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Supermarkets Shift To Self Checkout Lanes
Las Vegas Sun ^ | 6/5/04 | AP/Ira Dreyfuss

Posted on 06/06/2004 4:36:52 AM PDT by KentTrappedInLiberalSeattle

WASHINGTON (AP) - Supermarket checkout clerks are going the way of the bank teller - available if you want one, avoidable if you don't.

Self-checkout machines, which let customers scan, bag and pay for their own groceries, offer shoppers a chance to avoid the lines at the checkout stands.

"This is like an ATM for them. It's quicker and easier," said Jennifer Panetta, a spokeswoman for the six-state Harris Teeter chain, based in Matthews, N.C. "They are in pretty much all our stores."

About one-quarter of grocery chains are trying them now, with some 34,000 machines in use in stores in 2003, said market analyst Greg Buzek, president of IHL Consulting Group in Franklin, Tenn.

Buzek, who wrote a report on the equipment, predicts that by 2007 there will be 244,000 self-checkout machines in stores and that virtually every chain will at least some of them.

"The way we shop has changed quite a bit in the last 15 years," he said in an interview. "But the checkout lane hasn't changed all that much."

For example, shoppers have been shifting from grocery carts to plastic baskets, and adding short stops to the big weekly grocery purchase. More than half of supermarket customers bring fewer than 15 items to the register, and self-checkout is ideal for them, according to Buzek's report.

Express lanes were set up to speed these customers through, but self-checkout can be even faster, Buzek said. A space that could fit one or two lanes can handle four to six self-checkout machines, reducing the chance of getting stuck in a line. "There's usually nobody in line at self-checkout," Buzek said.

Customers take longer than a clerk to ring up and bag groceries, but the shoppers do not seem to notice that, the report said. Because the customer is keeping busy scanning and bagging instead of waiting while the clerk does the work, time seems to pass faster.

"I think this is faster if you know what you are doing," said Khatool Reha of Reston, Va., as she dropped a couple of cans of spaghetti into a plastic bag at a Harris Teeter store. "There is no need to wait in line."

When she buys more than 10 items, "I just go over there," said Reha, motioning toward the staffed lanes.

That is the way it is supposed to work, Buzek said. Getting more small purchasers into the self-checkout lanes frees cashiers in the staffed lanes to deal with big-ticket purchases that customers prefer to have someone else bag, he said.

For retailers, the use of self-checkout can reduce staffing at the front of the store. One staffer typically is the only employee needed to assist customers at the self-checkout lanes when shoppers cannot get a bar code to scan or do not know where to put their credit card.

Buzek said there also is less theft at a self-checkout counter.

Employees are responsible for most of the theft in a retail store, he said. One common form is "sweethearting," in which the clerk helps a friend by passing a cheaper item over the scanner but dropping a more expensive one into the bag.

That is hard to do on a self-checkout machine. The computer can identify the object, typically weighing each product-coded item. A customer drops the item into the bag after it is scanned, and if the weight of the bag doesn't change by the proper amount, the machine halts the transaction until things get straightened out.

Wal-Mart has self-checkout in about 840 of its more than 3,000 stores, and is putting the equipment into all of its new stores as they open, said Gus Whitcomb, a spokesman for the chain in Bentonville, Ark.

Whitcomb said Wal-Mart customers have put just about everything through the scanners - even ready-to-assemble desks in "a big gigantic box." Other stores, such as The Home Depot hardware chain, also have been using self-checkout.

Not every food store chain is leaping to the technology. Publix Super Markets, based in Lakeland, Fla., has about 800 stores, mostly in Florida, but only about a dozen have self-checkout, and seven of those were already in stores the chain purchased in Tennessee, said Brenda Reid, a Publix spokeswoman.

The corporate culture at Publix emphasizes having staffers do things for customers, Reid said. "Self-checkout would be very countercultural," she said.

Publix stores where the manager sees a demand for self-checkout can get it, she said, but "nobody is beating down our doors."


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: automation; cashiers; clerks; employment; jobs; paininthebutt; selfcheckout; selfservice; supermarkets
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To: Uncle Meat

ROFLOL!!! Yep...one of them might cool me off.

:-D


121 posted on 06/06/2004 1:11:02 PM PDT by 2Jedismom (He has slipped the surly bonds of Earth...)
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To: Rebelbase
It's fast if there isn't a technically challenged customer ahead of you.

I go super-slow just for the fun of it. Push all the wrong buttons, etc!! Great fun!!!

122 posted on 06/06/2004 1:13:38 PM PDT by ExtremeUnction
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To: 2Jedismom

We can settle this without you getting supersoaked.I could come to your house for chicken dinner.


123 posted on 06/06/2004 1:14:17 PM PDT by Uncle Meat
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To: Uncle Meat

Supersoakers happen when NASA designers have too much fun.


124 posted on 06/06/2004 1:16:36 PM PDT by cyborg
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To: Woahhs
Because greedy grocery corporations like to screw you![/sarcasm]

Oh, thank God you added sarcasm.

