific store in real time.

Similarly, self service interactive touch screens can help to create more interactions in-store and, as a result, the conversion rate goes up, Thomson said.

Share This Article

Similar Retail News Articles:

  1. Zebra Technologies on what the Goverment’s AI plans mean for frontline retail workers
  2. Varner, one of Scandinavia’s largest fashion retailers, deploys Sitoo POS on Zebra Technologies’ mobile devices to power CX across its store estate
  3. Blecon launches Blecon Agent, transforming Zebra Technologies’ frontline devices into an autonomous Bluetooth tracking network
Tags: NRF 2026Zebra Technologies
ADVERTISEMENT

Related Posts

Are loyalty prices becoming the new normal in UK supermarkets?

July 3, 2026

Loyalty schemes have been around in UK supermarkets for decades, with shoppers accruing points on...

Pricer

Pricer: why silent margin leakage is a bigger threat than theft

July 3, 2026

Retailers have traditionally focused on shrink as the biggest threat to profitability, but some of...

Pandora: tennis season is back and so is tennis jewellery

Pandora: tennis season is back and so is tennis jewellery

July 2, 2026

Racquet sports are back on the agenda for many and as tennis season returns, so...

The best places to play slots in Vegas

July 1, 2026

Las Vegas is the undisputed slot capital of the world. With tens of thousands of...

For today’s UK consumer, value is earned not discounted, argues Loïc Tassel, president, Europe at Procter & Gamble

For today’s UK consumer, value is earned not discounted, argues Loïc Tassel, president, Europe at Procter & Gamble

June 30, 2026

Tassel: Insight comes from data and observing how people live As UK households become more...

retail incentives

Why bonuses are the ideal retail incentive

June 23, 2026

When you look online for products, you will inevitably search for the best value items....

Load More

🗞️ Trending Retail News

  • Iceland

    Iceland: fans on five meals a day as new product launched for England v Mexico

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Zaytoun, Fairtrade certified organic extra virgin olive oil, to be stocked in 250 Co-op stores

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Lavazza celebrates 10th anniversary as the Official Coffee of Ascot and Royal Ascot

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • July rain causes Brits to choose hearty roasts over barbecues, Ocado Retail reports

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Packaging entrepreneur launches Buynex B2B procurement and supply-chain platform

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Retail crime must be challenged, says top security specialist

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

FEATURED ARTICLES

Securing The Future of Retail

Securing the future of retail through seamless omnichannel integration

March 23, 2026
appealing to the new emotional economics of festive shopping

Smug-face and FOMO: appealing to the new emotional economics of festive shopping

October 27, 2025
Journey to AI: build strong foundations for retail success

Journey to AI: build strong foundations for retail success

September 2, 2025
eTail Uk 2026 eTail Uk 2026 eTail Uk 2026
ADVERTISEMENT
retail crime protection retail crime protection
ADVERTISEMENT
nfu mutual nfu mutual
ADVERTISEMENT

Find the Story You Need

No Result
View All Result
  • Home Page
  • Editorial – Contact
  • Advertising
  • Copyright
  • Privacy & Cookie Policy
  • Retailer News
  • Products
  • Data
  • Technology
  • Events
  • People
  • Comment
  • Sustainability
  • Awards
  • Research
No Result
View All Result
  • HOME
  • Featured Articles
  • Retail News Categories
  • About us
  • Advertising
  • Contact / Press release submit page
  • Privacy policy