Staff shortages within the sector mean software assistance in areas such as retail, payment automation and marketing is more important than ever when it comes to
business profitability. Karen Maxwell looks at some of the solutions available
Today’s retail software can help spas deliver offers and drive sales / photo: shutterstock/fizkes
Guenther Poellabauer
TAC
Guenther Poellabauer / photo: TAC
TAC’s digital signage, self-service machines and touch POS (point of sale) contribute significantly to increased sales opportunities within a spa environment. In-house marketing with digital signage allows direct communication of services/products in a targeted way via strategically positioned screens, and special offers can be advertised via a webshop. Vending machines enable guests to buy tickets and drinks independently, and with TAC machines, towels are always provided.
Payment information is securely encrypted using reliable technology. Once credit card information is kept, it is automatically converted into a token and stored.
Whether at checkouts, in the webshop or at vending machines, the TAC Pay integrated payment interface ensures that one-time and recurring payments, and refunds are processed easily, quickly and securely through the TAC software.
TAC’s stock module supports inventories, supplier, and order management. If minimum stock levels are reached, items appear in order proposals. In inventory management, goods movements are also considered that have not come about through normal business, such as breakage, theft or returns.
One-time and recurring payments and refunds are processed easily, quickly and securely
Sal Capizzi
Book4Time
Sal Capizzi / photo: Book4Time
Book4Time has added a retail ‘shopping cart’ feature which allows both practitioners and desk staff to hold suggestive retail items to a client’s ticket without affecting the transaction. If the client decides they want to purchase these items they can be moved to ‘purchase’ with the click of a button. It also operates as a standalone ‘point of sale’ system for retail boutiques within a spa property.
Regarding the checkout process, the system is able to save payment details with the latest GDPR secure technology – allowing clients to checkout both service and retail items seamlessly through Book4Time Pay. In addition, contactless payment solutions, including 15-plus interfaces with prominent, international credit card merchants, is also available.
Book4Time sales reports track sales and break them down by vendor, product type and line, so spa managers can run specific reports that show how much retail specific revenue has been sold by each team member.
Spending reports also offer insights on which retail products sell well and which items could be an area of opportunity.
A shopping cart can hold suggestive retail items to a client’s ticket without affecting transaction
The software can track sales made by each team member / photo: shutterstock/Dmytro Zinkevych
Oliver Cahill
Premier
Oliver Cahill / photo: premier
Core, by Premier Software, makes upselling simple and intuitive so operators can use retail allocation and recommended product features, both of which prompt staff to sell products at the point of billing after their spa experience. While retail allocation triggers the sale of products associated with the treatment booked, recommended products are based on personal recommendations from the staff member. These can be noted on the client’s record card and flagged on departure.
Core integrates with Premier’s online-booking platform, onejourney, to provide a unified, tailored shopping experience. Complete with revenue generating features and one basket for booking online, onejourney also links Apple Pay and digital wallets to the client’s account and all client purchases are stored on an individual record.
Core’s reporting feature assists the spa manager in monitoring a range of information, which includes the number of retail products sold, and by whom, to facilitate rewards with commission and track best sellers. By setting a minimum product level, the system offers a prompt when an item falls below this threshold and needs reordering. Core can also be set up to create order forms, accept deliveries and transfer stock between sites.
Recommendations can be noted on the clients record card and flagged on departure
Daniel Griswold
Agilysys
Daniel Griswold / photo: Agilsys
Agilysys Spa offers an integrated booking engine and membership portal, which allows operators and guests to create profiles to store their personal information and view previous and future bookings together with all retail transactions. The software also allows for secured storage of payment details. This single guest itinerary offers spa staff an insight into a guest’s activities across the property, which provide them with the necessary data to recommend products that compliment a guest’s lifestyle and past purchases.
Agilysys Spa Retail and Inventory systems work together to provide accurate tracking of inventory items. This robust reporting system has the capability to create reports on guest spend, popular retail items, commissions, and other sales-driven metrics. The inventory module allows managers to track retail items, manage quotes, create purchase orders, and issue receipts related to ordered merchandise.
With the same information, staff can use Agilysys Digital Marketing to send targeted email promotions that are product specific, or only available to loyal/high-profit guests.
