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Woolworths to trial ‘scan and go’ technology that could do away with the checkout

THE checkout is probably the most dreaded part of any visit to the supermarket. But it could soon become a thing of the past.

Amazon Go revolutionises grocery shopping

IF EVEN self serve check-outs are just too laborious for you, Woolworths may have the answer. It’s trialling some snazzy new tech that does away with the checkout altogether.

At its supermarket in the ritzy Sydney harbourside suburb of Double Bay, the retail giant is letting customers trial a new “scan and go” system.

If a success, it could spell the end for the checkout — self-service or otherwise — as customers put items straight into their bags. It’s also a sign of the steadily diminishing role coins and notes are playing in the retail sector.

The trial could eventually lead to the end of self service check-outs. Picture: AAP Image/Joel Carrett
The trial could eventually lead to the end of self service check-outs. Picture: AAP Image/Joel Carrett

Woolies said the new way to pay could potentially “transform the shopping experience”.

From Thursday, several thousand shoppers already signed up to its loyalty program will be able to downland a special app to their phones.

The trial, which is only taking place at the one store, will mean customers can choose their products, scan the barcode through their phone and then directly drop the items into their bags. So, it’s bad news for baskets too.

Special weighing scales for fruit and veg will display a barcode which can also be scanned and will then feed the correct price into the app.

When the shop is all done, customers will do one final scan at a terminal near the exit. The app will tot up the total and automatically subtract the amount from a linked card. There will be no need to go through a checkout at all.

Woolworths is trialling ‘scan and go’ technology at its Double Bay store in Sydney
Woolworths is trialling ‘scan and go’ technology at its Double Bay store in Sydney

The app has been developed by the company’s in-house technological innovation division, dubbed WooliesX.

Woolworths head of payments Paul Monnington said customers were pushing the company to make shopping more convenient.

“We believe smartphone technology and mobile payments have the potential to transform the shopping experience for our customers in the future.

“This trial is not only about testing new technology, it’s also about seeing how our customers and teams respond to a completely new style of shopping.”

A very happy customer, maybe recalling a joke, scanning her bottle of water.
A very happy customer, maybe recalling a joke, scanning her bottle of water.
Loose items can be weighed, with a barcode then appearing. When the barcode is scanned, it transfers the dollar amount to the app.
Loose items can be weighed, with a barcode then appearing. When the barcode is scanned, it transfers the dollar amount to the app.

Mr Monnington was at pains to point out you could still pay the normal way at Double Bay.

When the trial finishes up, he said the firm will “assess future options” such as a wider rollout.

Without a staff member checking purchases, one question will be how Woolies can prevent shifty customers walking out with goods they haven’t paid for.

The chain certainly isn’t the first in the world to try out scan and go technology. Amazon has opened a handful of so-called “Amazon Go” stores which use much the same technology that Woolworths is employing.

While China’s Alibaba already has a network of supermarkets called Hema where customers can scan their shopping and have it delivered within 30 minutes to their homes.

But Woolies reckons it’s the first in Australia to give the technology a whirl.

Already, Woolworths accepts payment by Apple Pay, whereby customers simply wave their phone, which is connected to their payment card, in front of the register. But they still have to put their products through the till.

Digital giant Alibaba already has a chain of supermarkets in China where you can scan and go.
Digital giant Alibaba already has a chain of supermarkets in China where you can scan and go.

In July, a Woolies executive told news.com.au they were steadily shrinking the number of cash accepting check-outs in busy stores as customers’ embraced digital and card payments.

Woolworths’ Metro division managing director Steve Greentree said customers were moving away from physical money.

“In all of our city locations, people are just ambivalent to cash now. They just don’t use it so here (at the Woolworths Metro store on Sydney’s Pitt St) we have three registers that take cash and that’s it; every other self-service is card only, so it’s tap and go or Apple pay,” he said.

Cashless tills were safer, he said, because they weren’t targeted by thieves. With fewer moving parts, they were also less prone to breaking down and without having to store cash and coins, they took up less room. That meant more check-outs per store.

“They’re just much more efficient.”

benedict.brook@news.com.au

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Original URL: https://www.news.com.au/finance/business/retail/woolworths-to-trial-scan-and-go-technology-that-could-do-away-with-the-checkout/news-story/81a41a356f5402c4501a934e2df96dce