Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Express Check Out

The Retail Industry and Consumer Behavior have undergone a dramatic transformation over the last decade. A Retail store wants to offer a plethora of products and a consumer wants a one-stop shop. This desire to sell more and attract more is causing large retailers to face a single common challenge of “Queuing”. The checkout counters at these stores habitually have growing queues of impatient and restless consumers.

I frequently find myself spending my valuable weekends getting restless at such a queue and have a dipolar dilemma of either persisting through the suffering or orphaning my shopping cart and storming out of the store.

My observations and my personal shopping experience is the origin of this idea. I term this innovation, the “Express Check-Out (ECO)”; a solution targeted at providing a self-service checkout counters eliminating the need to queue up.         

The ECO cart will be a smart shopping cart aimed at replacing the omnipresent dummy shopping cart. To visualize an ECO cart, think of the traditional shopping cart (with or without wheels) fitted with all of the following nifty gadgets:

  • Sensitive weight sensors embedded in the base of the basket
  • RFID tag scanners embedded in two opposite or four adjacent walls of the basket
  • A “honesty” red/green glowing  LED for visual “honesty” confirmation
  • An effortless billing interface capable of
  • Reading barcode for billing the purchase items
  • Changing the mode to add or delete the scanned items
  • A swipe for credit, debit and loyalty card
As a prerequisite, the store will require to maintain a mapping of the item with its corresponding weight, if this information is not already available in the barcode.

The user experience can be workflow-ed as:
  1. The customer wishes to purchase an item X
  2. The user scans the barcode on the product and then places it in the basket
  3. The total weight of all the scanned items should be equal to the actual weight in the basket. This will ensure the customer does not “accidentally” skip step 2
  4. The honesty visual confirmation will further reinforce step 2 by glowing appropriately. This will be an indication for both the store managers and the customer.
  5. Items with negligible weight will have RFID tag attached to them. The RFID tag will be read by the scanner in the wall of the basket and the item will be added to the shopping list automatically
  6. Once done with the shopping, the consumer will have to wheel the cart through a content scanner. The scanner shall scan all the contents of the basket and compare it with the shopping list generated by the billing interface. The content scanner can highlight any ambiguity and the customer can be forwarded for manual inspection
  7. If it’s a green from the honesty LED and the content scanner, the customer can simple swipe his card and check out
A customer has the opportunity to do all this with little or no queuing!

ECO creates value to all the stakeholders – for the customers it empowers them with an express checkout facility and for the retail store it will reduces the workload of the checkout counter personnel and provide a unique and a pleasant shopping experience.  

Personal Note:
I had conceived this idea in the month of September of 2008 and had it submitted to Eureka, an entrepreneur program organized by IIT Mumbai. However, it failed to create the intended waves.

Today, in May 2011, I read about “Ahold USA'sStop & Shop and Giant supermarkets” being ready to roll out a version of this idea across their stores in the US.

I am being honest when I say this – I did not steal this idea. I did not produce this entry after reading the press release. This is the second of my ideas to be commercially developed by another creative thinker. I do not wish to claim ownership of this idea but want to convey my creativity and innovativeness that I constantly harp upon in my thought factory. Call me Arrogant, but that is a fact.

If you have had, any such ideas write it up and you can be a guest blogger on my thought factory.

3 comments:

Hemanth Pallavajula said...

I did not go through the other link you have mentioned. But, one thing which seriously takes time is standing in queue for weighing in your vegetables. If we have a way to get this done quickly, it will help a lot.
One thing I am thinking about (if weight sensors are not stealed by someone inspired of your Stealing post), is to let users put in the varying weight item (vegetables, fruits, and in Big Bazaar, even rice), punch in the code for that item displayed, put the closed mouth of cover near a pasting point (within the cart), the cart will close the cover, paste a label to it indicating weight, barcode of the product.
Of course, if the user 'mistakenly' feeds in wrong item code, at the billing point, it will be rectified.

Rajesh said...

Good thinking all through. You could potentially use NFC for step 7.

Unknown said...

Hi Hemanth: it may help to built this feature but at the same time i dont want the cart to get bulky.

Hi Rajesh: thanks for leaving a comment. NFC could also work.

thanks for reading
Atit