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Tuesday, September 2, 2008

Stop & Shop Supermarket Chain Goes Hi-Tech


Your next trip to Stop & Shop may be little more than just placing items into your wagon and paying for them at the cashier's checkout counter.

Since 2005, Stop & Shop has been quietly deploying Hi-Tech gadgets in a dozen of their locations. Today Stop & Shop has deployed a variety of digital gadgets in 376 store locations.

These digital devices enable customers to weigh their own produce, order a variety of cold-cuts at the deli counter, by using a video touch screen, and pay without the assistance of a cashier.

The digital gadget that customers will use for shopping is the "Scan It" personal scanner; the way it works is simple. You activate the scanner by reading the barcode on your Stop & Shop loyalty card. This card is similar to the ones use today by consumers for obtaining discounts on certain items. However this system is a lot smarter and also doubles as a sales person trying to get you to buy more groceries.

When scanning your loyalty card, all your past purchases are linked to the "Scan It" personal scanner. As you walk up and down the aisles scanning your groceries, "Scan It" will alert you of special discounts with a gentle ping. Stop & Shop claims that your personal data like your name and credit card information is not communicated over the wireless connection.

Most of the time "Scan It" works fine providing that the barcode is on the item or you know the code for that particular item. For produce you will not find a barcode stuck to a vegetable and you will be forced to search for the code using the scale´s touch screen. This can leave some shoppers frustrated and just shop somewhere else for their produce.

The last stop is paying for your groceries and this can be accomplished in two ways. You can visit the kiosk for small purchases or the long line for your large grocery purchases. Scanning a barcode mounted on top of the checkout device tells "Scan It" that you're done. Now you scan your loyalty card at the check out scanner and you are prompted to pay your bill.

Your grocery adventure at Stop & Shop's Hi-Tech store is now over unless you're one of the un-fortunate ones that have been randomly chosen for an audit. From time-to-time Stop & Shop will randomly pick customers to re-scan all their groceries to see if they come up with the same bill total. Is this random audit to check their automated system or customer honesty?

Source: Pyysorg.com

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Monday, August 25, 2008

Ahold unveils new-look logo for Stop & Shop, Giant stores


QUINCY, Mass. (Aug. 21) Stop & Shop’s long-standing logo will soon become a thing of the past.

The supermarket chain announced Thursday that it would redesign its logo and introduce new in-store features and technologies, saying it would “offer a peek into the grocery store of the future.” The changes will appear throughout the chain over the next year.

New technologies will include a hand-held scanning device that allows customers to scan and bag groceries while they shop, stations in the produce department for pricing and bagging fruits and vegetables and ordering kiosks in the deli section.

Another banner, Landover, Md.-based Giant Food, is also making changes, altering its logo and rolling out new store offerings. The changes will take place over the next two or three years; the first store affected will be in Bethesda, Md.

The Dutch company Ahold operates both chains. Giant Food operates 181 stores in Maryland, Virginia, Delaware and the District of Columbia. Stop & Shop, based in Quincy, Mass., operates stores throughout New York, New Jersey and the New England states.

Source: Drug Store News

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Thursday, August 21, 2008

Groceries & gadgets: Stop & Shop's geeked-out stores help boost bottom line


I stopped by one of my favorite high-technology retailers the other day, to pick up some skim milk.

No, Best Buy and Circuit City haven't added dairy departments. I buy my groceries at Stop & Shop Supermarket Co., the big grocery chain that might offer the most geeked-out shopping experience in America.

Many of Stop & Shop's 376 stores feature a variety of digital devices that let customers weigh their own veggies, order deli meats by using a video touch screen, and pay their bills without human assistance. Many other retailers, like Stop & Shop's main Boston-area rival, Shaw's Supermarkets Inc., offer self-checkout. But Stop & Shop has gone further than any of its rivals to automate our trips to the grocery.

The company has quietly deployed the technology in dozens of locations since 2005. Now, it will plug the gadgets into many more stores over the next year, as part of a major face lift. "It is an opportunity for us as the market leader to stay in front of the pack," said Jim Dwyer, the chief business development officer for Ahold USA, Stop & Shop's Dutch parent company.