A single guest itinerary offers spa staff an insight into a guest’s activities across the property
Guests can create a profile and store personal details / photo: Agilsys
Matt Lerner
Mindbody
Matt Lerner / photo: Mindbody
Booker, by Mindbody, simplifies the sale of products and services. The integrated POS allows staff to finalise a sale anywhere within a spa and wellness facility — so they can add retail products to services provided at their individual stations, or at the checkout counter.
Booker also makes it easy to offer discounts and special offers — creating new and personalised opportunities for in-house retail sales.
The system allows operators to store up to three credit cards within a customer’s profile to enable quick pay for future purchases and staff can easily select whichever card the client requests when completing a purchase in-store. When checking out through online booking, clients can even choose a standard tip percentage that will be automatically applied to their future appointments, and they can also manage their own payment information.
Booker’s inventory tracking also makes it easy for spa and wellness facilities to manage their product inventory by allowing them to oversee and optimise their inventory, based on buying trends, so they order the right number of products to meet their customers’ demands.
Clients can choose a standard tip percentage that will be automatically applied to future appointments
Jasmine Hurst
SpaSoft
Jasmine Hurst / photo: spasoft
SpaSoft not only tracks, sells, and reports on all products within a spa business it also offers features such as Product Recommendations and Promotional Products to make selling easy for the spa team.
With Product Recommendations, therapists can recommend products to guests and track them within their profile so they can purchase at POS. Promotional Products can optimise retail sales and assist spas in getting creative when promoting products, whether it’s bundling with services, offering BOGOs (buy one get one free) or by offering discounts.
Spa operators can also find out what their inventory is worth by using purchase orders to track and report on quantity and cost of retail products. SpaSoft can then supply products to multiple outlets, keeping the revenue segmented for inventory tracking and revenue reporting. In addition, spas can set up their cost price calculation the way they want, either FIFO (first in first out) or average weighted.
SpaSoft’s reporting mechanism allows operators to make data-driven decisions. By leveraging reports such as top selling products, slow moving products and retail sales analyses, they can identify purchasing trends by vendor, product, or group segmentation.
Spas can identify purchasing trends by vendor, product, or group segmentation
Automatic product recommendations are a feature / photo: shutterstock/Sarawut Kh
Ricky Daniels
TryBe
Ricky Daniels / photo: TryBe
With Trybe, operators can tailormake the customer journey when going through an online booking. This means there is ample opportunity to upsell and push sales at the click of a button. For example, the option to add a glass of bubbly on arrival or upgrade to an afternoon tea can be included, allowing the customer to make these decisions without a salesperson present.
Allowing for a smooth journey and customer loyalty, customers can opt to have their card details saved, which makes the checkout process easier and these are automatically updated when they expire. The checkout also supports mobile wallets such as Apple Pay and Google Pay to ensure frictionless purchases.
For stock reordering, Trybe software continually monitors stock levels and converts the data into reports. The reordering option ensures operators know their stock levels are taken care of and orders for minimum order quantities can be raised once items fall below order levels.
To help make target marketing easier, the system is able to remember the guest and what they have previously bought, through the Trybe system’s customer profiles area.
The system remembers the guest and what they have previously ordered, making target marketing easier
Charity Hudnall
Vagaro
Charity Hudnall / photo: Vagaro
The Vagaro system imports product inventory to an account for free so spa operators can easily manage in-house products in one place. The software allows the creation of product bundles to help pair top-selling items with less popular products to increase sales and revenue. For seamless upselling integration with spa services, a physical inventory can be easily added to a customer’s checkout process on the platform by simply scanning the product bar code.
Vagaro allows both businesses and customers to save payment details on file for future and repeat purchases, which allows businesses to charge the payment method on file at checkout, while customers can autofill saved information for a simpler checkout process.
Bloom Healing Botanical Spa found Vagaro when they were looking for easy-to-use, scalable software. One of their best-selling signature products is their skin care line, a collection of healing botanicals they create and bottle in-house. Vagaro’s inventory feature helped to optimise sales because it helped them keep track of all products, including the ingredients they needed to order from their formulator to create the top-selling botanicals.
Product bundles pair top-selling items with less popular products to increase sales and revenue
Inventory features help optimise product sales / photo: shutterstock/Robert Przybysz
Sudheer Koneru
Zenoti
Sudheer Koneru / photo: Zenoti
Zenoti software helps to boost retail sales by giving automated product suggestions to spa and wellness providers – based on stored guest data regarding their preferences and spending habits. Providers see these personalised recommendations via a mobile device during the visit, making it easy for them to highlight products and upsell their tickets.
