Toronto Star

The future for shoppers Trendspott­ing

- SUSAN SAMPSON

The smart cart is on its way. It’s called the Concierge. And it’s got all kinds of functions to hasten and ease your supermarke­t experience. Call up your shopping list. Tick off items and tot up prices using fingertip touches and bar code scanning. Order deli meats or cakes while you cruise the aisles. ( Concierge will notify you when the order is ready for pickup.) Find out where the lima beans or the canned chestnut purée might be hiding. Check nutritiona­l informatio­n. Find recipes ( and the ingredient­s for them). Browse specials and get coupons.

Springboar­d Retail Networks in King City, Ont., showed off its Concierge computeriz­ed carts at the recent Grocery Innovation­s Canada exhibition here. The carts are part of a system that includes a web portal and personal access keys. A company spokespers­on says Concierge will be tested in pilot programs in Canada next June. It was launched in the U. S. in May. You’d think that grocers wouldn’t like Concierge. After all, wandering around looking for an item ( and picking up impulse buys along the way) is good for business. But one payoff is being able to target ads at customers already in the store ( pet owners, for example). Another is an increase in customer traffic. There’s wiggle room. According to StatsCan, Canadians spend 9.1 per cent of their disposable incomes on grocery products — one of the lowest percentage­s in the world.

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