By Jochem van der Veer, CEO and Co-Founder of TheyDo
Retailers are entering the next season under growing pressure to make faster, more confident decisions in the face of increasing complexity. From shifting customer expectations to multi-channel operations, the need for speed and alignment is higher than ever. Yet many businesses find themselves stuck, overwhelmed by the volume of data at their disposal and unsure how to act on it. Despite having more insights than ever, only 45% of available data is actually used in decision-making.
Deloitte data highlights that retailers continue to struggle with capturing and making effective use of their data. Many of today’s business leaders report feeling overwhelmed by the sheer volume of insights and data points they encounter each day. The challenge isn’t just the volume of information but the fragmentation of it. Dashboards, reports, customer feedback, and operational data all flow into different systems, owned by different teams. Leaders are often forced to make decisions based on partial views or outdated ones. While AI has introduced new ways to analyze data at scale, especially unstructured and qualitative data sources, like reviews and support transcripts, it’s not a solution on its own. What’s missing is a shared framework to translate these insights into clear, coordinated action.
This is where journey management comes in. It’s not simply another layer of CX strategy. Journey management is something different: a structured approach to organizing and applying data in a way that aligns people and processes around the full customer journey. Rather than focusing on isolated touchpoints or departmental KPIs, journey management provides a way to understand where the most critical pain points lie and how to resolve them systematically across the business.
When Personalization Misses the Mark
Creating this structure becomes especially critical as retailers try to scale personalization. Many businesses rely on rules-based automation and static dashboards to tailor experiences, but this often results in surface-level interactions that don’t reflect real-time customer behavior. Without context or alignment, even sophisticated personalization efforts can miss the mark, feeling irrelevant or overly generic. Journey management offers a path to fix this by making sure the insights that drive personalization are not only accurate but also actionable. It provides teams with a shared map of the customer experience so that AI-powered recommendations reflect actual journeys, not just isolated data points.
AI and Journey Management Create Coordinated Action
When journey management and AI are brought together, the impact is greater than the sum of their parts. AI can surface patterns across massive data sets, while journey management ensures those patterns lead to meaningful decisions. This is especially valuable in resolving issues that span departments, like a supply chain delay that affects online orders, in-store pickup, and customer service. Rather than each team reacting independently, journey management gives them a way to work from the same data toward the same outcome.
Retailers are also beginning to combine predictive analytics with human judgment, pairing AI’s pattern recognition with the emotional intelligence of team leads to deliver more personalized and proactive experiences. Journey management helps embed these efforts into the business, ensuring that insight doesn’t just stay in a report but leads to coordinated action across touchpoints and channels.
Looking Ahead: Seeing Agility as a Competitive Edge for Retailers
Ultimately, as AI adoption accelerates, the differentiator won’t be access to technology but the ability to use it effectively. Journey management enables that shift by helping retailers cut through data noise, align around shared priorities, and stay responsive to change. In a year where agility is essential, those who adopt this approach won’t just keep pace. They’ll set the standard for how insight powers action across the retail industry.
About author
Jochem van der Veer is the co-founder and CEO of TheyDo, an intuitive journey management platform. A designer by trade, he has nearly a decade’s experience in UX consultancy. Jochem founded TheyDo in 2019 to help businesses truly become customer-centric by organizing around the customer journey.
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