The all-in-one software tracks product inventory data, helping spas to manage costs and empower businesses to increase their retail revenue. Using real-time data and business analytics, spa operators can make timely stock management decisions with live inventory insights that automatically detects when it’s time to restock a product. The system also generates pre-filled purchase orders for suppliers and can segment the data by property location.
Zenoti also offers personalised marketing. With behaviour-based campaigns, micro-segmentation, and AI-powered advertising, the Zenoti platform identifies specific audience segments based on their previous activity and preferences.
As part of their switch to Zenoti, the Citrus Salon in California integrated retail products into their online experience so new and returning guests could buy products online, explore service options and book appointments. In one year, their retail sales doubled and online appointment bookings increased by 39 per cent.
Providers see customer’s personalised recommendations via a mobile device during their visit
Read more from this issue of Attractions Management magazine
View contents of Attractions Management 2022 issue 3
Editor's letter: Salus per natura
Although great buildings lie at the heart of the spa and wellness experience, operators are turning to nature to deliver healing journeys, says Liz Terry
Spa People: Thierry Malleret
We talk to the economist behind Monthly Barometer about key trends emerging in the wellness sector, such as a greater connection with nature
Spa People: Verena Lasvigne
The founder of VLF Spa Consulting shares her learnings from a career running spas on three continents
Spa People: Kim Weller
The wellbeing director of Banyan Tree tells us about the rollout of the company's new brand, Veya – for mind/body wellness
New opening: Loisium Spa
A look at the new luxurious spa situated at the heart of France's celebrated Champagne region
Interview: Neil Jacobs
The CEO of Six Senses talks about creating an eco-system around the brand to deliver hotels, clubs, residential, offices and resorts
Project preview: Next generation wellness
We take our first look at Tulah, the new clinical wellness retreat brand about to make its debut in Kerala, India, and speak to its CEO
ISPA Research: Rate of recovery
Russell Donaldson digs deeper into ISPA's 2022 US Spa Industry Study and considers the industry's resurgence since the end of pandemic lockdowns
Sponsored: Gharieni: Delivering results
Innovation is the hallmark of Gharieni experiences, meeting the rapidly
evolving needs of wellness seekers within the spa and wellness environment
New opening: Lanserhof Sylt
Lisa Starr reports on the industry's eagerly awaited wellness experience – nestled within sand dunes on the German island of Sylt
Healing: Emotional rescue
As people increasingly seek support for their emotional wellbeing, Jane Kitchen talks to the operators who are digging deeper to deliver genuine transformation
Promotion: TechnoAlpin: Powerful contrast
Spa clients can enjoy super-cool relaxation and pain-relief at Sächsische Staatsbäder in Bad Brambach thanks to a TechnoAlpin SnowRoom
Concept: Soneva Soul
The CEO and co-founder of Soneva, Sonu Shivdasani, talks about the philosophy behind the company's new wellness concept, Soneva Soul
An opportunity to reimagine one of the UK’s most recognisable towers has been formally
opened by Rivington Hark, as St Johns Beacon invites operators and partners to shape its
next phase. [more...]
Staff shortages within the sector mean software assistance in areas such as retail, payment automation and marketing is more important than ever when it comes to
business profitability. Karen Maxwell looks at some of the solutions available
Today’s retail software can help spas deliver offers and drive sales / photo: shutterstock/fizkes
Guenther Poellabauer
TAC
Guenther Poellabauer / photo: TAC
TAC’s digital signage, self-service machines and touch POS (point of sale) contribute significantly to increased sales opportunities within a spa environment. In-house marketing with digital signage allows direct communication of services/products in a targeted way via strategically positioned screens, and special offers can be advertised via a webshop. Vending machines enable guests to buy tickets and drinks independently, and with TAC machines, towels are always provided.
Payment information is securely encrypted using reliable technology. Once credit card information is kept, it is automatically converted into a token and stored.
Whether at checkouts, in the webshop or at vending machines, the TAC Pay integrated payment interface ensures that one-time and recurring payments, and refunds are processed easily, quickly and securely through the TAC software.
