Edward
Bartender
- Messages
- 25,084
- Location
- London, UK
Self-checkout. In this part of the U.S. they've offered this for several years now, but the set-up is minimal; self-checkout is still designed for that shopper who literally needs only one or two smallish items, can scan them, pay, put 'em in a bag, and leave with receipt in-hand. Trouble is, local shoppers roll a full cart or two up to the self-checkout kiosks, then spend an hour or more scanning and bagging their goods, all the while blocking the surrounding kiosks so those people who only have two or three items can't get to the equipment. Selfish? You bet, and it's only gotten worse since the pandemic started.
That sort of thing happens here in London too. My local supermarket started with a half a dozen of them. Then they cut half the regular tils and now they have thirty or forty of these. It's exacerbated by the fact that of maybe a dozen traditional tils, they rarely open more than two at a time - the rest sit empty. The better option I've seen for auto tils is in some Asdas, where it's an auto til but to size of a full-size, regular til, so better for a proper trolley shop. I expect we'll see more of those rolled out in time. Funny thing, though: the cheapest quality supermarkets in the UK remain the German-owned Lidl and Aldi chains. Lidl have a small number of auto-tils for express (10 items or less) shoppers, fully manned tills otherwise - and their pay and conditions are still reportedly markedly better than any of the others. Lidl were the first UK supermarket to support the *living* wage, not just the legal minimum wage.