By
Steven Johnson, Grocerant Guru®
Tacoma, WA-based Foodservice Solutions®
For
decades, grocery retailers competed primarily on price. Today, they compete on convenience,
time savings, meal solutions, personalization, portability, digital engagement,
and trust. New Jersey's decision to become the second state to prohibit
surveillance pricing may seem like a setback for retailers seeking new pricing
technologies, but in reality it may become an unexpected catalyst that forces
supermarkets to focus on what consumers actually value.
Ironically,
removing the temptation to pursue AI-driven individualized pricing could
ultimately save grocery retailers millions of dollars by redirecting investment
toward operational efficiency, fresh prepared foods, and customer loyalty
rather than controversial pricing algorithms.
Consumers
have spoken. They want value—but they also demand transparency.
The
passage of New Jersey's Fair Price Protection Act follows growing public
concern surrounding "surveillance pricing," where artificial
intelligence and customer data could potentially influence what one shopper
pays versus another for identical products. The legislation also places a
one-year moratorium on the installation of new electronic shelf labels, slowing
adoption of technology many retailers envisioned using for dynamic pricing.
While
headlines focus on AI pricing, they miss the far bigger story.
Consumers Don't Want Personalized Prices
Consumers
want personalized meals—not personalized prices.
Food
marketing research throughout 2025 and 2026 consistently shows shoppers are
seeking:
·
Ready-2-Eat fresh prepared meals
·
Heat-N-Eat family meal solutions
·
Mix-and-match meal components
·
Restaurant-quality foods at grocery
prices
·
Quick shopping trips
·
Transparent everyday value
·
Digital convenience without
sacrificing trust
Consumers
have become remarkably sophisticated. They understand that AI can improve
shopping experiences through recipe suggestions, inventory accuracy,
personalized coupons, and meal recommendations. What they reject is the
possibility that their income, shopping habits, or digital behavior might
influence the price they pay for milk, eggs, chicken, or bread.
Trust
remains one of retail's most valuable assets.
Grocery's Real Competitive Battle Isn't Price—It's Dinner
The
real competitive battle isn't between Kroger, Walmart, Aldi, Costco, or
regional supermarket chains.
It's
between every retailer competing for tonight's dinner.
According
to multiple industry studies released during 2025 and early 2026, approximately
80% of evening meals are still sourced from home, yet consumers
increasingly refuse to cook entirely from scratch. Instead, they assemble meals
using fresh prepared foods, refrigerated entrées, rotisserie chicken, meal
kits, side dishes, deli offerings, frozen vegetables, bakery items, and
restaurant takeout.
This
is exactly where the Grocerant opportunity continues to expand.
Consumers
aren't asking retailers to lower every price.
They're
asking retailers to eliminate work.
Time
has become the new currency.
The Smart Investment Is Fresh Prepared Food
Rather
than investing tens or hundreds of millions of dollars into dynamic pricing
systems that invite regulatory scrutiny, grocery retailers should redirect
those investments toward:
·
Expanded Ready-2-Eat meal production
·
Improved Heat-N-Eat family meals
·
Better prepared food packaging
·
Faster checkout
·
More efficient labor deployment
·
AI forecasting that reduces food waste
·
Stronger inventory management
·
Better fresh food merchandising
Artificial
intelligence absolutely belongs inside grocery stores.
Just
not between the customer and the shelf price.
AI
can reduce shrink, forecast demand, optimize labor scheduling, improve
replenishment, reduce out-of-stocks, predict fresh production, and personalize
meal recommendations without creating consumer distrust.
That
is where technology creates long-term shareholder value.
Electronic Shelf Labels Still Have Value
Electronic
shelf labels should not be viewed solely as dynamic pricing tools.
Properly
deployed, they reduce labor costs by eliminating manual price changes, improve
pricing accuracy, decrease pricing errors, simplify promotions, and allow
associates to spend more time helping customers and merchandising fresh foods.
Those
operational efficiencies remain valuable regardless of whether individualized
pricing is prohibited.
In
fact, labor savings from electronic shelf labels may become one of the
strongest financial justifications for adoption once public concerns
surrounding surveillance pricing are addressed.
The FTC Changed the Conversation
Federal
scrutiny of AI pricing practices accelerated after investigations into digital
grocery pricing raised questions about transparency and consumer protection.
Public confidence became just as important as technological capability.
Retailers
increasingly recognize that shoppers willingly share personal information in
exchange for relevant coupons, personalized recipes, loyalty rewards, and
meaningful savings.
They
do not expect that same information to determine the price of essential
groceries.
That
distinction matters.
The
retailers that preserve consumer trust will strengthen long-term customer
loyalty.
The Future Belongs to Grocerants
The
future grocery winner will not be the company with the smartest pricing
algorithm.
It
will be the retailer that best answers one simple consumer question:
"What's
for dinner tonight?"
Consumers
continue migrating toward retailers capable of providing complete meal
solutions rather than simply selling ingredients.
Every
investment should help shoppers save time, simplify meal preparation, reduce
cleanup, and create restaurant-quality experiences at home.
That
is the Grocerant model.
That
is where profitable growth continues to accelerate.
Three Grocerant Guru® Insights
1.
Transparency Is Becoming a Competitive Advantage
As states increasingly regulate AI-driven pricing practices, retailers that
embrace consistent pricing, meaningful loyalty rewards, and operational
excellence will strengthen consumer trust while differentiating themselves in
an increasingly skeptical marketplace.
2.
AI Delivers Greater ROI Behind the Scenes Than at the Shelf Edge
The highest returns from artificial intelligence come from demand forecasting,
labor optimization, inventory management, food waste reduction, and fresh
production planning—not charging different shoppers different prices for
identical products.
3.
Dinner Drives the Future of Food Retail
The fastest-growing opportunity remains Ready-2-Eat and Heat-N-Eat fresh
prepared foods. Consumers increasingly want to customize family meals using
restaurant-quality meal components that are quick to serve, easy to
personalize, and require minimal cleanup. Retailers that invest in the
Grocerant model will compete more effectively against restaurants while
improving both top-line sales and bottom-line profitability.
Tap into the Foodservice
Solutions® team for greater understanding of New Electricity or for a
Grocerant Program Assessment, Grocerant ScoreCard, or for product positioning
or placement assistance, or call our Grocerant Guru®. Since 1991 www.FoodserviceSolutions.us of Tacoma, WA
has been the global leader in the Grocerant niche. Contact: Steve@FoodserviceSolutions.us or 253-759-7869







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