TAC’s stock module supports inventories, supplier, and order management. If minimum stock levels are reached, items appear in order proposals. In inventory management, goods movements are also considered that have not come about through normal business, such as breakage, theft or returns.
One-time and recurring payments and refunds are processed easily, quickly and securely
Sal Capizzi
Book4Time
Sal Capizzi / photo: Book4Time
Book4Time has added a retail ‘shopping cart’ feature which allows both practitioners and desk staff to hold suggestive retail items to a client’s ticket without affecting the transaction. If the client decides they want to purchase these items they can be moved to ‘purchase’ with the click of a button. It also operates as a standalone ‘point of sale’ system for retail boutiques within a spa property.
Regarding the checkout process, the system is able to save payment details with the latest GDPR secure technology – allowing clients to checkout both service and retail items seamlessly through Book4Time Pay. In addition, contactless payment solutions, including 15-plus interfaces with prominent, international credit card merchants, is also available.
Book4Time sales reports track sales and break them down by vendor, product type and line, so spa managers can run specific reports that show how much retail specific revenue has been sold by each team member.
Spending reports also offer insights on which retail products sell well and which items could be an area of opportunity.
A shopping cart can hold suggestive retail items to a client’s ticket without affecting transaction
The software can track sales made by each team member / photo: shutterstock/Dmytro Zinkevych
Oliver Cahill
Premier
Oliver Cahill / photo: premier
Core, by Premier Software, makes upselling simple and intuitive so operators can use retail allocation and recommended product features, both of which prompt staff to sell products at the point of billing after their spa experience. While retail allocation triggers the sale of products associated with the treatment booked, recommended products are based on personal recommendations from the staff member. These can be noted on the client’s record card and flagged on departure.
Core integrates with Premier’s online-booking platform, onejourney, to provide a unified, tailored shopping experience. Complete with revenue generating features and one basket for booking online, onejourney also links Apple Pay and digital wallets to the client’s account and all client purchases are stored on an individual record.
Core’s reporting feature assists the spa manager in monitoring a range of information, which includes the number of retail products sold, and by whom, to facilitate rewards with commission and track best sellers. By setting a minimum product level, the system offers a prompt when an item falls below this threshold and needs reordering. Core can also be set up to create order forms, accept deliveries and transfer stock between sites.
Recommendations can be noted on the clients record card and flagged on departure
Daniel Griswold
Agilysys
Daniel Griswold / photo: Agilsys
Agilysys Spa offers an integrated booking engine and membership portal, which allows operators and guests to create profiles to store their personal information and view previous and future bookings together with all retail transactions. The software also allows for secured storage of payment details. This single guest itinerary offers spa staff an insight into a guest’s activities across the property, which provide them with the necessary data to recommend products that compliment a guest’s lifestyle and past purchases.
Agilysys Spa Retail and Inventory systems work together to provide accurate tracking of inventory items. This robust reporting system has the capability to create reports on guest spend, popular retail items, commissions, and other sales-driven metrics. The inventory module allows managers to track retail items, manage quotes, create purchase orders, and issue receipts related to ordered merchandise.
With the same information, staff can use Agilysys Digital Marketing to send targeted email promotions that are product specific, or only available to loyal/high-profit guests.
A single guest itinerary offers spa staff an insight into a guest’s activities across the property
Guests can create a profile and store personal details / photo: Agilsys
Matt Lerner
Mindbody
Matt Lerner / photo: Mindbody
Booker, by Mindbody, simplifies the sale of products and services. The integrated POS allows staff to finalise a sale anywhere within a spa and wellness facility — so they can add retail products to services provided at their individual stations, or at the checkout counter.
Booker also makes it easy to offer discounts and special offers — creating new and personalised opportunities for in-house retail sales.
The system allows operators to store up to three credit cards within a customer’s profile to enable quick pay for future purchases and staff can easily select whichever card the client requests when completing a purchase in-store. When checking out through online booking, clients can even choose a standard tip percentage that will be automatically applied to their future appointments, and they can also manage their own payment information.
Booker’s inventory tracking also makes it easy for spa and wellness facilities to manage their product inventory by allowing them to oversee and optimise their inventory, based on buying trends, so they order the right number of products to meet their customers’ demands.
