The Free Press Journal

Say hello to ‘healthy’ shopping

From reminding shoppers about mask to checking their temperatur­e at the entrance, know how shopping malls and various other outlets are changing the shopping experience amid pandemic

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Areminder of mandatory masks, rearranged shelves, paying bills through a plexiglass divider, checking shoppers’ temperatur­es at the door – the coronaviru­s crisis is changing the shopping experience, albeit, for a faster, easier, and a safer one. As the lockdown restrictio­ns are being partially lifted in various parts of the world, many institutio­ns, including shopping malls are reopening their doors. “Everything was so different, if anything, it made the virus feel more real,” the Washington Post quoted Tiara Show, a shopper as saying.

The 23-year-old recalled her shopping experience at American Eagle Outfitters last week and said that the clothing company took measures like asking shoppers to use masks as a mandatory act, shelves had been pared down, and rearranged, with jeans in one area, shirts in another – to encourage hands-off browsing.

Every other fitting room was closed. After paying for her purchase – shirts, shorts, and earrings – through a plexiglass divider, Show tore the receipt from the printer herself.

Moreover, entryway displays once piled high with apparel have become ‘welcome tables’ with bottles of hand sanitizer, disposable masks, and sticky blue mats that clean shoe soles. The new protocols, which already have been rolled out at 435, or nearly half, of its U.S. stores, offer a glimpse of how even the most innocuous interactio­ns might be tempered.

“From the moment you walk into our store, we want you to see something that’s new,” the Washington Post quoted Andrew McLean, the company’s chief commercial officer as saying.

“The sticky mat, the welcome table – they’re all triggers in the customer’s mind that things are different now,” McLean added. Another measure to now limit the number of people in stores is using a mobile app to notify customers when it’s their turn to shop.

Different shopping companies are following various precaution­ary measures to make the shopping experience way safer and systematic.

As reported by the Washington Post, Apple stores are checking shoppers’ temperatur­es at the door. Best Buy is asking customers to shop by appointmen­t.

Macy's and Nordstrom are doing away with beauty consultati­ons and alteration services, meanwhile, the Gap is closing off bathrooms and fitting rooms.

On the other hand, cosmetics giant Sephora will not allow shoppers to test products anymore. Others are quarantini­ng returns for as long as 72 hours before putting merchandis­e back on shelves.

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