The US mid-sized retail sector is facing mounting pressure from margin compression, supply chain volatility, rising labor costs, and the growing need to invest in digital, data, and AI capabilities. Retailers in the USD 500 million to USD 1 billion revenue range are caught in a difficult middle ground: expected to compete with large enterprises on customer experience and analytics sophistication, but without comparable scale, budgets, or technology depth. As a result, many struggle to move AI and analytics initiatives beyond small, disconnected pilots.
A key constraint is access to affordable, scalable talent across data engineering, analytics, and AI. Building these capabilities onshore has become increasingly expensive, slowing modernization efforts and limiting the impact of digital investments. In response, retailers are rethinking their operating models and exploring Global Capability Centers as a structural solution rather than a cost-saving exercise.
AIM Research, in association with Systems Plus as research partner, has undertaken a comprehensive study to examine how Global Capability Centers, particularly in India, can help US mid-sized retailers bridge these gaps. The study finds that modern GCCs have evolved into strategic extensions of the enterprise, supporting core engineering, analytics, AI experimentation, and 24×7 operations.
When designed with clear mandates and strong governance, GCCs enable faster capability building, improved supply chain visibility, more effective digital marketing, and scalable AI adoption. The study outlines actionable pillars to help retailers structure phased capability builds and ensure GCCs act as engines of transformation rather than isolated offshore units. For US mid-sized retailers under pressure to do more with less, GCCs are emerging as a critical lever for competitiveness and long-term resilience.


