Back in the day even Steven Johnson, Grocerant Guru® at Tacoma, WA based Foodservice Solutions® was a
kid, and played with remote control cars.
There is no doubt in Johnson’s mind that the same was true for many at
Albertsons / Safeway. So, they must have
liked it then because they are bringing remote control delivery to select
neighborhoods.
Sometimes taking one step back helps when
you’re trying to take two steps forward? So, what do you think? Is a remote-control delivery a new and
disruptive technology? Johnson, thinks not.
Albertsons
partnered with Tortoise, an automated
logistics company focused on last-mile solutions, to pilot its
remote-controlled zero-emission delivery cart in Northern California, in an
effort to bring some industry buzz and new electricity to the brand. Is there more to it than that?
So, the new Safeway cart, powered by Mountain View,
Calif.-based Tortoise, is equipped with a camera and a
speaker and is guided through the neighborhood by a remote operator. The cart
can hold up to 120 pounds of groceries in four lockable containers for a
contactless delivery experience.
Currently, the service is open for
testing with Safeway associates in select Northern California neighborhoods.
During these early stages and as part of the pilot process, the cart will be accompanied
by a human. When the cart arrives at a home, the customer receives a text to
come outside and pick up their groceries. The carts travel at an average speed
of 3 mph and are powered 100% by an electric battery.
Industry buzz, yes, new brand electricity,
yes, leading technology, maybe not. However, it is a strong step and finding a
solution and at times you must take two steps back to take one forward.
Johnson stated “that in my minds-eye the
new electricity must be very efficient for the supply chain and includes such
things as; corporate partnerships, fresh foods, smell, online
ordering, delivery, self-driving cars, plant-based foods, music, streaming,
food sampling,
toy’s, podcast, movies, cereal, developing brands, grocerant
positioning, fresh food messaging, autonomous delivery, cashier-less
retail, plates, glasses, cash-less payments, digital hand-held marketing.
All food and beverage retailers to
survive the next generation of retail must embrace the artificial intelligence
revolution while simultaneously embracing fresh food and beverages that
are portable, fresh, with differentiation that is familiar not different and
this fits that bill according to Johnson.
Other efforts Boise, Idaho-based
Albertsons has made recently to make the shopping experience more convenient
includes a pilot of pickup lockers and
an automated pickup kiosk at select Jewel-Osco locations in Chicago. The
company already offers delivery and Drive Up & Go options through its
websites and apps. Albertsons is also expanding its relationships with third-party operators to
provide delivery options in as fast as two hours.
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