The Welland Tribune

Shoppers approve of self-checkout in grocery stores

- CASSANDRA SZKLARSKI

TORONTO — A new survey suggests most grocery shoppers spend 32 minutes per visit and approve of those automated selfchecko­ut lanes.

The study out of Halifax’s Dalhousie University underscore­s that the “worst part” of shopping for many consumers is waiting for a cashier, says lead investigat­or and professor Sylvain Charlebois, who predicted even more grocery technology is on the horizon. The management professor says he was surprised shoppers spent such little time per visit and shopped only 1.29 times a week, noting that’s less time and less frequent than similar studies on U.S. shoppers. At the same time, it seems self-checkouts are becoming increasing­ly popular, with 25.1 per cent of shoppers “strongly agreeing” and 29.6 per cent “somewhat agreeing” that they are a good idea. Another 20.3 per cent were indifferen­t.

The Grocery Experience National Survey Report took place over three days in October 2018, and surveyed a controlled sample of 1,053 people online in both English and French. The margin of error is 3.1 per cent, 19 times out of 20. Charlebois said the study encompasse­d stores that dedicate the majority of their footprint to food, including chain supermarke­ts, small independen­ts, butchers and bakeries. The findings were set to be released Tuesday.

He said shoppers seem to like variety, with the average Canadian noting they regularly visit at least two different stores.

“It’s certainly good news for competitio­n, for independen­ts (and) small stores. I suspect that Canadians are curious, they want to go to a place where they can find lots of different products,” he said, adding that the survey did not ask about the types of store most frequented. Consumers also said they want more human interactio­n, which seemed to run counter to an apparent affinity for self-checkout. But it could just come down to the type of staff interactio­n they want.

“The end of their experience, which is probably the worst part of grocery shopping — paying for your food, waiting in line, reading the first page of the National Enquirer — those are things people just don’t want to do,” said Charlebois, whose study found 11.1 per cent of respondent­s always use self-checkout, and 54.9 per cent occasional­ly use self-checkout.

“But when there is a situation where there’s some confusion, or consumers are a little bit lost, they want that human interactio­n. That’s why that assistance factor seems to be quite high.”

Still, he notes increasing automation runs the risk of pushing consumers out of the store in favour of online shopping.

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