Instead of saving labor, the new gadgets shift it, from store employees to shoppers. Users weigh, scan, and bag their own purchases, preferably in reusable cloth bags, priced at 99 cents each. Good for the environment, and for the bottom line. No wonder the bags are green.

When I asked Stop & Shop spokesman Robert Keane about how all this technology will reduce labor costs, he deftly sidestepped the question. "This is something to really offer the customer choices," he said. And of course, he's right. After years as a faithful Shaw's customer, I switched to the Stop & Shop in Quincy because its grocery tech gets me in and out of the store so much faster. Besides, it's cool.

Especially the device at the heart of the Stop & Shop system, the Scan It personal scanner. Shaped like a bar of soap with a pistol grip, the Scan It has been deployed in about 90 Stop & Shops, the first large-scale deployment of the system anywhere in the world.

Scan It is a lot sleeker and simpler than the first personal scanners introduced by Stop & Shop in 2005. The old device, called Shopping Buddy, was about as big and heavy as a laptop computer and overburdened with features shoppers didn't need, like a digital map of the store or games to keep children occupied while their parents shopped.

"It was too much for the shoppers," said Michele Deziel, spokeswoman for Modiv Media Inc., the Quincy company that designed the software for Shopping Buddy and Scan It.

The new version, introduced last year, keeps things simple. You activate it by scanning a Stop & Shop "loyalty card," the kind you may already use to get discounts on various items. Now just walk the aisles. When you pick an item, aim the Scan It at the barcode and press a button. The device tracks each selection and the total price of your purchases.

The do-it-yourself strategy also applies to items that aren't scanner-friendly, like deli meats and vegetables. You can use a touch-screen computer to place deli orders; when your corned beef is ready, Scan It flashes you a message. For produce, scales calculate the correct price when you punch in a four-digit code for each item. Out pops a barcoded sticker.

It works fine, if you know the code, or if a code sticker has been glued to your onions or broccoli. Often, though, there is no sticker, forcing you to search for it using the scale's touch screen. Usually this works, but sometimes it doesn't, leaving shoppers irritated and possibly vitamin-deficient.

One thing you can't purchase alone is booze. Scan a six-pack of Bass Ale, and a human will meet you at the checkout to confirm you're old enough to drink.

Scan It is also a subtle but persistent salesman. Scanning the loyalty card links the device to a history of your previous purchases. Stop & Shop's system uses this data to come up with special offers for products you might fancy. The offers are relayed to Scan It, which gently pings you about discounts. You'll be glad to know that personal data, like names or credit card numbers, don't travel over the wireless network - just a numerical code that identifies you as a sucker for pasta.

Still, this can all seem a little intrusive. Then again, it's nothing new. Retailers invented loyalty cards to track customers; Scan It just lets them ride herd on us every minute we're in the store. If you don't like it, get rid of your card - and forget about using Scan It.

Your last stop is the automated checkout line. These come in two varieties - a simple kiosk for small purchases and a long line with a conveyor belt for big shopping trips. The little kiosk, with its rack for bagging your purchases, can be a nuisance if you use a paper sack to line the plastic grocery bag. The rack has a scale to make sure you're not sneaking items past the scanner to avoid paying. Sometimes it reads an extra bag as an unscanned item and halts the checkout process. It's infuriating. I prefer the less-irksome conveyor belt.

Either way, it's time to pay. Scanning a barcode mounted atop the checkout device tells the Scan It you're done. Swipe your loyalty card at the checkout scanner, and it instantly reads your list of purchases and tells you how much to pay. Now and then, you'll be ordered to a checkout line where a human attendant will rescan your purchases. It's a random audit to deter theft. But usually, the machine just asks for the money. Shove in a few bills or swipe a credit card, and it's all over but the bagging.

And no 99-cent cotton eco-sacks either. I use disposable paper and plastic, paid for by Stop & Shop. All my scanning and weighing saved it a tidy sum in labor costs; it's the least they can do.

