Revieve develops new beauty AI tools to drive customer engagement

Revieve develops new beauty AI tools to drive customer engagement

The new features use AR and AI technology to determine skin tone and factors affecting the skin

date published

September 22, 2020

Time Reading

5 Min

Revieve develops new beauty AI tools to drive customer engagement
Speaker
Sampo Parkkinen - CEO/Co-Founder

Sampo Parkkinen - CEO/Co-Founder

Sampo Parkkinen is the CEO and Founder of Revieve, a personalized digital brand experience company working with global brands, retailers, and digital services providers in the beauty, skin, health, and wellness categories. Sampo has a long record of successfully guiding and scaling companies, serving as an early-stage investor, venture partner, and board member in technology companies including SportIQ, PromoRepublic and others. Prior to devoting his work full-time focus to Revieve, Sampo was a founder and COO at RapidBlue Solutions, a Finland-based shopper analytics company providing brick-and-mortar visitor analytics to retail and commercial property ShopperTrak successfully acquired.

Today, as a serial technology entrepreneur, investor, author, and Contributor at Forbes, Sampo leverages his extensive experience working with digital solutions and technologies to enable brand experience for brands and retailers across the skin, health wellness, and beauty categories. Sampo is also a frequent guest speaker at retail and beauty technology events and conferences. He is often seen on different media channels and the leading trade media magazines across the globe, including The Telegraph, Business Of Fashion, Coveteur, Vogue Scandinavia, Glossy and more.

He takes pride in giving back to the community and serves as a mentor for the Techstars accelerator program in Chicago and a venture capital firm focused on growing companies that generate positive outcomes in education, health, economic empowerment, and environmental sustainability.

Sampo is a lifelong learner and a proud dad. In his free time, Sampo enjoys playing sports and spending time with his wife and three children.

Focus
Show more
Audience
Show more
SHARE this
Unlock the secrets of beauty innovation and AI trends!

Unlock the secrets of beauty innovation and AI trends!

Stay ahead in the industry with expert insights and strategies.

Meet in the Middle

How middle retail can reboot in the pandemic age

To survive, they must address pandemic behaviors like trip consolidation and digital personalization. Knowing which shifts are temporary and which are more long-term will be dictated by fatigued consumers emerging from lockdown — and the retailers who can nimbly lead the way.

Trip Consolidation

Influenced by distancing fears and limited “essential” locations, consumers abandoned casual shopping for consolidated trips, stocking up on food and other essentials at Target and Walmart.

With shoppers now able to return Amazon goods at Kohl’s and get Kroger pickup at Walgreens, the old customer journey is dead.

How do you get the customer to deconsolidate and return to casual shopping? Middle retailers can make shopping about the consumer, not just the products being sold. Shoppers can find low prices anywhere, so offering them more of what they want is better.

Some are looking to build emotional connections, while others will want a feeling of safety. This means going beyond the utility-like feel being offered by mass market brands and offering a more local experience, or adding to the product mix to meet the post-pandemic hybrid shopping behaviors and newly discovered brands.

Depending on location, some will be attracted to programs that fit their new habits like touch-less checkouts, call-ahead or curbside pickup. Investing in a more attractive mix of offers or exceptional services can win customers back, and tee up opportunities for front-line employees to rebuild relationships from the ground up.

Digital Acceleration

Online shopping has jumped 49% since the beginning of March and has rippled across multiple customer segments, including baby boomers.

With print fading in the touchless store plan, there is a need to develop more elegant digital touchpoints with customers. When compared with smaller retailers, the middle can use their larger size to scale experiences, while also coming up with unique encounters that consumers often don’t get — like personalized loyalty — from the largest mass market providers.

It’s also critical for brick-and-mortar retailers occupying the middle ground to target consumers agnostically flowing through in-store or online shopping experiences, understanding that online does not mean always on their website.Making it a convenient and unique encounter online is important, but also linking it back to the local community is a powerful benefit to leverage, and one that is core to middle retail.

Personalization Experiences

With the acceleration of online, demand for more personalized shopping has also increased. In health and beauty, there is a drive toward personalization that is being aided by digital diagnostic tools. According to the Revieve Health and Beauty Index, personalized skin care diagnostics and recommendation usage is up over 200% globally in 2020.

These engagement tools will continue to create new service channels in store and online, from educational tools and product recommendations to sampling and purchasing. However, in-store technology will see a significant shift, with retailers investing in the bring-your-own-device trend across all departments and functions to satisfy the next-gen digital consumer.

Leverage Your Strengths

Mid-market retail should use its size and speed to its advantage and carve out uniques paces in the market that will be emerging from the crisis. Consumers who have lost their jobs or are looking to save money will not be spending as much on luxury products, leading to an opportunity for middle retailers to offer products that are a step up from value products.

For middle retailers to thrive, they must pick specific segments and offer a more personalized product mix, alongside supporting offers. There is a lot on the to-do list; start with a customer reentry strategy that addresses trip consolidation, digital acceleration and personalization experiences.

Upcoming Events

AI in Beauty 2025: Strategic Webinar Series for Retailers and Brands

AI in Beauty 2025: Strategic Webinar Series for Retailers and Brands

Part of the series

Series

Explore how AI, personalization, and Beauty AI Agents are reshaping the way beauty brands and retailers engage consumers, build loyalty, and drive growth. This exclusive 3-part webinar series brings together strategy, innovation, and real-world use cases to help you lead the next era of beauty commerce.

Conversational AI: Transforming Beauty E-commerce

Conversational AI: Transforming Beauty E-commerce

Part of the series

Series

Upcoming

June 11, 2025

11 Jun

-

June 11, 2025

Conversational AI: Transforming Beauty E-commerce

Explore how beauty brands are using GenAI-powered conversations to guide, educate, and convert. From digital assistants to contextual product education, this session reveals how conversational interfaces are becoming the new storefront — and how to deploy them at scale with impact.

Beauty Begins with Intent: How AI Is Reimagining the Makeup Discovery Journey

Beauty Begins with Intent: How AI Is Reimagining the Makeup Discovery Journey

Part of the series

Series

Makeup discovery doesn’t start with a product—it starts with a mood, a look, a feeling. In this session, we explore how beauty brands and retailers are redefining the shopper journey using AI-powered try-on, facial analysis, and visual-led discovery. Learn how to unlock emotional and aesthetic intent to deliver personalized experiences that drive loyalty, conversion, and connection at scale.