Giant grocery corporations are not in it for the dollar and profit. They are there to smile at us and say hello as we enter and to treat us like valued customers. The thought of ripping off consumers has never crossed the minds of those that run these large corporation. Like Enron and other corporations, it was all just a simple mistake. These CEOs are not really concerned with large profits and multi million dollar salaries. There only concern is to provide you with happy service and a friendly hello.

125 posted on 06/06/2004 1:16:57 PM PDT by Joe Hadenuf (I failed anger management class, they decided to give me a passing grade anyway)
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To: Uncle Meat; Overtaxed

How 'bout fried eggs? The chickens are a bit boney to make good eatin'.

;-)

But not anytime soon...my youngest jedi is sick. He's having "the Pukings". ;-)


126 posted on 06/06/2004 1:18:27 PM PDT by 2Jedismom (He has slipped the surly bonds of Earth...)
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To: Uncle Meat; 2Jedismom
If there ever is a time to spray you with a hose,it would be now.

No! No! You've got it all wrong: you "go spraying" with a hose. :)

127 posted on 06/06/2004 1:18:55 PM PDT by Overtaxed
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To: cyborg

Sorry,I'm kinda slow today.I don't get it.


128 posted on 06/06/2004 1:20:07 PM PDT by Uncle Meat
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To: Uncle Meat

You mentioned getting supersoaked...the inventor of it was a NASA thermodynamics systems designer :) BTW, you can't be slower than me. I had one cup of coffee today.


129 posted on 06/06/2004 1:21:12 PM PDT by cyborg
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To: Overtaxed; Uncle Meat

LOL!!!

My friend OT here has actually heard this rant before. In person.


130 posted on 06/06/2004 1:21:33 PM PDT by 2Jedismom (He has slipped the surly bonds of Earth...)
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To: Overtaxed

All right damn it,I'm tired of you folks trying to tell me how to talk.I'm going to highjack a firetruck and hose you all and eat all your pet chickens.


131 posted on 06/06/2004 1:22:51 PM PDT by Uncle Meat
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To: 2Jedismom

Heard this "ranting" before, hehehe. Attack of the Killer Gerunds!


132 posted on 06/06/2004 1:31:08 PM PDT by Overtaxed
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To: ninenot
I'm not all that sensitive; doesn't bother me at all--but it is definitely a two-way street.

No, it's not. Part of her job is to represent the company to its customers, whether she likes those customers, or not. Conversely, simply paying for the item or service completely fulfills any obligation on the part of the customer.

Being nice to your customers is just good business practice. *Paying* is good consumer practice.

Now if you're talking relations between business entities, where the prices aren't set unilaterally, that equation changes a bit, and you *do* wind up on the proverbial two way street.

133 posted on 06/06/2004 1:39:02 PM PDT by Woahhs (America is an idea, not an address)
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To: Joe Hadenuf

Hey Joe! How 'bout them '02 Bucs?

Who were those candy-asses they whipped again? I'm having trouble remebering?


134 posted on 06/06/2004 1:52:42 PM PDT by Woahhs (America is an idea, not an address)
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To: 2Jedismom
How 'bout fried eggs? The chickens are a bit boney to make good eatin'.

The one your son in the blue shirt is holding looks healthy,that one will do.

135 posted on 06/06/2004 2:27:42 PM PDT by Uncle Meat
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To: Woahhs

She understands that, so do I.

But it's still a disappointment. I expect more from people than that--it's the way I was raised. My mom would remind me to be "at least CIVIL"--meaning returning a greeting.


136 posted on 06/06/2004 5:51:11 PM PDT by ninenot (Minister of Membership, TomasTorquemadaGentlemen'sClub)
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To: johniegrad

No offense meant, none taken, my FRiend.


137 posted on 06/06/2004 9:17:29 PM PDT by Terabitten (Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of All Who Threaten It)
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To: goldstategop
Once you get the hang of self-checkout, its a great alternative when you have a few items you want to take out the doors with you in a hurry.

Yup and I used to be deadset against them at first but it turns out, they really do help. Of course, alot of bugs need to be worked out, I have noticed the machines are really fussy and always insisting that you are trying to rip off the store when you are actually doing it correctly. They need to get that fixed since it is highly annoying to be constantly told you 'have unauthorized items in the bag' when you really don't.

Still, local Safeways around here have stubbornely refused to install these machines and the result is that whether you are buying 1 item or 100, you will be waiting in a long line as only 1 checkout stand out of 15 is open and checkout clerks are constantly being called off their breaks to come help out. Safeway needs to get with it.

138 posted on 06/06/2004 9:35:16 PM PDT by Citizen of the Savage Nation
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To: Rebelbase
It's fast if there isn't a technically challenged customer ahead of you.

That's what I would think at first, but in reality, 'technically challenged' customers are intimidated by these things and avoid them like the plague. Plus, there are usually more stands open then customers using them so you never have to wait.

Now if they could just fix the damn things to stop pestering people who are doing it right, things would be great.

139 posted on 06/06/2004 9:37:20 PM PDT by Citizen of the Savage Nation
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To: KentTrappedInLiberalSeattle
This is news? These things are at least 5 years old.
140 posted on 06/06/2004 9:53:39 PM PDT by MitchellC (No gamma rays for oil.)
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