Source: Boston Globe

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Monday, July 28, 2008

Stop & Shop Said to Eye Closing Dunkin’ Donuts


QUINCY, Mass. — Stop & Shop here may be closing some or all of the 132 Dunkin’ Donuts locations in its stores and replacing them with Starbucks, according to local reports last week. A spokesman for Stop & Shop, owned by Amsterdam-based Ahold, confirmed that the chain’s leases with Dunkin’ Donuts expire next year but declined to comment further on the reports. An article in the Meriden Record-Journal in Connecticut said Stop & Shop plans to replace Dunkin’ Donuts locations with Starbucks, although it was not clear how many of the locations would be replaced. Stop & Shop’s website lists 132 in-store Dunkin’ Donuts. In a prepared statement, Stephen J. Caldeira, chief global communications and public affairs officer for Dunkin’ Brands, said, “Any reports about our stores located inside Stop & Shop supermarkets are speculative.” Stop & Shop inked a five-year deal with Starbucks in 2006 to develop an unspecified number of in-store cafes.

Source: Supermarket News

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Monday, July 14, 2008

New head of Giant-Landover stores, Stop & Shop


Carl Schlicker was named president and CEO of Stop & Shop Supermarket Co. and its sister company Giant-Landover, marking his leap from a $4.3 billion to a $16.7 billion entity of Dutch food retailer tycoon Royal Ahold.

Schlicker, formerly chief executive of Ahold’s Giant-Carlisle group of supermarkets, will replace Jose Alvarez, who is ending his two-year chief executive role to become executive vice president of global business development for Amsterdam-based Ahold.

In February 2007, Schlicker took the reins of the 145-store Carlisle group from his role as executive vice president of sales and marketing of the Carlisle, Pa.-based group. . . more

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Monday, May 12, 2008

Stop & Shop Opens in Springfield, MA


SPRINGFIELD - The new Super Stop & Shop supermarket at Allen and Cooley Streets that was of concern last year to nearby residents is in business.

The store was opened on May 2 with special events that included face-painting, games, trivia, and children's activities.

"People seem to like us there," said company spokesman Robert E. Keane yesterday.

The Outer Belt Civic Association had opposed the grocery outlet because of concerns about increased traffic. Neighbors did get the chain to back off on its plan to open 24 hours a day.

It is open on Mondays through Saturdays from 6 a.m. to midnight, and on Sundays from 7 a.m. to 10 p.m.

The 63,000-square-foot supermarket has a staff of 188, Keane said.

The store at 415 Cooley St. is the former site of an old A&P supermarket redeveloped by the Hayes-Kaufman Partnership of Manchester, Conn., at a cost of between $12 million and $15 million. Besides the Stop & Shop outlet, the development features 9,500 square feet of retail stores.

Keane would not say yesterday how much the it cost to build the supermarket.

He said it will have amenities now standard in most supermarkets, such as a sushi bar, a Citizens Bank branch, a bakery, a seafood department, and Redbox DVD rentals.

Not to be outdone, Big Y Foods Inc. recently completed $2 million worth of renovations on its store at Allen and Cooley, across the street from Stop & Shop.

A $10 million Big Y outlet now under construction on Route 20, Wilbraham, will be opened in the summer. It is located a short distance from a Stop & Shop store on Boston Road, Springfield.

Stop & Shop maintains 120 stores in the state, including outlets at 1277 Liberty St. and 1600 Boston Road in Springfield.

Big Y has 57 outlets in Connecticut and Massachusetts, including stores at 300 Cooley St. and 800 Boston Road in Springfield.

Source: MassLive.com

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Thursday, April 24, 2008

Stop & Shop to Open Maine In-Store Bank Branches


QUINCY, Mass. — The Stop & Shop Supermarket Co. here, part of Ahold USA, said yesterday it has made an agreement with People’s United Bank, Bridgeport, Conn., for in-store bank branches in its stores in Maine.

Stop & Shop now has one store in Kennebunk, which opened last year, and the bank branch will open in June. People’s recently acquired Chittendon Corp. in Maine, which operates three banks: Maine Bank & Trust, Merrill Bank and Ocean Bank. The Kennebunk branch will be an Ocean Bank.

“Today, 75 of our 162 Connecticut branches are located in Super Stop & Shop stores, providing our customers with superior convenience and helping us deliver an unparalleled customer experience,” said Robert R. D’Amore, senior executive vice president, Retail and Small Business Banking, People’s United Bank.

