One grocery store is getting rid of all of its self-service checkouts.
Booths is a UK supermarket chain that is known for its quality and great customer service. In a bold move, it is getting rid of most of its self-service checkouts in its 27 Northern England stores. Booths, which is sometimes called the “northern Waitrose,” has decided to put customer service and interaction with real people ahead of automation, so the checkouts are now fully staffed.
The decision to get rid of self-service tills was based on feedback from customers and a desire to provide a more personalized shopping experience.
Nigel Murray, the managing director of Booths, said that customers had complained that self-scan machines were too slow, unreliable, and impersonal. This move fits with Booths’s mission to provide “high levels of warm, personal care” and goes against the trend of more and more machines taking over retail jobs.
Booths’ decision has started a conversation about the pros and cons of self-service checkouts, especially when it comes to the ongoing problem of shoplifting.
The British Independent Retailers Association (BIRA) said that the high rate of retail theft is a big problem for stores that use self-service tills. This makes people wonder how well automated systems work at stopping theft.
Booths is bringing back fully staffed checkouts in most of its stores. However, in two stores in the Lake District—Keswick and Windermere—self-service tills will still be available because of high customer demand and customer preference for convenience.