Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

CASUALTIES OF COVID: SALAD BARS & DOLLAR BILLS?

WHAT’S IN STORE AT GROCERY STORES: Experts say you should prepare for heightened sanitation, meal kits and more online ordering

- BY STEPHANIE ZIMMERMANN, STAFF REPORTER szimmerman­n@ suntimes. com | @ SZReports

How COVID- 19 will reshape our region, its economy and everyday life. Read more at suntimes. com/ new- normal.

The salad bar, the soup bar, the olive bar. The free samples. The leisurely time spent strolling through the produce section, touching avocados to check whether they’re fresh.

All of that’s vanished during the coronaviru­s pandemic, which has turned a trip to the grocery store into a monumental­ly stressful experience for many shoppers.

Like other catastroph­es, the havoc left by the coronaviru­s will leave us with lasting changes affecting all aspects of our lives, groceries no exception.

“People used to love going to the stores and seeing their friends,” says Phil Lempert, founder of Supermarke­tGuru. com and consultant and TV analyst who’s followed grocery shopping trends for three decades. “A lot of that is over.”

Lempert expects to see changes in the design of grocery stores as well as changes in how we buy products.

Sanitation will be at the top of the list for stores, with Plexiglas cashier stands continuing to be the norm, along with innovation­s like antimicrob­ial checkout belts and hand- sanitizing stations.

Aisles will be made wider so shoppers don’t feel crammed in, and contactles­s payments will be encouraged.

In the produce section, expect to see more prepackage­d items, Lempert says. He thinks post- pandemic consumers will not look kindly on people who squeeze the cantaloupe­s and oranges before putting them back in the display.

But the biggest change might be how drasticall­y the number of products on shelves is reduced. Today, a typical supermarke­t stocks about 42,000 different items. Lempert envisions a hybrid experience in which shoppers go online to choose staple items — such as ketchup, breakfast cereal and dish soap — and then shop in person only for produce, meat, fish, bread and other fresh items that require a closer look.

And while the customer is shopping, robotics at the back of the store would gather the products from the online list and bring the order to the front of the store. When the shopper brings the fresh items to the checkout stand to pay, the cashier would add the goods ordered online.

Shoppers would be in and out much more quickly, a vastly more efficient experience.

That scenario would eliminate the salad bar, which Lempert says created a lot of waste for stores anyway. “I think the entire store is going to be reimagined,” he says.

Consumers seem poised for more digital shopping. During the pandemic, delivery and “click- and- collect” shopping — the consumer orders and pays online, then picks up food at

“PEOPLE USED TO LOVE GOING TO THE STORES AND SEEING THEIR FRIENDS. A LOT OF THAT IS OVER.”

PHIL LEMPERT, founder of Supermarke­tGuru. com

the store — “has gone through the roof,” Lempert says.

Albertons CEO Vivek Sankaran told investors on an earnings call in April that the parent company of Jewel- Osco will continue investing in e- commerce. “We’ve had the plans, so now it’s a matter of accelerati­ng those investment­s commensura­te with the growth that we are seeing in e- commerce.”

Already, some supermarke­t chains have created “ghost grocery” locations — fulfillmen­t centers that are closed to the public except for click- and- collect orders.

The pandemic also exposed the fragility of supply chains for items such as meat and toilet paper, areas in which smaller, nimbler grocery stores might be able to excel. Many independen­t grocers had better luck stocking popular products because of their longstandi­ng relationsh­ips with local farmers and suppliers, says Laura Strange, spokeswoma­n for the National Grocers Associatio­n, which represents independen­t supermarke­t operators and wholesaler­s.

When the virus hit, smaller operations were able to quickly pivot to e- commerce and contactles­s payment methods and put sanitation protocols in place to assure their customers, Strange says.

One small grocer in California called a portable toilet company to quickly set up a handwashin­g station for customers to use as they entered and exited the store.

“They adjusted their operations and shifted to be sure they were providing a safe environmen­t for their customers and their employees,” Strange says.

She also thinks salad bars and hot food bars will disappear for now, though she doesn’t rule out a comeback after there’s a vaccine or drug therapy for COVID- 19.

The big winners for now are likely to be “grab- and- go” prepacked deli items and meal kits that will allow people to dine at home, where they feel safe, eating food that’s easy to prepare.

As with the 2008 recession, money concerns will have shoppers looking for the best values, Strange says, which means privatelab­el products will do well, as will locally sourced items that people want to support.

 ??  ?? ABOVE: Signs outside Carnival Grocery in Oak Park announce that face masks are required in the store and the reduced maximum number of customers allowed inside at one time.
ABOVE: Signs outside Carnival Grocery in Oak Park announce that face masks are required in the store and the reduced maximum number of customers allowed inside at one time.
 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? LEFT: A cashier wearing a face shield bags groceries for a customer at a Local Market in Chicago.
GETTY IMAGES LEFT: A cashier wearing a face shield bags groceries for a customer at a Local Market in Chicago.
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