Posted on 11/12/2002 1:34:41 AM PST by chance33_98
New shopping technology could breed supermarket discrimination By Michael Liedtke The Associated Press (11-11-02)
MORAGA What if a shopping cart became a computer on wheels, a sales vehicle sophisticated enough to analyze individual buying habits so it could pinpoint which shoppers got the best prices?
Safeway Inc., the nations third-largest grocer, is quietly searching for the answer by testing a smart shopping cart. The trial reveals how retailers might capitalize on the reams of consumer information they have been stockpiling since the mid-1990s.
It is unfolding at two of Safeways northern California stores, one in the affluent town of Moraga near San Francisco, the other in rural Cameron Park.
Shoppers are greeted by the Magellan a shopping cart with a book-sized computer on the front handle. A side slot lets shoppers swipe their Safeway club cards the identification most major grocers now require for discounts on certain items.
Reading the club card enables the shopping carts computer to tap into the buying histories Safeway has compiled on most customers. The cart can then display four grocery items offered at sales prices unavailable to anyone else.
The computer also provides a guide to each consumers most frequently purchased items and monitors the shoppers steps through the aisles, flashing ads to promote nearby merchandise.
Safeway and other grocers experimenting with similar technology believe the tools will make it easier to reward their best customers and increase sales.
Keeping these customers happy is becoming even more important to supermarkets as they face increased competition from the likes of retail powerhouse Wal-Mart Inc.
The grocers also believe customers will embrace the carts other bells and whistles, such as store maps.
Consumer advocates fear the smart carts will cultivate a caste system in which grocers cater to big spenders by offering deep discounts unavailable to poorer consumers.
I am concerned that some people are going to be left behind by this technology, said John Vanderlippe, associate director for Consumers Against Supermarket Privacy Invasion and Numbering, a watchdog group.
The computer, for instance, could conclude that a single man generates relatively little profit compared to a mother buying groceries for her husband and two kids.
Theres a powerful incentive for supermarkets to be more discriminating about their prices.
Industry data show 30 percent of supermarket shoppers generate 75 percent of a stores sales. Analysts say it makes sense for grocers to pamper the big-spending customers to make sure they keep coming back.
But the best customers at supermarkets often get some of the worst treatment, said Arthur Middleton Hughes, a vice president for CSC Advanced Database Solutions, a database-building company in Schaumburg, Ill.
As an example, supermarket customers buying the most groceries are routinely stuck in the longest checkout lines while shoppers with just a few items use express lanes, Hughes said. Giving greater discounts to the best customers could be just one way to reward them for standing in longer lines.
But the technology also might work against big spenders. For instance, the smart cart might determine that a mother buys peanut butter for her kids every week, no matter the price, and conclude theres no reason to ever offer that shopper a discount.
Although the consumer response during the trials so far has been fairly good, Safeway doesnt have any current plans to introduce the smart-cart system in all 1,650 stores nationwide, spokesman Brian Dowling said.
We think this could be a unique way to deliver more offers to our customers, Dowling said. It would be a bad assumption to conclude all the offers will only go to high-income individuals.
Helen Rosenberg of Moraga swipes her card through the computerized cart to get more good deals, but she doesnt like the system.
Its horrible. Its totally like Big Brother is watching you, Rosenberg said.
Safeway isnt the first grocer to experiment with smart shopping carts. Last year, Iowa-based Hy-Vee Inc. tested similar technology that used infrared tracking devices and video screens to make special offers at some Kansas City, Mo. stores.
The company that developed that system, Salt Lake City-based Klever Marketing Inc., has been trying to sell its smart carts to toy stores, warehouse stores and other discount merchants, according to regulatory filings. Klever Marketing officials didnt return calls seeking further comment.
Smart-cart critics, meanwhile, hope the technology fails.
This idea could backfire, Vanderlippe said. It could help people realize just how much information they are sharing about themselves.
Hmmmmmm
Its horrible. Its totally like Big Brother is watching you, Rosenberg said.
But you continue to 'swipe' to save yourself a few pennies. Pathetic.
Every time I go to the local Winn-Dixie supermarket, they try to get me to sign up. I tell them I prefer to remain anonymous. I get a few strange looks for 'not complying'. Tough cookies.
Believe me when I say that I can completely relate to the stance taken here.
However, what would I care that they know what I buy at the supermarket. I'll bet it's not all that different from anyone elses. I eat meat, veggies, I use paper and canned goods. I buy beer, snacks, and sometimes health and beauty items.
If this allows them to target me with products that statistically I may like at a lower price, ok.
I understand the big brother argument and concerns over how others may use this information. I just can't relate to being harmed for buying tator tots on a regular basis:)
You buy Tator Tots??? HA! Anything you eat can and will be used against you....
So that is what the wife has been up to...Hmmmm.
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