Retail buyers have always been visual thinkers. From the first glance at a fabric swatch to walking a trade show floor filled with silhouettes, colors, and cuts—they make decisions based on what they see, not just what they read.
Yet somehow, once the buying moment passes, all of that visual clarity disappears into spreadsheets, emails, and data systems that treat product imagery like an afterthought.
This disconnect between how buyers think and how they’re expected to work isn’t just inconvenient. It’s inefficient. It slows teams down. It fragments decision-making. It causes missed trends and repeated mistakes.
That’s the gap. And that’s exactly where Unified PLM Platforms comes in—a connected retail technology platform built for smarter, more visual, and more collaborative product buying.
The retail industry still leans heavily on legacy systems built for finance—not merchandising. Buyers are asked to compare hundreds of SKUs using text-based attributes and disconnected tools:
Even when you know which fabric, color, or silhouette worked best last season… finding that data is like playing digital detective. And when your team expands or transitions? That knowledge disappears entirely.
Studies show that 65% of people are visual learners, and buyers—especially in fashion, home goods, and consumer products—are no exception. When product visuals and performance data are separated, buyers are forced to rely on memory, slowing down their ability to act.
Brands like Nike, H&M, and Nordstrom have already recognized this and invested in platforms that link imagery to performance analytics. Nike, for example, uses integrated design and data tools to accelerate concept-to-shelf timelines. Nordstrom uses connected visuals to support its “closer to you” strategy—blending digital and store experiences with unified insights.
Connecting imagery to data allows teams to:
Bridging this gap with an image-first, data-connected retail technology platform that transforms the way buying teams work. Instead of toggling between tools and chasing down files, teams can access:
✅ High-resolution product imagery
✅ Performance metrics (sell-through, margin, velocity)
✅ Vendor details, SKU specs, and change history
✅ Collaborative messaging tied to each product
This unified experience ensures that what you see is what you work with—at every step of the buying cycle.
Unlike traditional PLM systems that prioritize engineering specs, DAM's put visual merchandising first. It’s built for how buyers actually think:
Imagine seeing your full product assortment visually—while simultaneously viewing margins, inventory levels, and sell-through rates. No more opening five tabs to answer one question.
Visual data should be paired with real-time retail analytics. This means buyers can:
Brands like Zara have pioneered fast fashion by turning real-time insights into rapid product iteration. ASOS uses live assortment data to curate regional offerings and test trends in small batches.
Intelligent filters and sorting tools make it easy to answer questions like:
Using visual and numeric filters together gives buyers instant, data-backed answers—without the mental gymnastics of jumping between tools.
Retailers like Target and Sephora have led the industry by making product visuals a central part of their omnichannel retail strategy. Target’s internal merchandising tools prioritize visual filters and KPIs. Sephora, known for its advanced product data strategy, pairs visuals and consumer feedback to guide everything from online merchandising to store displays.
Buyers using a Unified PLM Platform report:
These aren’t just software benefits—they’re operational shifts that free up teams to focus on creativity, not cleanup.
When visuals and data live side-by-side, buying becomes what it was always meant to be: creative, intuitive, strategic, and fast.
That’s the power of a unified retail merchandising platform.
Stay tuned for:
📘 Chapter 2: Transforming the Buyer’s Workflow
Book a custom demo and explore how you can streamline your entire assortment planning and merchandising process.
Want to go deeper into modern merchandising? Check out these Surefront blogs:
Transforming Your Catalog with PIM
The Ultimate Guide to a Perfect Line Sheet
How to Choose and Implement the Best PLM Software