A Retail Case Study: Scaling the Footprint, Sustaining High-Performance
A next-generation continuous employee listening program that systematically builds and sustains high performance.
Business Context & The Real Challenge
Business Context
- Fast-growing luxury retail brand
- Expanded from ~20 stores to 70+ stores in ~12–15 months
- Aggressive further expansion planned
As growth accelerated, three business-critical risks became harder to ignore
Frontline Attrition Risk
Rapid hiring and store launches increased the risk of early exits, capability loss, and repeated replacement costs in customer-facing roles.
Customer NPS Consistency
A premium brand promise had to be delivered consistently across both stores, without quality dilution.
Walk-in to Buy-in Conversion
As expansion continued, store teams had to convert footfall into revenue more consistently, not just drive traffic.
What the atp|reflect Implementation Revealed
Employee experience showed clear linkage to business outcomes
Across listening cycles, all drivers showed some degree of relationship with business outcomes helping the business move from broad engagement conversations to precision prioritisation.
Drivers with Strongest Linkages:
Customer NPS
- External Orientation: r = +0.86
- Clarity & Direction: r = +0.71
Walk-in to Buy-in Conversion
- Operational Excellence = +0.60
- Ownership & Accountability: r = +0.58
Attrition
- Manager & Leadership Effectiveness: r = -0.56
- Employer Brand / Pride: r = -0.56
Older stores were showing more strain than newer stores
- Average favorability gap of 10% pts across drivers with maximum gaps on commitment drivers like: Wellbeing (-12) and Psychological Safety (-12).
This enabled the business to:
Prioritise the few drivers most likely to influence attrition, NPS, and conversion
Identify store-level hotspots and maturity-based patterns
Focus action where business impact was most likely, instead of spreading effort across all drivers.
The atp|reflect Implementation and Solution
Discovery & Context Design
Leadership discussions, store visits, and frontline immersion helped customise the listening construct to the realities of luxury retail execution.
Pilot to Prove the Model
A ~15-store pilot validated both the need and the power of the approach, surfacing clear business linkages early.
Scaled with the Business
The program expanded alongside the network, eventually supporting 70+ stores and 2000+ employees across India.
Built for Action, Not Just Reporting
Store managers and leaders received driver-level insights, hotspot views, and focused actions enabling prioritisation rather than broad, generic engagement interventions.
Sample Driver-Actions
External Orientation reflects how actively store teams stay aware of the external market, especially competitor moves, local market shifts, customer preferences, and emerging commercial signals that may affect store performance.
“We regularly gather and discuss updates about what our competitors are doing.”
In a fast-scaling luxury retail environment, strong external orientation helps stores stay commercially sharp. It enables teams to respond better to competitive activity, protect conversion and customer experience, and avoid execution becoming inward-looking as the network expands.
This driver was prioritised because stronger external orientation showed a meaningful relationship with business outcomes (0.86 with NPS), helping the organisation identify where better commercial awareness and market responsiveness could support stronger performance at scale.
High-level action recommendations (with further micro-steps and guidance on the tool):
(Store-level)
In your next team meeting, take 10 minutes to ask each team member to share one recent competitor observation: this could be about offers, visual merchandising, customer footfall, product mix, or service experience. Capture the top 2 patterns and close the meeting by agreeing one local action your store should take or test in response.
(Area-level)
In your next team meeting with people managers, ask each store manager to share one competitor or market trend they are seeing in their location and one implication for store execution. Identify which stores are demonstrating stronger market awareness, which are not, and agree on a simple expectation: every store should discuss external market updates at least once a week in store huddles.
(Region-level)
In your next team meeting with RBMs, review the store-level scores on External Orientation and ask: Which stores are actively discussing competitor moves, and which are not? Use the conversation to identify 2–3 lower-scoring stores where regional leaders will explicitly check whether competitor and market updates are being discussed in regular team huddles over the next month.
Program Outcomes + ROI
Business & People Outcomes (12-month directional impact):
Attrition Reduction
- Annualised frontline attrition reduced from ~36% to ~24%
- ~60 fewer exits per quarter; ~₹7.2 Cr saved annually
Customer NPS Improvement
- Average customer NPS improved from +54 to +63
- ~5–7% improvement in repeat purchase rate
Conversion Uplift
- Average conversion improved from 24.8% to 28.6%; leading to ~₹11.5 Cr in incremental revenue/year
Leading Indicators of Impact:
Avg Driver Improvement
On prioritised drivers in actioned stores
Sustained Participation
Across all listening cycles
Employee Feedback
Said the program surfaces issues that matter