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Supermarket giant ditches self-checkout for staffed tills

Author
Heath Moore,
Publish Date
Mon, 20 Nov 2023, 3:41pm
A supermarket giant in the UK is ditching self-service checkouts, saying customers prefer staffed services instead. Photo / Getty Images
A supermarket giant in the UK is ditching self-service checkouts, saying customers prefer staffed services instead. Photo / Getty Images

Supermarket giant ditches self-checkout for staffed tills

Author
Heath Moore,
Publish Date
Mon, 20 Nov 2023, 3:41pm

A supermarket giant is axing the now-common self-checkouts and bringing back fully-staffed checkouts, with the CEO saying 鈥渨e like to talk to people鈥.

High-end UK chain Booths made the drastic decision after they found machines to be 鈥渟low, unreliable and impersonal鈥, deciding that 鈥渞ather than artificial intelligence, we鈥檙e going for actual intelligence鈥.

It鈥檚 a brave move in an industry that has turned to automated services and convenience as well as a reduction in staff overheads.

Managing director Nigel Murray explained that the perception is that self-checkouts are more efficient for the customer, but Booths has actually found customers feel that鈥檚 not the case at all.

鈥淥ur customers have told us this over time, that the self-scan machines that we鈥檝e got in our stores they can be slow, they can be unreliable, they鈥檙e obviously impersonal,鈥 Murray told BBC Radio Lancashire.

鈥淲e stock quite a lot of loose items - fruit and veg and bakery - and as soon as you go to a self-scan with those, you鈥檝e got to get a visual verification on them, and some customers don鈥檛 know one different apple versus another, for example.鈥

Booths in the UK say customer feedback has led to the change. Photo / Getty Images
Booths in the UK say customer feedback has led to the change. Photo / Getty Images

He explained that creates a lot of 鈥渇ussing about鈥 and that employees already have to come over if someone has alcohol in their basket or there is an issue with items that don鈥檛 come with a barcode.

鈥淲e are a business that prides ourselves on the high standards and high levels of warm, personal care,鈥 Murray said.

鈥淲e like to talk to people and we鈥檙e really proud that we鈥檙e moving largely to a place where our customers are served by people, by human beings, so rather than artificial intelligence, we鈥檙e going for actual intelligence.鈥

The move is an interesting development, with retail experts in the UK saying staffed checkouts give employees the chance to upsell during interactions, but that removal of self-checkouts may also reduce the level of retail theft.

Many New Zealand supermarkets now use self checkout aisles as well as staffed checkouts. Pictured is the Newtown Countdown supermarket in Wellington. Photo by Mark Mitchell

Many New Zealand supermarkets now use self checkout aisles as well as staffed checkouts. Pictured is the Newtown Countdown supermarket in Wellington. Photo by Mark Mitchell

Brits backed up Booths鈥 findings, with many saying they鈥檙e happy with the announcement.

鈥淚 think shopping is a boring, mundane thing to do and I think if staff are there chatting to you, it just makes it better,鈥 one said.

Another added: 鈥淏rilliant decision there, often seems to be a longer wait time for the self-checkouts than the wait for the normal tills.鈥

鈥淟ove this. We need to start getting back into talking and meeting people again. Fabulous,鈥 a third commented.

New Zealand supermarkets respond

Many New Zealand supermarkets have adopted a predominantly self-checkout service in the past decade, with just a handful of staffed lanes.

Booths鈥 findings in the UK around customer preferences were somewhat of a surprise to Woolworths NZ.

So will New Zealand supermarket brands follow suit?

Woolworths New Zealand told the Herald they have found customer feedback on self-checkouts to be positive.

鈥淲e were surprised to see the report about Booths supermarkets getting rid of most of their self-checkouts and we have no plans to do similar,鈥 Woolworths said in a statement.

鈥淲e think our customers find it convenient to have options on how they buy their groceries at our stores.鈥

While part of Booths鈥 reasoning for ditching the self-checkouts was complaints about slow and unreliable scanning, Foodstuffs spokeswoman Emma Wooster indicated their customers have had the opposite experience.

In a statement to the Herald, Wooster said self-checkout shopping experiences are becoming even more popular for their customers.

Foodstuffs told the Herald self-checkout lanes at their stores across the country are proving popular.

Foodstuffs told the Herald self-checkout lanes at their stores across the country are proving popular.

鈥淥ur 500-plus local grocers are always working to ensure the in-store experience they provide for their customers is right for their customers and community,鈥 she said.

鈥淪elf-service checkouts are becoming increasingly popular with customers who want to do a quick shop with minimum waiting time, so they鈥檙e here to stay in our stores.

鈥淔our Square Britomart is a great example of this. The store in the heart of Auckland鈥檚 CBD opened last week and has eight self-service checkouts and two that are full service, and we鈥檙e finding our customers enjoy both the convenience and speed that self-service checkouts offer them.鈥

Booths鈥 move was partly down to items not being correctly scanned and some customers stealing goods.

In August, Woolworths New Zealand beefed up security with new high-tech cameras to catch self-service checkout cheats.

A number of Woolworths stores across the country were trialling camera technology to reduce the number of 鈥渕is-scans鈥 at the checkout, its head office confirmed.

Woolworths told the Herald at the time the trial uses overhead cameras angled towards the checkouts but stressed that 鈥渟trict security policies鈥 are in place to keep shoppers safe.

The technology records shoppers and their transactions, detecting if an item hasn鈥檛 been scanned correctly.

It claims the trial鈥檚 objective is to test the accuracy of the checkout process and 鈥渘ew stock loss prevention technology鈥.

Lined across the self-serve checkouts are black, spherical cameras focused on each station, whilst another smaller camera points down on the station from above.

During the trial, any customer who 鈥渕is-scans鈥 prompts a short video to play and highlights the affected product in the checkout.

鈥淢is-scans can include things like products being left in baskets or trolleys, [the] mis-scanning of products or passing a product through as something unrelated,鈥 a Woolworths statement said at the time.

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