June: top 10 most clicked retail tech articles

These are the RTIH articles that caught your fancy last month.

Savvy retailers will adapt and thrive in post coronavirus world

RTIH looks at how the coronavirus is fundamentally changing our shopping habits and experiences and how under pressure retailers are responding.

Sustainable retail in a post coronavirus world

Sustainability was the retail sector’s buzzword of 2019 and this hot streak has continued into 2020.

Movements such as Extinction Rebellion, School Strikes for Climate, veganism, the plastic backlash and biodiversity conservation have been hugely influential here. And many believe that the coronavirus outbreak will take things to the next level.

How retailers are adapting to a post lockdown world

As non-essential English retailers prepare to re-open their stores on 15th June, RTIH looks at some of the innovative measures being deployed by their international counterparts who are already up and running.

Startup interview: Mohammad Darab Ali, Founder and CEO, Better1

RTIH catches up with the boss of Canadian e-commerce startup Better1.

Six innovative retail technology initiatives

These retailers and brands are leading the way in providing technology and experiences that are one step ahead of their customers’ expectations.

The retail tech space in May: good month/bad month

RTIH takes a look at the retail technology space during May and rounds up the winners and losers.

20 retail technology startups powering a new era of retail

RTIH brings you 20 tech startups who are driving change in the omnichannel retail space.

Interview: Lisa Bowden, Head of Business Development – Solutions, Retail Assist

Lisa Bowden tells RTIH about OMIO PIM, powered by Retail Assist, which was launched in May. 

X5 Retail Group tech innovation drive continues apace

Russian food retailer X5 Retail Group and French tech accelerator Lafayette Plug and Play (LP&P) have released the interim results of their innovation scouting tie up.

Nespresso taps blockchain tech for supply chain initiative

Nespresso has launched a blockchain platform that lets people trace their coffee from farms in Zimbabwe through to the company’s production centre in Switzerland.

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