22 April 2008 05:19 PM
Tags: woolworths, supermarket, retail, ncr, fastlane, customer, checkout, terminal
Like this article? Click below to send it to your mobile for free!
I used to work at Big W and was among the first workers to operate and maintain them. And to be honest, those first units were rubbish.
Although they have improved greatly since then, even now I don't believe they are ready to be used for large quantities of groceries like they inevitably will be. The hardware and software just isn't developed enough yet.
Why would I spend the time to check myself out when there are staff who are trained to do this quickly and accurately. I had noticed the reduction in staff lately (about 10-20% or registeres open at any time), which resulted in much longer lines, so I wasn't surprised to see these units come to my local store. It ticks me off that companies are making their customers do more and more work, while at the same time their profits go up and up.
I'm not interested in these self-checkout units unless they upgrade their systems to trolly based scanning units (scan when you put the item into the trolly) or RFID (wheel the trolly through reader and all groceries in the trolly are read in one go). Realistically we are about 5 years behind some of the European countries in this respect.
You are right that the corporate goal is not to make it easier on the customer, but to eliminate jobs. This happened all over the U.S. beginning years ago, when gas companies instituted a "pump your own gas" policy, claiming it would "save money". It did save money -- for the oil companies. It allowed them to eliminate a lot of service station jobs, and
have their customers not only pay continually rising prices, but to do the work they USED to have to pay employees to do. This is the same pattern you see everywhere -- customers not only paying increasingly high prices, but having absolutely no customer service. And of course workers finding less and less possibility of employment.
It is completly an option to use these checkouts, I have done a two day training course on this machine for woolies and what you have stated is entirely wrong, staff will no be reduced infact it requires more staff on duty than normal to operate, and requires more hours, need to start 30mins earlier than the store opens to set the machines up, and stay back 30mins after store closes. as stated the machines are completly optional, if you wish to get out of the store quicker, then you have the OPTION of putting the shopping through yourself, this means you are not standing around waiting in queues and the waiting for the person to put your shopping through, if you are doing something then the time goes quicker naturally, I work at woolies and my hours have gone up, it has also opened more opportunities for me to move up in my store, this is a benifit for the customer, and requires much more work from staff (the machines are quite complex),
and the systems you have mentioned are a fantasy and then the staff that you were so worried about loosing jobs, will definatly have no jobs,
No one has been made redundant in my store, no one will be, hours are going up
completly wrong
thanks
This has been available in a number of Coles stores in Melbourne for over a year.
The fact is, most customers are stupid enough to have trouble getting through the checkout with an associate to help them. God help them trying to do it themselves.
Furthermore, I wonder how many of the poor automatons going through there will have trouble finding their money when it comes out.
CSI Tracing, Ballmer hunting and Bobcats -- Club Builder
In this week's Club Builder: Gary Sinise shows how to trace IPs in VB, Microsoft attempts to kill off XP again… Watch it now
Phaedon Stough, MitchelLake
Host Phil Dobbie talks to Phaedon Stough, managing partner at MitchelLake an Australian recruitment firm … Watch it now
Australian Govt funds IT start-ups
Google should come clean on datacentres
US shows what OPEL could have been
Broadband speedtest
How fast is your Internet connection?
Calculate the speed here.
Superguide: Printers -- all you need to know
Looking to buy a printer? Our superguide rates the latest printers and shines a light into the industry.
Click here for more.
Storage and server superguide
Over the last decade the art of maintaining the datacentre of a large organisation has evolved into an art form.
Click here for more.
Hopefully this will help with the weekend and holiday rush times. It is a shame it has taken Australian stores so long to adopt technology that has been out for over 5 years in other countries.