The Palm Beach Post

Walmart to stop using self-scanning service

- By Matthew Boyle

Walmart has ended a service where customers could ring up their own purchases, showing that old habits die hard even in the digital age.

The retailer had offered its so-called “Mobile Scan & Go” technology in about 150 Walmart stores, after a successful rollout across its Sam’s Club warehouse chain.

But while the service worked in Sam’s — which carries fewer products, all of which are prepackage­d — it confused some Walmart shoppers, who found that bagging, weighing and then scanning items including fresh fruit and vegetables was a hassle.

Walmart’s Chief Financial Officer Brett Biggs admitted as much at an investor conference in March, saying that there were things that “make the customer maybe a little more leery of Scan & Go.”

Customers could use a handheld device or their own smartphone to scan their goods.

The service forced shoppers to change their habits, and the enormous number of items in a typical Walmart basket complicate­d the process, according to Neil Stern, a senior partner at retail consultant­s McMillanDo­olittle.

“Even though scan-and-go technology has been around for some time, consumers still don’t seem to embrace it the way we anticipate­d,” he said.

The service will remain at Sam’s Club, where its usage doubled last year.

 ?? WALMART ?? Customers could use a handheld device or their own smartphone to scan their goods. The service confused some shoppers and forced them to change their habits.
WALMART Customers could use a handheld device or their own smartphone to scan their goods. The service confused some shoppers and forced them to change their habits.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States