Clients can choose a standard tip percentage that will be automatically applied to future appointments
Jasmine Hurst
SpaSoft
Jasmine Hurst / photo: spasoft
SpaSoft not only tracks, sells, and reports on all products within a spa business it also offers features such as Product Recommendations and Promotional Products to make selling easy for the spa team.
With Product Recommendations, therapists can recommend products to guests and track them within their profile so they can purchase at POS. Promotional Products can optimise retail sales and assist spas in getting creative when promoting products, whether it’s bundling with services, offering BOGOs (buy one get one free) or by offering discounts.
Spa operators can also find out what their inventory is worth by using purchase orders to track and report on quantity and cost of retail products. SpaSoft can then supply products to multiple outlets, keeping the revenue segmented for inventory tracking and revenue reporting. In addition, spas can set up their cost price calculation the way they want, either FIFO (first in first out) or average weighted.
SpaSoft’s reporting mechanism allows operators to make data-driven decisions. By leveraging reports such as top selling products, slow moving products and retail sales analyses, they can identify purchasing trends by vendor, product, or group segmentation.
Spas can identify purchasing trends by vendor, product, or group segmentation
Automatic product recommendations are a feature / photo: shutterstock/Sarawut Kh
Ricky Daniels
TryBe
Ricky Daniels / photo: TryBe
With Trybe, operators can tailormake the customer journey when going through an online booking. This means there is ample opportunity to upsell and push sales at the click of a button. For example, the option to add a glass of bubbly on arrival or upgrade to an afternoon tea can be included, allowing the customer to make these decisions without a salesperson present.
Allowing for a smooth journey and customer loyalty, customers can opt to have their card details saved, which makes the checkout process easier and these are automatically updated when they expire. The checkout also supports mobile wallets such as Apple Pay and Google Pay to ensure frictionless purchases.
For stock reordering, Trybe software continually monitors stock levels and converts the data into reports. The reordering option ensures operators know their stock levels are taken care of and orders for minimum order quantities can be raised once items fall below order levels.
To help make target marketing easier, the system is able to remember the guest and what they have previously bought, through the Trybe system’s customer profiles area.
The system remembers the guest and what they have previously ordered, making target marketing easier
Charity Hudnall
Vagaro
Charity Hudnall / photo: Vagaro
The Vagaro system imports product inventory to an account for free so spa operators can easily manage in-house products in one place. The software allows the creation of product bundles to help pair top-selling items with less popular products to increase sales and revenue. For seamless upselling integration with spa services, a physical inventory can be easily added to a customer’s checkout process on the platform by simply scanning the product bar code.
Vagaro allows both businesses and customers to save payment details on file for future and repeat purchases, which allows businesses to charge the payment method on file at checkout, while customers can autofill saved information for a simpler checkout process.
Bloom Healing Botanical Spa found Vagaro when they were looking for easy-to-use, scalable software. One of their best-selling signature products is their skin care line, a collection of healing botanicals they create and bottle in-house. Vagaro’s inventory feature helped to optimise sales because it helped them keep track of all products, including the ingredients they needed to order from their formulator to create the top-selling botanicals.
Product bundles pair top-selling items with less popular products to increase sales and revenue
Inventory features help optimise product sales / photo: shutterstock/Robert Przybysz
Sudheer Koneru
Zenoti
Sudheer Koneru / photo: Zenoti
Zenoti software helps to boost retail sales by giving automated product suggestions to spa and wellness providers – based on stored guest data regarding their preferences and spending habits. Providers see these personalised recommendations via a mobile device during the visit, making it easy for them to highlight products and upsell their tickets.
The all-in-one software tracks product inventory data, helping spas to manage costs and empower businesses to increase their retail revenue. Using real-time data and business analytics, spa operators can make timely stock management decisions with live inventory insights that automatically detects when it’s time to restock a product. The system also generates pre-filled purchase orders for suppliers and can segment the data by property location.
Zenoti also offers personalised marketing. With behaviour-based campaigns, micro-segmentation, and AI-powered advertising, the Zenoti platform identifies specific audience segments based on their previous activity and preferences.
As part of their switch to Zenoti, the Citrus Salon in California integrated retail products into their online experience so new and returning guests could buy products online, explore service options and book appointments. In one year, their retail sales doubled and online appointment bookings increased by 39 per cent.
