You have all heard the old adage ‘stack them
shelves high and let them fly’ referring of course to product in our case any
food product. All food retailers suffer
when there are holes on the shelves or out of
stock items, as
customer want what they want and want it now. Technology just may be the
solutions to out of stock grocery store shelves.
Yes, a robot, named Tally, will begin
scanning grocery store aisles at three St. Louis-area Schnucks stores in a six-week pilot
program this week. The robot will check aisles three times a day to look for
out-of-stock items and make sure items and price tags properly.
Dave Steck, the chain’s vice president
of IT and infrastructure, announced a partnership with San Francisco-based
Simbe Robotics stating “We’re
excited to see what this partnership brings,” “This is just one of many ways
that Schnucks is staying at the forefront of technology to enhance our
customers’ shopping experiences.”
Schnucks is a regional grocery store
chain that has close to 100 stores in Missouri, Illinois, Indiana, Wisconsin
and Iowa. They will use an adjustable robot to monitor items on store shelves but is hopeful that the
robot “may open up a world of other possibilities” with the data it collects.
Simbe CEO Brad Bogolea told the local newspaper
that the robot’s ability to find items that need to be restocked and pricing
errors allows employees to focus on other tasks. The robot has already been
scanning aisles in other stores across the country, including some Target
stores in San Francisco last year.
Mr Bogolea stated “The goal of Tally is
to create more of a feedback mechanism,” “Although most retailers have good
supply chain intelligence, and point-of-sale data on what they’ve sold, what’s
challenging for retailers is understanding the true state of merchandise on
shelves. Everyone sees value in higher quality, more frequent information
across the entire value chain.”
How are you driving down cost, reducing
out of stocks items? Do you have redundant programs or systems and still have
out of stock items? If success does
leave clues and it does could a robot look at things differently enough to
edify your operation? So just who is
watching your store?
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