Brett Beveridge is the Founder and CEO of T-ROC Global.
For decades, retail’s workforce strategy has revolved around one constant: people. Associates stocked shelves, answered customer questions and handled checkout. Technology supported the process, but it rarely changed the structure of the workforce itself. That dynamic is beginning to shift.
Today, retailers are entering a new era marked not just by human labor, but by what I call digital labor. This labor is the combination of technology and a skilled physical workforce working together to run modern retail operations.
Artificial intelligence, automation and intelligent systems are not replacing retail workers. Instead, they are becoming another layer of labor that helps retailers operate faster, more efficiently and at greater scale, which leads to better customer experiences. The retailers that succeed will be the ones that integrate these tools while continuing to invest in their people.
The Rise Of Digital Labor In Retail
Retail has always been operationally complex. Stores manage thousands of products, shifting demand, omnichannel fulfillment and rising customer expectations, all while operating on tight margins.
Historically, retailers solved these challenges by adding more people or tightening processes. Now, AI and automation offer another path.
Technologies like predictive analytics, robotics, voice AI and intelligent inventory systems are beginning to take on tasks that once required manual effort. These include answering routine customer questions, managing inventory flows and analyzing store data in real time.
For example, retailers have been deploying AI-powered voice agents that answer incoming store calls and handle common questions such as store hours or product availability. These systems help prevent floor associates from being pulled away from in-store customers while still ensuring shoppers receive quick answers.
This is a powerful example of digital labor in action. Technology handles repetitive operational tasks so human associates can focus on customer experience and sales. AI-driven digital sales associates can also support revenue generation by helping customers find the right products and recommending complementary accessories or add-ons.
I have seen firsthand how valuable that shift can be. Earlier in my career, I watched talented associates lose significant time each day to routine interruptions and administrative tasks. When technology takes over those routine tasks, it unlocks time for people to do the work that really drives value.
How Automation Repositions The Workforce
Instead of AI eliminating jobs, what we are seeing is a repositioning of labor. Routine and repetitive tasks are increasingly being handled by automation, while the human workforce is shifting toward areas where people continue to outperform machines.
AI augments human labor. Retailers have realized that adding human labor hours is not affordable, but adding digital labor can enhance the customer experience. Think labor on demand. When customers need help with a product, it is always there. Customers no longer have to hunt down a retail sales associate and can feel confident they are receiving accurate information to help them make a purchase.
Retail has always been a people business, and AI doesn’t change that. In many cases, it allows associates to spend more time doing the work that makes retail meaningful for both employees and customers.
As someone who has spent decades building companies that support retailers across the country, I have learned that technology only succeeds when it empowers the people on the ground. Associates who feel supported by better tools become more confident, productive and ultimately more helpful to customers.
Why The Store Of The Future Is A Hybrid Workforce
As digital labor becomes more embedded in retail operations, the concept of the store workforce will expand beyond employees physically on the sales floor. Many stores will rely on digital systems operating in the background. AI agents may manage incoming communications, machine learning tools could forecast inventory needs and smart checkout systems may streamline the shopping process. Intelligent tools can even guide retail staff through product questions.
Retailers are already using AI-powered assistants that allow associates to quickly access product knowledge or project guidance through conversational prompts. Rather than replacing human expertise, these tools amplify it. A new associate can access knowledge that once took years of experience to build.
When these technologies are combined with a skilled physical workforce, retailers create a hybrid model where each side strengthens the other. That is the essence of digital labor.
Rethinking Workforce Strategy
Retail leaders who view labor purely as a human headcount may struggle in the years ahead. The companies that lead the next decade of retail will treat technology as part of the workforce itself. Workforce planning must include both people and digital systems, and training must evolve so employees are comfortable using AI-driven tools.
Retailers that embrace this model can operate more efficiently, deliver more consistent experiences and empower store associates with better tools and information, all of which ultimately lead to higher revenue and success.
Why The Human Element Matters More Than Ever
Ironically, as AI becomes more capable, the human side of retail may become even more important. When technology handles routine work, the value of human interaction rises. Customers still want advice from knowledgeable human and digital associates. They want personalized service and reassurance in purchasing decisions, especially for detailed products or larger investments.
Digital labor helps retailers create more opportunities for those moments. Instead of spending time on administrative work, associates can help customers solve problems, complete projects and make confident decisions.
A New Chapter For Retail Work
Retail has always evolved alongside technology. From the introduction of barcodes to the rise of e-commerce and mobile apps, each innovation has reshaped how stores operate. AI and automation represent the next chapter, creating a second workforce within retail organizations made up of intelligent systems and digital tools working alongside people.
The retailers that thrive will not ask whether technology will replace workers. They will focus on how human talent and digital labor can work together to create stronger businesses and better customer experiences.
Humans should not be losing their jobs to technology if retailers are designing their plans for success. The future of retail is about humans and technology working together.
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