The Mercury News

Amazon Go offers fresh foods on the honor system

Store technology bills shoppers for what they walk out with

- By Spencer Soper

You won’t find a squeaking hot dog rotisserie in Amazon’s cashier-less convenienc­e store. Instead, you’ll see Mediterran­ean lamb sandwiches, fresh salads and to-go containers of cubed pineapple and melon.

After more than a year of testing with an employee-only focus group, Amazon Go opened to the public Monday in downtown Seattle, putting to the test the online retailer’s technology that lets shoppers grab what they

want and leave without paying a cashier. The inventory caters to health-conscious, affluent millennial­s rushing to their next meeting and could leave the

stoner-slacker crowd searching aimlessly for the machine that barfs out chili and cheese with the push of a button.

“We got a lot of feedback on selection,” Amazon Go’s technology vice president Dilip Kumar said, adding that most changes over the past year involved the store’s inventory. Amazonians prefer their salad dressing on the side, for instance. And boxed meal kits to be cooked at home should be clearly labeled if they are vegan or gluten-free.

Amazon Go is the company’s most ambitious effort to change the way people shop in stores and a play for the struggling $550 billion U.S. convenienc­e store industry. Amazon hopes the cashier-less technology will help it stand out from the nation’s 150,000 convenienc­e stores where traffic jams can form at the checkout

counter. It’s all part of the company’s larger brick-andmortar ambitions, which include a stepped-up push into groceries with the Whole Foods Market acquisitio­n as well as the opening of about a dozen book stores in such cities as Los Angeles, Chicago and New York.

To enter the Amazon Go store, customers download a smartphone app and scan a QR code to open a glass turnstile. Those shopping in a group scan the account holder’s phone once for each person entering and sensors will associate them with that account. From there, machines take over, watching the items plucked from shelves and adding them to a shopping cart. Shoppers are billed once they leave and if there are any mistakes or the customer isn’t happy with an item, you push a “refund” button to have that item removed from the bill. Shoppers don’t have to return an unwanted item to the store.

The system is designed around the honor system with an understand­ing that those looking to trick the system and steal things are in the minority. “The system is very accurate,” Kumar said.

The 1,800-square-foot store is in the ground floor of Amazon’s new Seattle headquarte­rs complex. On a recent tour, about 10 chefs were in a kitchen, and several other employees replenishe­d the shelves. One employee monitored the small beer and wine section to manually check IDs.

There are typical convenienc­e store staples like peanut butter, milk, eggs and bread. Freshly made items get prominent shelf space, as do veggie chips and other products from the Whole Foods “365 Everyday Value” brand. The experiment will only succeed if Amazon delivers quality food at good prices, said Jeff Lenard, spokesman for the National Associatio­n of Convenienc­e Stores.

“The coolness of the technology will undoubtedl­y get people to check it out,” he said. “But the quality is what will get them to come back.”

 ?? STEPHEN BRASHEAR — GETTY IMAGES ?? After more than a year in beta, Amazon opened the cashier-less store to the public Monday in Seattle.
STEPHEN BRASHEAR — GETTY IMAGES After more than a year in beta, Amazon opened the cashier-less store to the public Monday in Seattle.
 ?? ELAINE THOMPSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The artificial intelligen­ce-powered store allows shoppers to scan their smartphone, pick out the items they want and leave.
ELAINE THOMPSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The artificial intelligen­ce-powered store allows shoppers to scan their smartphone, pick out the items they want and leave.

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