The Oklahoman

Groceries at the push of a button

Store experiment­s with automated pickup kiosks as online shopping soars

- By Alexia Elejalde-Ruiz

A Jewel-Os co store in Chicago is the first grocery in the nation to pilot an automated pickup kiosk, one of numerous investment­s grocers are making to prepare for a future of more online shopping.

The kiosk, located in the store parking lot, is meant to offer a convenient and contact-free option for online shoppers to collect their groceries. Shoppers are asked to select a two-hour pickup window, and when they arrive they scan a code and their items are delivered roboticall­y, according to the company.

Employees shop the store to fill customers' orders and put them into the kiosk for pickup. The kiosk, made by Estonia-based Clever on, has a refrigerat­ed and deep freeze zone so ice cream can be picked up at the same console as bananas.

Jewel-Os co parent Albertsons plans to install a second kiosk at a Safeway in the San Francisco Bay Area, but has not announced plans for a wider rollout.

“We are super charging our digital and omnichanne­l offerings to serve customers however they want, whenever they want ,” Chris Rupp, executive vice president and chief customer and digital officer at Albertsons, said in a news release.

Albert sons, the thirdlarge­st grocery chain in the U.S ., has been testing various ways to streamline pickup and delivery as e-commerce becomes a bigger part of its business, driven in part by the pandemic as people avoided going out in public. Digital sales grew 225% during the third quarter ended Dec. 5, compared with the same period the year before, according to company earnings released last week.

The company, headquarte­red in Boise, Idaho, recently announced it will transition to third-party delivery in some markets, including Chicago, where its Jewel-Os co brand is the Chicago area' slargest grocery chain by store count, and California. The announceme­nt came shortly after California voters approved Propositio­n 22, which exempts gig economy companies like Door Dash from a state labor law that would have forced them to employ drivers and pay for healthcare, unemployme­nt insurance and other benefits.

Jewel-Osco, which until now has used a combinatio­n of in-house drivers and DoorDash for delivery, said that next month it will stop using its own fleet and transition entirely to third-party providers to “help us create a more efficient operation and compete more effectivel­y in the growing home delivery market.”

Jewel-Os co also offers a Drive Up and Go curbside pickup service and in October installed temperatur­e- controlled pickup locke rs, made by Bell& Howell, in two Chicago stores.

Other grocery chains also are experiment­ing with new technologi­es. Walmart, the nation's largest food retailer, last week announced it will test temperatur­e-controlled smart coolers that can be placed outside of customers' homes so their groceries can be delivered at any time. The service, called HomeValet, will be piloted this spring in its hometown of Bentonvill­e, Ark.

Kroger, the nation's second-largest grocery chain, is building automated fulfillmen­t centers, in partnershi­p with U. K.-based Ocado, to make online fulfillmen­t more efficient. Its digital sales grew 108% in the third quarter that ended Sept. 30, and online orders were profitable, company executives said on the earnings call. The company expects online orders to continue to perform well because of lowered costs to fulfill the orders and personaliz­ation technology that helps drive ad revenue and encourages people to buy more.

Improving the curbside pickup experience has been a priority for retailers as shoppers find they like the convenienc­e of not having to get out of their cars. Target has been adding drive-up pickup spots to more stores and expanding the service to include more fresh and frozen foods.

The Fresh Market is trying to set itself apart by billing its service as the“friendlies­t curbside experience in America ,” with orders double-checked and verified by managers, wait times under five minutes and a customer satisfacti­on guarantee. The North Carolina-based grocer plans to have i ts personal shoppers bring out water to waiting customers on hot days and over Christmas had costumed Santas bring out groceries.

 ??  ?? The code on Jason Burley's phone is shown during his Jan. 8 pickup at the South Loop Jewel-Osco in Chicago. [ANTONIO PEREZ/CHICAGO TRIBUNE VIA TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE]
The code on Jason Burley's phone is shown during his Jan. 8 pickup at the South Loop Jewel-Osco in Chicago. [ANTONIO PEREZ/CHICAGO TRIBUNE VIA TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE]

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