Technology Category
- Platform as a Service (PaaS) - Application Development Platforms
- Sensors - Liquid Detection Sensors
Applicable Industries
- Cement
- Food & Beverage
Applicable Functions
- Procurement
- Sales & Marketing
Use Cases
- Time Sensitive Networking
- Usage-Based Insurance
About The Customer
Imperfect Foods is a leading online grocer founded in 2015 with a mission to eliminate food waste and build a better food system. As a Certified B Corporation™, the company works directly with farmers and producers to rescue food and deliver it right to customers’ doors. To date, Imperfect Foods has rescued more than 159 million pounds of food from lesser outcomes. The company offers a fully customizable service that is more affordable, and more environmentally friendly, than the average trip to the grocery store. With hundreds of thousands of customers, Imperfect Foods has a vast amount of customer data that it needed to manage and utilize effectively.
The Challenge
Imperfect Foods, an online grocer dedicated to eliminating food waste, faced a significant challenge in managing and utilizing its vast customer data. With hundreds of thousands of customers and an increasing number of data sources, the company struggled to act on this information effectively. The lack of a centralized view of the customer data made it difficult to understand what traits led to high-value customers or what factors influenced customers to order. Imperfect Foods needed a way to consolidate all of its customer data across its entire data stack to leverage it for marketing activation to increase signups and product usage. The company was also limited on engineering resources, which further complicated the situation.
The Solution
Imperfect Foods turned to Snowflake, Fivetran, and Hightouch to create a continuous flow of data. Snowflake was chosen as a centralized data platform to consolidate all customer data. The simplicity and ease of use of the platform played a crucial role in the decision. With Snowflake, Imperfect Foods could build robust data models around order data, marketing spend, marketing attribution, etc., empowering the marketing team to deliver more personalized engagements and understand the impact of their efforts on business growth. Fivetran was used to automate data pipelines, ingesting customer data from various disparate sources, including backend databases, customer surveys, accounting and inventory data, and spreadsheet data. Fivetran underpinned Imperfect Foods' entire data stack, increasing the power of Snowflake. Hightouch was used for data activation, allowing Imperfect Foods to automatically sync customer data in near real-time to Iterable for lifecycle marketing, and various ad platforms for lookalike audiences and retargeting.
Operational Impact
Quantitative Benefit
Case Study missing?
Start adding your own!
Register with your work email and create a new case study profile for your business.
Related Case Studies.
Case Study
The Kellogg Company
Kellogg keeps a close eye on its trade spend, analyzing large volumes of data and running complex simulations to predict which promotional activities will be the most effective. Kellogg needed to decrease the trade spend but its traditional relational database on premises could not keep up with the pace of demand.
Case Study
System 800xA at Indian Cement Plants
Chettinad Cement recognized that further efficiencies could be achieved in its cement manufacturing process. It looked to investing in comprehensive operational and control technologies to manage and derive productivity and energy efficiency gains from the assets on Line 2, their second plant in India.
Case Study
HEINEKEN Uses the Cloud to Reach 10.5 Million Consumers
For 2012 campaign, the Bond promotion, it planned to launch the campaign at the same time everywhere on the planet. That created unprecedented challenges for HEINEKEN—nowhere more so than in its technology operation. The primary digital content for the campaign was a 100-megabyte movie that had to play flawlessly for millions of viewers worldwide. After all, Bond never fails. No one was going to tolerate a technology failure that might bruise his brand.Previously, HEINEKEN had supported digital media at its outsourced datacenter. But that datacenter lacked the computing resources HEINEKEN needed, and building them—especially to support peak traffic that would total millions of simultaneous hits—would have been both time-consuming and expensive. Nor would it have provided the geographic reach that HEINEKEN needed to minimize latency worldwide.
Case Study
Energy Management System at Sugar Industry
The company wanted to use the information from the system to claim under the renewable energy certificate scheme. The benefit to the company under the renewable energy certificates is Rs 75 million a year. To enable the above, an end-to-end solution for load monitoring, consumption monitoring, online data monitoring, automatic meter data acquisition which can be exported to SAP and other applications is required.
Case Study
Coca Cola Swaziland Conco Case Study
Coco Cola Swaziland, South Africa would like to find a solution that would enable the following results: - Reduce energy consumption by 20% in one year. - Formulate a series of strategic initiatives that would enlist the commitment of corporate management and create employee awareness while helping meet departmental targets and investing in tools that assist with energy management. - Formulate a series of tactical initiatives that would optimize energy usage on the shop floor. These would include charging forklifts and running cold rooms only during off-peak periods, running the dust extractors only during working hours and basing lights and air-conditioning on someone’s presence. - Increase visibility into the factory and other processes. - Enable limited, non-intrusive control functions for certain processes.
Case Study
Temperature Monitoring for Restaurant Food Storage
When it came to implementing a solution, Mr. Nesbitt had an idea of what functionality that he wanted. Although not mandated by Health Canada, Mr. Nesbitt wanted to ensure quality control issues met the highest possible standards as part of his commitment to top-of-class food services. This wish list included an easy-to use temperature-monitoring system that could provide a visible display of the temperatures of all of his refrigerators and freezers, including historical information so that he could review the performance of his equipment. It also had to provide alert notification (but email alerts and SMS text message alerts) to alert key staff in the event that a cooling system was exceeding pre-set warning limits.