(Reuters) - Wal-Mart Stores Inc
is testing a system that would allow shoppers to scan items using their
iPhones and then pay at a self-checkout counter, a move that could trim
checkout times and slash costs for retailers.
If the "Scan &
Go" test by the world's largest retailer is successful, it has the
potential to change the way people shop and pay, making the process more
personal and potentially faster.
Earlier this week, Walmart invited employees with Apple Inc iPhones to participate in a test at a Walmart supercenter in Rogers, Arkansas, near the company's headquarters, according to a form on the Survey Monkey website. (https://www.surveymonkey.com/s/selfcheckout)
"All of the effort
is to speed your way through the checkout so that we can reduce costs
and improve the shopping experience," said Paul Weitzel, managing
partner at retail consulting firm Willard Bishop, who said he had not
seen Walmart's test. "With smartphones and improved technology we're only going to see more of this."
The test comes months after Walmart said that it would add more self-checkout lanes at its Walmart and Sam's Club stores as it continues to look for ways to lower costs and prices for its shoppers.
Pushing more shoppers to scan their own items and make payments without the help of a cashier could save Walmart
millions of dollars, Chief Financial Officer Charles Holley said on
March 7. The company spends about $12 million in cashier wages every
second at its Walmart U.S. stores.
Shoppers often complain on Twitter and in other forums that it takes too long to pay at Walmart,
where sometimes only a few of the several checkout lanes are open and
staffed with cashiers. While some retailers employ baggers to speed up
the checkout process, at Walmart one employee scans and bags items.
"We're continually
testing new and innovative ways to serve customers and enhance the
shopping experience in our stores," said Walmart spokesman David Tovar.
Walmart's iPhone app already includes functions such as letting shoppers create lists and seeing which items are in stock.
The test comes as
retailers and restaurants are trying to figure out ways to speed up the
checkout process by letting customers pay with a tap of their
smartphones.
In the Walmart
iPhone scanning test, shoppers can scan products with their phone and
put them in bags while they shop, and then pay at a self-checkout
counter.
The test does not
allow users to pay on their phone. The app transfers the scanned items
to the self-checkout kiosk and then shoppers complete the transaction
using the normal self-checkout process.
Walmart
declined to give details on where the test might lead, but it could
conceivably allow for scanning on other smart phones and be paired with
mobile payment.
Walmart
earlier this month said it was joining with other retailers to develop a
mobile payment network, a retailer-led initiative that would match
similar services by Google Inc and eBay Inc, among others.
While self-checkout
aisles are common at many stores, the ability to scan items with one's
mobile phone while shopping is not a typical process. Among other tests,
Supervalu
Inc's Jewel-Osco chain once let shoppers use handheld scanners and then
enter that information at the checkout to pay, but that test ended
years ago.
"This is probably
the fourth technology that we've tried between shopping carts, RFID
chips, the handheld scanners and now we've got smartphones," Weitzel
said of the retail industry. "We're looking for ways to improve that
experience as an industry."
Walmart's
test appears to be limited to one store, but it appears that the
company sought out participants beyond its staff for its study. The
company asked employees to reach out to friends and family in its search
for participants, according to a copy of an email sent by the company's
@WalmartLabs team and obtained by Reuters. A company spokesman would
not verify this on Friday afternoon.
Walmart
offered participants in one-hour sessions $100 for their time and a $25
gift card to use in the store for purchases, according to the form on
the Survey Monkey website.
Walmart shares closed up 35 cents at $72.60 on Friday on the New York Stock Exchange.
Resource : Yahoo News
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