Penticton Herald

Stores are getting smarter

Here come smart stores with robots, interactiv­e shelves

- By ANNE D’INNOCENZIO

LAS VEGAS — Tomorrow’s retail stores want to take a page from their online rivals by embracing advanced technology — everything from helpful robots to interactiv­e mirrors to shelves embedded with sensors.

The goal: Use these real-world store features to lure shoppers back from the internet, and maybe even nudge them to spend more in the process.

Amazon’s new experiment­al grocery store in Seattle, opening soon, will let shoppers buy goods without needing to stop at a checkout line. Sensors track items as shoppers put them into baskets or return them to the shelf. The shopper’s Amazon account gets automatica­lly charged.

“Amazon, for good or bad, has been setting the path,” said Robert Hetu, research director at Gartner Research. “Each retailer is going to have to respond in some way. But it’s not one-size-fits-all.”

Kroger, Neiman Marcus and Lowe’s are among the companies experiment­ing with futuristic retail stores. Robots, for instance, could help guide shoppers to the right aisle, while augmented reality apps could help you see how a particular shade of paint will look in the living room — or how you might look in a pair of jeans. Many of these technologi­es are being unveiled or demonstrat­ed at the CES gadget show, now on in Las Vegas.

Plenty of retailers have learned through trial and error that technology can’t get too far ahead of shoppers. It has to be easy to use and beneficial to shoppers in some way. If retailers get it right, they might succeed in boosting spending at retail stores at a time when consumers increasing­ly prefer to shop online.

Here are five technologi­es coming to a store near you. SMART SHELVES Web retailers have plenty of data on their customers. Some of these online technologi­es can even track shoppers from site to site to lure them back with what’s known as retargetin­g ads — promos targeted to what that shopper has looked at before, but didn’t actually buy. Smart shelves with sensors promise the same kind of consumer behaviour analytics at retail stores.

At a Kroger store in Cold Spring, Ohio, shelves currently show digitized price tags and informatio­n about the products. The next step is to tie that to individual shoppers. For example, for a shopper who prefers gluten-free products, the price tags could light up in the aisle where the glutenfree options are. The company says this will all be done with the customer’s permission.

Perch Interactiv­e, a startup that is working with chains like Sunglass Hut and fragrance maker Jo Malone, uses laser and motion sensors to detect when a product is picked up. Perch lets retailers know what people pick up but don’t buy. It also offers recommenda­tions: When a shopper picks up a Jo Malone product, a display pops up to show a complement­ary fragrance. ROBOTS Amazon and other retailers have long used robots in warehouses to help package and ship orders. But what about interactin­g with shoppers?

Home improvemen­t retailer Lowe’s is testing robots at a California store, and plans to roll them out to 10 more stores this year. Besides scanning shelves for inventory, the robots can guide customers to specific products.

Shoppers will also start seeing robots that interact with them more deeply. Japanese joint venture SoftBank Robotics is testing a four-foot humanoid robot called Pepper at two malls in California. They greet shoppers and can do a little dance, but have the potential to send messages geared to people’s age and gender through facial recognitio­n. SoftBank says it’s working with clothing retailers to help suggest outfits to shoppers. INTERACTIV­E MIRRORS High-end clothing stores are testing interactiv­e mirrors in dressing areas.

Neiman Marcus has installed these outside fitting rooms at 20 stores to offer shoppers a 360-degree view of what an outfit looks like. Shoppers can make side-by-side comparison­s without having to try them all on.

Rent the Runway, an online retailer that lets people rent high-end clothing, teamed up with Samsung to have digital displays highlight its inventory for shoppers at a new location in New York. A mirror in the store is planned to recommend items that go with what the customer is wearing. VIRTUAL AND AUGMENTED REALITY

Home improvemen­t retailers have been embracing virtual reality and augmented reality to help shoppers figure out ways to decorate homes or apartments. With such technologi­es, shoppers wear a headset to picture how something might look in 3-D, in some cases overlaid on top of their real kitchen or living room. Home Depot’s augmented reality app lets customers upload a picture of the room on their phone and thumb through thousands of paint and stain colours until they arrive at one that’s right.

At CES, a major clothing chain is expected to announce a tool for shoppers to virtually try on jeans and other items. SELF-CHECKOUT Stores have been pushing self-service kiosks for years. It hasn’t always been smooth, though. Two years ago, Wal-Mart offered a Scan & Go app for shoppers to scan items as they grabbed them from the shelves. At the checkout counter, the customer merely had to scan a code to complete the transactio­n. But Wal-Mart scrapped the project after customers found the app difficult to use.

Andy Wong, partner at Accenture’s Kurt Salmon Digital, said Wal-Mart had a tougher time because its customers are less technologi­cally inclined overall.

By contrast, Amazon has a customer base already comfortabl­e with digital shopping for its store in Seattle.

Shortly after Amazon announced its checkout-less store, Panasonic Corp. unveiled an unstaffed bagging system at a Lawson convenienc­e store in Japan.

Shoppers place a “smart” basket with their items on a machine at checkout. The system calculates the bill and automatica­lly bags the items.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? Instead of a Wal-Mart greeter, in the future, shoppers may have a robot greeter. Pepper the robot from SoftBank Robotics can greet shoppers and help steer them to the products they’re looking for.
The Associated Press Instead of a Wal-Mart greeter, in the future, shoppers may have a robot greeter. Pepper the robot from SoftBank Robotics can greet shoppers and help steer them to the products they’re looking for.

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