The Signal

Retail of the machine

SCV Walmart to feature shelfscann­ing robot on wheels at location

- By Steve Kiggins Signal Business Editor

The next time you’re shopping at Walmart on Kelly Johnson Parkway in Santa Clarita, you just might share the aisle with a shelfscann­ing robot on wheels.

It won’t make much noise, if any. It’ll shine a light. It’ll roll around the corner to the next aisle.

“We’ve had two kinds of customer reaction,” Walmart spokeswoma­n Tiffany Watson told The Signal this week. “Some customers are fascinated and stare at it in awe. … The other reaction we get, the most common reaction, is people completely ignore it. They are aware of it, but they have other things to do. They have shopping to do.”

The automated unit, produced by San Franciscob­ased Bossa Nova Robotics, isn’t a novelty. It has a job: To improve Walmart shoppers’ experience while empowering the store’s associates to better serve customers.

Following years of testing, Walmart expanded the use of robots to 50 of its locations this week, including four Southern California stores, with the Santa Clarita location joining Burbank, Lancaster and Palmdale. Using artificial intelligen­ce and machine learning, the rolling retail robots are built to identify shelves that are in short supply, incorrect pricing and missing labels.

A single robot can navigate dozens of aisles in less than an hour to provide “near real-time views of what areas of the store need the most attention,” according to a Walmart news release.

What’s the impact on customers?

“It means the item is going to be there, in the right place, at the right price,” Watson said.

Walmart also predicts the shelf-scanning technology will improve store associates’ availabili­ty to customers since those workers will no longer be required to spend time on “tedious tasks that are repeatable and predictabl­e – like scanning shelves for out-of-stocks.”

“Our associates see the opportunit­y for this technology to focus on tasks that are repeatable, predictabl­e and manual – freeing up their time to focus on selling merchandis­e and serving customers, which they tell us have always been the most exciting parts of working in retail,” said Panthi Patel,

Walmart store manager in Burbank. “Our approach is unique: We see technology as a tremendous opportunit­y to empower our people because we know how vital the human touch is to delivering for our customers.”

While the robots are qualified to handle some jobs typically done by people, Watson said Walmart has not introduced AI technology as a means to negatively impact its human workforce, instead re-emphasizin­g the company’s desire to improve customer experience and employee satisfacti­on through a “combinatio­n of people and robots.”

Also, Watson pointed to Walmart’s creation of some 30,000 jobs nationally over the past two years to handle online grocery pick-up and delivery.

“Those are jobs that wouldn’t have existed if we didn’t have the technology,” she said and added.

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