AB Inbev’s replenishment app “B2B”
Posted: Mon Jan 20, 2025 9:26 am
Specifically, Komatsu has developed an original IoT (Internet of Things) platform that allows seamless operation of unmanned machines and production surveys between multiple factories. In addition, with the addition of drones, they can measure the land at a construction site in one day, improving accuracy, while it would take nearly a week to do it manually.
Belgian brewery Anheuser-Busch (AB) InBev created a B2B application for distributors that sell its products, which provides customized recommendations for inventory replenishment and new products based on built-in algorithms. They even set up a technology innovation lab, Beer Garage, to study how to use artificial intelligence, machine learning, and the Internet of Things to improve retail and customer experience. For example, they introduced a "connected brewery" that can monitor quantity, quality, temperature, and other production factors online.
4. Natuzzi’s Enhanced Store
Italian furniture producer and retailer Natuzzi is experimenting with CX by opening an “augmented store” in New York City. It’s a new type of retail environment that combines virtual and augmented reality (VR and AR), holographic displays, and 3D modeling. Natuzzi uses Microsoft’s HoloLens 2 to allow customers to view miniature 3D versions of each piece of el salvador telegram number database furniture, and using an immersive VR headset, you can interact with all the furniture in the showroom by changing colors and finishes. What’s more, in the augmented store, customers can use these digital tools to plan custom projects, turn into an interior designer, and imagine a home that perfectly expresses them. While raising the bar and redefining the experience of buying furniture, Natuzzi’s augmented store has gone viral on social media, in addition to garnering a ton of attention and reaching new potential customers.
5. DBS Bank’s 100% virtual branch “Digibank”
Singaporean company DBS, the largest bank in Southeast Asia, has long been seen as a frontrunner in the digitization of banking services. In an interview with DBS CFO Chng Sok Hui, he shared how the company’s journey towards digital transformation began when they realized they were more than just a bank – they were a technology company. They wanted to be taken as such by the market. So, they first launched Digibank in India, an online banking service with zero physical branches. Digibank’s mobile app is optimized for a seamless user experience using intuitive AI and “digital robots” as customer service.
Belgian brewery Anheuser-Busch (AB) InBev created a B2B application for distributors that sell its products, which provides customized recommendations for inventory replenishment and new products based on built-in algorithms. They even set up a technology innovation lab, Beer Garage, to study how to use artificial intelligence, machine learning, and the Internet of Things to improve retail and customer experience. For example, they introduced a "connected brewery" that can monitor quantity, quality, temperature, and other production factors online.
4. Natuzzi’s Enhanced Store
Italian furniture producer and retailer Natuzzi is experimenting with CX by opening an “augmented store” in New York City. It’s a new type of retail environment that combines virtual and augmented reality (VR and AR), holographic displays, and 3D modeling. Natuzzi uses Microsoft’s HoloLens 2 to allow customers to view miniature 3D versions of each piece of el salvador telegram number database furniture, and using an immersive VR headset, you can interact with all the furniture in the showroom by changing colors and finishes. What’s more, in the augmented store, customers can use these digital tools to plan custom projects, turn into an interior designer, and imagine a home that perfectly expresses them. While raising the bar and redefining the experience of buying furniture, Natuzzi’s augmented store has gone viral on social media, in addition to garnering a ton of attention and reaching new potential customers.
5. DBS Bank’s 100% virtual branch “Digibank”
Singaporean company DBS, the largest bank in Southeast Asia, has long been seen as a frontrunner in the digitization of banking services. In an interview with DBS CFO Chng Sok Hui, he shared how the company’s journey towards digital transformation began when they realized they were more than just a bank – they were a technology company. They wanted to be taken as such by the market. So, they first launched Digibank in India, an online banking service with zero physical branches. Digibank’s mobile app is optimized for a seamless user experience using intuitive AI and “digital robots” as customer service.