Modelling and simulating retail management practices: a first approach
Peer-Olaf Siebers, Uwe Aickelin, Helen Celia, Chris Clegg

TL;DR
This paper presents an agent-based simulation model of retail shop-floor operations, exploring how management practices like employee development and cashier empowerment impact customer satisfaction and sales, validated through experiments.
Contribution
It introduces a novel retail simulation model based on real data, demonstrating its potential to analyze management practices' effects on performance.
Findings
Simulation model effectively captures shop-floor dynamics.
Management practices influence customer satisfaction and sales.
Model validation shows promising results for 'what-if' analysis.
Abstract
Multi-agent systems offer a new and exciting way of understanding the world of work. We apply agent-based modeling and simulation to investigate a set of problems in a retail context. Specifically, we are working to understand the relationship between people management practices on the shop-floor and retail performance. Despite the fact we are working within a relatively novel and complex domain, it is clear that using an agent-based approach offers great potential for improving organizational capabilities in the future. Our multi-disciplinary research team has worked closely with one of the UK's top ten retailers to collect data and build an understanding of shop-floor operations and the key actors in a department (customers, staff, and managers). Based on this case study we have built and tested our first version of a retail branch agent-based simulation model where we have focused on…
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Taxonomy
TopicsConsumer Retail Behavior Studies
