5 Takeaways from the 2025 NRF Big Show

Courtesy of Tony D'Onofrio

What an exhausting, exciting, inspiring, highly motivating week in New York on the annual pilgrimage to the National Retail Federation’s (NRF) Big Show! For the week, I logged nearly 100,000 steps or 42 miles visiting stores, engaging retailers, walking the show floor, meeting analysts, and showcasing new innovations for Sensormatic.

In my opening comments on stage for a Sensormatic-sponsored event with retailer PVH, I congratulated the audience for working in one of the most vibrant industries in the world. In 2025, the global retail industry will climb to nearly $33 trillion, growing at roughly 4% per year through 2026.

Source: TD Insights

This article summarizes my top five data-supported takeaways from the 2025 Big Show.

Where Tech and Tears Meet

Digital Partners

For many years now, my Big Show week begins at the Retail Orphan Initiative (ROI) Super Saturday. This event brings together retailers and solution providers in the perfect blend of the latest technology updates and tears in hearing inspirational stories of how charity organizations have improved humanity around the world.

Since 2010, Retail ROI has funded 350 projects in 31 countries with $5.1 million in grants. In total it is estimated that over 363,000 vulnerable children have been helped by this charity.

On the technology front, the IHL Group presented game changing innovations during the event.

Source: IHL Group

My AI Head Is Ready to Explode

As expected, artificial intelligence was the technology everyone was demonstrating and speaking about. A few retail application examples:

  1. L’Oréal is leveraging AI to help their marketing and promotional teams build digital twin assets that give these creative teams the ability to spin up marketing campaigns faster, test smarter, and engage with customers in real time.
  2. Walmart is using AI to predict, forecast, and build inventory levels faster. Demand planning continues to be one of the most complex areas brands must face.
  3. Lowe’s has built 1,700 digital twin models of store layouts to track customer experiences, preferences, and buying patterns—all to optimize conversion.

Again, from ROI Super Saturday, here are the AI retail focus areas:

Source: IHL Group

According to new Capgemini research on what matters most to consumers in 2025, three-quarters (75%) say they are open to Gen AI recommendations, compared with 63% last year. An impressive 71% of consumers would like to see Gen AI integrated into their shopping interactions, compared with 56% last year. Sixty-eight percent of consumers have bought products recommended by Gen AI recommendations, compared with 52% last year.

Physical and Digital Continue to Converge

Technology convergence increased its presence on multiple levels at this year’s edition of the Big Show. Remember when we worried about Cloud running retail infrastructure and wanted to keep everything on premise? Microsoft and Google continue to increase their monstrous presence at this retail event.

Source: Tony D’Onofrio

Amazon also had a much larger presence touting their ability to provide cutting-edge retail operations, smart stores, just walk out technologies, digital commerce, and customer obsessed engagement.

Electronic shelf labels were also more prevalent on the show floor. My favorite feature was integration into a store app that would allow the shelf label to flash when you are picking items for BOPIS, reducing store labor.

Even Elon Musk is jumping into retail with Starlink having a booth in the start-ups area. It is rumored that multiple major retailers are adopting Starlink for wireless communications.

Digital and physical companies will continue their merging journey. The only limitation is creativity in developing innovative solutions that deliver continued positive returns on investment for the retail industry.

The Next Retail Media Frontier Is the Store

On Saturday, just prior to the start of the Big Show, NRF and Stratacache held an event titled “What’s in Store for Retail Media Networks.” Here, a standing room crowd participated in an all-day event with multiple global retailers, analysts, and industry experts in discussing the future of retail media.

In walking the show floor, it was clear that retail media continues to increase its importance as a revenue and profit contributor for the industry. This growing presence confirms my view that the next logical, most effective, and profitable frontier for retailers are media networks inside stores.

The reason is very simple. For many retail chains, the audience inside stores is much larger than online.

Source: eMarketer

Leveraging in-store audiences—which are 84% larger than those on digital—will boost results. Capgemini research finds that consumers want personalized in-store ads via a display in a smart shopping cart, smart mirrors, or interactive touchscreens. Multiple new optional form factors are coming to improve in-store media networks.

Catching the Frictionless Commerce Thief

Frictionless commerce and retail theft are on a major collision course. Locking up products reduces sales and alarmingly moves business to competitors in many cases.

Consumers are becoming increasingly impatient. A 2024 study found that less than two-thirds of shoppers will wait for assistance when products are locked up. This varies by generation, with older shoppers more likely to wait and younger shoppers more likely to shift course. There’s a 19% chance shoppers will shift their purchase online and a 27% chance they’ll switch retailers or abandon the purchase altogether.

While I was impressed with the many examples on the show floor to increase frictionless commerce inside stores, the reality is that we have not yet achieved the correct balance between the two opposing forces of extreme consumer convenience and theft.

Another Bright New Retail Year Is Ahead

I believe that 2025 will be another year of progress where science fiction will continue to meet shopping reality. The retail industry is indeed transforming on all fronts and it continues to be an exciting time to be part of it. For those that I missed at NRF 2025, my apologies as the schedule was too hectic. I wish you all a prosperous new retail year.

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