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Retail Isn't Drowning In Technology, It's Drowning In Complexity

Elliott Winskill

Technology & Solutions Director, PMC

The challenge

For years, retail transformation has been framed as a technology challenge.

Retailers have invested heavily in ecommerce platforms, AI, automation, marketplaces and customer experience tools in an effort to move faster and stay competitive. Yet despite all of this investment, many businesses are still struggling with slow decision-making, disconnected operations and increasing operational friction.

The assumption has been that more technology equals more capability.

But in reality, retail isn’t drowning in technology – it’s drowning in complexity.

And most of that complexity has been created internally over time.

Complexity is the real constraint, not capability

Most retailers don’t suffer from a lack of systems.

They suffer from too many systems that don’t work together cleanly.

Over time, layers of platforms, integrations and processes are added to solve immediate business needs. Each decision is rational in isolation. But collectively, they create fragmentation across the organisation.

Data becomes inconsistent. Teams lose visibility. Processes become manual. Innovation slows down.

Eventually, complexity becomes the constraint, not technology itself.

This is a theme that has emerged strongly across our recent work with Ann Summers, where the focus wasn’t on adding more capability, but on rebuilding the foundations that allow the business to operate as a connected whole. You can read the full session recap here: Lessons From Ann Summers: A Retail Reinvention Story

Complexity compounds quietly

One of the most challenging aspects of complexity is that it rarely announces itself.

It builds gradually over years of growth, channel expansion, acquisitions and technology change.

A new ecommerce platform is introduced. A marketplace integration is added. A reporting tool is layered on top. A temporary workaround becomes permanent.

Individually, these are pragmatic decisions.

Collectively, they create an architecture that becomes harder and harder to understand, maintain and evolve.

Eventually, organisations reach a point where they are spending more time managing systems than improving the business.

And at that point, adding more technology only accelerates the problem.

AI is exposing what complexity has been hiding

The urgency around AI has made this issue more visible.

Retailers are now looking to AI to improve decision-making, automate processes and personalise experiences at scale. But AI does not operate in isolation, it depends entirely on the quality and structure of the data and systems beneath it.

Where those foundations are fragmented, AI simply amplifies inconsistency.

Disconnected systems produce disconnected intelligence. Poor data quality produces poor outcomes. Fragmented operations limit scalability.

This is why many AI initiatives stall after initial pilots. It’s not because the technology is immature, but because the underlying architecture is not ready.

This challenge is explored further in our recent thought leadership piece written by Nimitt Desai, our Head of Innovation, AI & Technology: Why Retail Data Strategies Are Failing in the Age of AI

Why data (not AI) is the real constraint

As retailers accelerate their AI ambitions, data becomes the defining constraint.

Not volume, but structure, accessibility and trust.

When data is fragmented across systems, teams are forced into interpretation rather than execution. That slows everything down: reporting, forecasting, trading decisions and customer experience improvements.

We explored this further in our recent Retail Technology Show 2026 Tech Talk session, where we challenged the assumption that AI is the primary problem facing retailers today: AI Isn’t Your Biggest Problem. Your Data Is.

The conclusion is consistent: AI maturity is not a technology issue, but instead a data and architecture issue.

Simplification is not the same as consolidation

The instinctive response to complexity is to consolidate. Replace many systems with one. Move to a single monolithic platform that promises to do everything in one place.

But that approach trades one problem for another.

Monolithic platforms can reduce surface-level complexity, but they also reduce flexibility, slow innovation cycles and tie retailers to roadmaps they don’t control. In a market where customer expectations, channels and commercial models are shifting constantly, that lack of agility becomes its own constraint.

The answer is not many systems, and not one system. It is the right composition of systems.

That means selecting best-of-breed solutions for the capabilities that genuinely differentiate the business, and connecting them through a coherent integration framework that maintains data consistency, operational visibility and the freedom to evolve any component without breaking the whole.

Done well, a composable architecture delivers the best of both worlds: specialist capability where it matters, and the connected simplicity that uncontrolled complexity has historically destroyed.

The discipline is not in the choice of platforms. It is in the framework that holds them together.

The retailers moving fastest are reducing complexity

The retailers making the most progress today are not those with the most tools, nor those chasing a single all-in-one platform.

They are the ones actively simplifying how their business operates.

That means:

  • Choosing the right systems rather than simply multiplying or consolidating them
  • Composing best-of-breed capabilities within a clear integration framework
  • Creating structured, trusted data environments
  • Designing integration for flow, not just function
  • Enabling shared visibility across teams
  • Building foundations that can evolve continuously

This work is not always visible externally, but its impact is.

Customers don’t experience architecture. They experience outcomes:

  • Faster fulfilment
  • Better availability
  • More consistent experiences
  • Faster innovation cycles

The difference is almost always internal simplicity.

Transformation is not a technology project

One of the most persistent misconceptions in retail is that transformation is a systems upgrade exercise.

In reality, it is an operating model change.

Technology is only part of the equation. The real challenge is redesigning how information flows, how decisions are made, and how teams work together across the organisation.

That requires:

  • Alignment at leadership level
  • Cross-functional collaboration
  • Shared ownership of outcomes
  • Trust between partners and teams

A willingness to challenge legacy ways of working Without this, even the most advanced technology simply sits on top of existing complexity.

Final thoughts

Retail isn’t drowning in technology.

It’s drowning in complexity, and that distinction matters.

Complexity doesn’t show up as a single problem. It shows up as slower decisions, fragmented experiences and limited ability to scale what the business already has.

The fix is not to swap many systems for one. It is to find the right balance: composable, best-of-breed solutions, connected by a framework that gives the business both specialist capability and operational coherence.

And in an industry increasingly defined by AI, data and connected commerce, the retailers that succeed will be those that simplify what sits underneath first – without sacrificing the flexibility they need to keep moving.

At PMC, we help retailers reduce complexity, modernise integration architecture and build the connected foundations required for scalable growth and future innovation.

If you’re questioning whether your current systems are enabling agility or quietly constraining it, now is the time to start the conversation.

Get in touch to start the conversation.

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