Providers see customer’s personalised recommendations via a mobile device during their visit
Read more from this issue of Attractions Management magazine
View contents of Attractions Management 2022 issue 3
Editor's letter: Salus per natura
Although great buildings lie at the heart of the spa and wellness experience, operators are turning to nature to deliver healing journeys, says Liz Terry
Spa People: Thierry Malleret
We talk to the economist behind Monthly Barometer about key trends emerging in the wellness sector, such as a greater connection with nature
Spa People: Verena Lasvigne
The founder of VLF Spa Consulting shares her learnings from a career running spas on three continents
Spa People: Kim Weller
The wellbeing director of Banyan Tree tells us about the rollout of the company's new brand, Veya – for mind/body wellness
New opening: Loisium Spa
A look at the new luxurious spa situated at the heart of France's celebrated Champagne region
Interview: Neil Jacobs
The CEO of Six Senses talks about creating an eco-system around the brand to deliver hotels, clubs, residential, offices and resorts
Project preview: Next generation wellness
We take our first look at Tulah, the new clinical wellness retreat brand about to make its debut in Kerala, India, and speak to its CEO
ISPA Research: Rate of recovery
Russell Donaldson digs deeper into ISPA's 2022 US Spa Industry Study and considers the industry's resurgence since the end of pandemic lockdowns
Sponsored: Gharieni: Delivering results
Innovation is the hallmark of Gharieni experiences, meeting the rapidly
evolving needs of wellness seekers within the spa and wellness environment
New opening: Lanserhof Sylt
Lisa Starr reports on the industry's eagerly awaited wellness experience – nestled within sand dunes on the German island of Sylt
Healing: Emotional rescue
As people increasingly seek support for their emotional wellbeing, Jane Kitchen talks to the operators who are digging deeper to deliver genuine transformation
Promotion: TechnoAlpin: Powerful contrast
Spa clients can enjoy super-cool relaxation and pain-relief at Sächsische Staatsbäder in Bad Brambach thanks to a TechnoAlpin SnowRoom
Concept: Soneva Soul
The CEO and co-founder of Soneva, Sonu Shivdasani, talks about the philosophy behind the company's new wellness concept, Soneva Soul
Hotel de France, located on the British Isle of Jersey, has created a wellness retreat package
that includes a hot yoga session that will take place in Jersey Zoo’s butterfly sanctuary.
A new immersive attraction designed to transport visitors into the final hours of ancient Pompeii
is preparing to open near the world-famous archaeological site in southern Italy.
Experience design company, BRC Imagination Arts, has completed a transition that sees founder
Bob Rogers pass ownership of the business to four long-serving senior executives, while
remaining actively involved with the company.
Movie Park Germany has opened a new Paramount Pictures-themed attraction as part of its 30th
anniversary celebrations, using immersive storytelling and adaptive reuse to reinforce the park’s
longstanding “Hollywood in Germany” positioning.
Therme Manchester’s 28-acre development, which will include interconnected glass pavilions
that measure 65,000sq m, will be the largest bathing and wellbeing attraction in the world once
complete, according to prof David Russell, CEO of Therme UK.
Efteling has opened Hooghmoed, a new family drop tower designed to broaden the appeal of its
recently launched Sirene Island themed area and introduce younger visitors to thrill attractions.
A proposed Puy du Fou development near Bicester and Universal Destinations and Experiences’
planned resort in Bedford are emerging as part of a wider transformation of the Oxford–
Cambridge Growth Corridor into a major centre for UK leisure and tourism inv
Shedd Aquarium has opened the Immersion Theater developed in partnership with SimEx-
Iwerks, as part of a wider strategy to enhance the guest experience and create additional
revenue opportunities.
The UK government has announced a temporary reduction in VAT on visitor attractions and
children’s meals as part of a summer cost-of-living support package designed to stimulate the
visitor economy and encourage family days out.
As designer Yinka Ilori prepares for his first solo gallery show in London, he speaks exclusively
to CLADmag about his mission to spread joy, the power of play, and his bold approach to using
colour (including the colours you won’t see in his work).
The government of Thailand is exploring plans for a THB300bn (£6.3bn, US$8.3bn)
entertainment complex in the country’s Eastern Economic Corridor (EEC), with officials
proposing a large-scale theme park and sports destination as part of a broader tourism and
economic development strategy.
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