The Mail on Sunday

End of the line for the supermarke­t checkout

The bell tolls for tills as shop-and- go phone scanner heralds...

- By Ruth Sunderland CITY EDITOR

CAN you imagine popping into a supermarke­t, picking up what you want from the shelves then marching out again without so much as breaking your stride? Well that day is just around the corner.

Sainsbury’s has come up with an app that could finally kill off the drudgery of standing in a checkout queue to pay for your shopping.

The supermarke­t is testing technology that will allow customers to scan shopping on their smartphone­s, then simply leave the store.

The cost of the goods will be deducted directly from their bank account or credit card via their phone. Sainsbury’s earlier this month tested a prototype of checkout-free shopping in its store at Euston Station in London.

The site was chosen en because most customers there ere are in a hurry to catch trains and keen to rush through ugh the shop. In the trial, al, shoppers used a spe- ci al app on t heir phone to buy a ‘meal deal’ consisting of three items: a sandwich, a drink and a snack, without having to queue.

‘Some of the people in the trial left thee store feeling veryry smug because they didn’tdn’t have to wait,’ said Dan Hills, who leads the he team which developed the he shopping app. ‘They felt like a king or queen because there was a long line of people waiting to pay and they didn’t have to join it.’

The supermarke­t hasn’t set a timetable for rolling out checkout-free shoppingsh­op in all its stores as it is still in the experiment­al stage. But it is already introducin­g ‘SmartShop’ technology which allows customers to use hand-held devices available in stores or their own

‘Customers feel smug avoiding the queues’

smartphone­s to scan items as they shop and then pay at a checkout at the end. Similar systems are already operated by other supermarke­t chains.

Sainsbury’s does not expect shopliftin­g to increase as a result of checkout-free technology because it believes the majority of customers are trustworth­y. However, it is developing new security systems to work alongside existing measures.

Sains bury’s chief executive Mike Coupe said the bigger issue was honest customers feeling uneasy about leaving a store without stopping to pay.

‘People feel uncomforta­ble just walking out, so we will have to put some kind of interventi­on in place, such as asking them to scan a barcode or tap their phone on a sensor when they leave.

‘ It wouldn’t be of any consequenc­e other than making them feel better,’ he said.

Mr Coupe added that he did not expect checkout-free shopping to lead to mass job losses but that staff who previously worked on checkouts would be redeployed.

‘The world of retail is changing and that means more automation and a redistribu­tion of jobs. We employ thousands of drivers and pickers for our online business – those jobs wouldn’t have existed a generation ago. It is not necessaril­y a case of fewer jobs, just different jobs.’

He said ‘it is hard to imagine’ a world where checkouts no longer existed at all because some customers would still prefer to deal with a person at a till, even if it meant queuing.

Usdaw, the shop workers’ union, said: ‘We know many customers really value the personal interactio­n.’ It added that it ‘is generally shopworker­s who bear the brunt of any abuse’ when customers become frustrated with new technology.

US giant Amazon last year set up a checkout-free grocery store in Seattle, where it has its headquarte­rs. The shop, called Amazon Go, is only open to employees at present. Shoppers are tracked through their smartphone­s and a battery of cameras using facial recognitio­n as they move through the aisles. Sensors detect when they remove or return products to the shelves. Shortly after they leave the store, a charge is made to their Amazon account and they are sent a receipt.

‘It’s not a case of fewer jobs, just different jobs’

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