“Jointly, People’s United, one of our first in-store partners, and Stop & Shop have identified the synergies of convenience and volume that exist for our customers who may shop and bank in the same trip,” said John Hernon, vice president of leasing and asset management for Stop & Shop. The retailer hasn’t announced plans for future Maine stores.

Source: SuperMarket News

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Wednesday, April 23, 2008

Ahold says vigilant on economy, food prices


AMSTERDAM, April 23 (Reuters) - Dutch supermarket group Ahold (AHLN.AS: Quote, Profile, Research) said on Wednesday it would keep a close watch on economic developments and rising food prices, and it expected its U.S. operations to improve in the later part of 2008.

"We will remain vigilant on the changing economic situation and rising food prices," Ahold Chief Executive John Rishton told shareholders at a meeting.

Ahold, the world's seventh largest retailer by sales, makes more than half its revenue in the United States, and the rest in Europe. The U.S. share has declined in recent years after the sale of some assets, but the company is trying to boost its U.S. operations.

By 1255 GMT shares traded down 1.6 percent, underperforming the DJ Stoxx European retailers' index , which traded down 1.0 percent.

In 2006, Ahold began a two-year overhaul of its two main U.S. chains, Stop & Shop and Giant-Landover, cutting prices and offering more own-brand products and greater variety. It also sold its catering supplies unit U.S. Foodservice.

Half of Ahold's operating profit comes from Dutch grocery chain Albert Heijn. It is also present in the Czech Republic and Slovakia and has joint ventures in Portugal and Sweden.
Rishton said he expected to sell Ahold's 49 percent stake in Portugal's Jeronimo Martins Retail (JMR) this year.

"We are confident we will sell JMR Holdings this year," he said at the shareholders meeting.
Scandinavian joint venture ICA, in which Ahold holds 60 percent, will continue to be part of the group, Rishton said, as it has a very strong market position. (Reporting by Foo Yun Chee; Writing by Harro ten Wolde; Editing by Quentin Bryar)

Source: Reuters

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Friday, April 11, 2008

Citizens extends in-store deal with Stop & Shop


PROVIDENCE – The in-store partnership between Citizens Financial Group Inc. and Stop & Shop Supermarket Co. LLC has proven so successful, the companies have agreed to extend it for another nine years. Financial terms were not disclosed.

“They’ve been a great partner for us,” Robert Keane, a spokesperson for Quincy, Mass.-based Stop & Shop, told Providence Business News today. “We think of them not so much as a tenant in our stores [but] as a business partner … and we look forward to continuing that relationship.”

The deal “extends our partnership with Stop & Shop through 2017, with an option to extend it for another five years,” Mike Jones, New England region spokesman for Citizens, told PBN in a telephone interview today.

“It’s really an affirmation of the great partnership we have with Stop & Shop, and it’s an affirmation of our belief that our in-store model provides value to our customers,” he said. “Obviously, there’s a tremendous convenience … our in-store branches are open seven days a week and offer extended weekday hours.”

“We have 540 in-store locations throughout our footprint and 23 in-stores in Rhode Island,” with Stop & Shop and other retail partners, Jones said.

Those locations have proven a big source of new accounts for Citizens.

Overall, “we generate 30 percent more new checking-account customers in-store,” he said. “Your traditional branches, we have maybe 5,000 customers per week, most of whom are repeat customers. In any given Stop & Shop store, we have 15,000 to 20,000 customers in our lobby, most of whom are potential new customers,” Jones said.

“It’s also a great platform for us to offer value-added promotions,” he said.

“We kicked off a new promotion yesterday that involves us giving away $135,000 in free groceries,” through Stop & Shop and other supermarket partners, Jones said. Any customer who opens a new checking account at one of Citizens’ in-store branches will be entered in a drawing, in mid-May, for a $250 prize. With one prize per location, that amounts to $5,750 in Rhode Island alone.

“We’re also offering a cash-back program, Extra Green,” starting this quarter and continuing indefinitely, Jones said. “Every time a customer who is enrolled in the program – and it’s free of charge … every time they spend $50 or more at Stop & Shop, they automatically receive into their Citizens’ account a certain percentage.” Extra Green participants who have “our premiere account,” Circle Gold Checking with interest, get back 3 percent of their grocery purchase; those with regular Circle Checking get 2 percent; and those with the basic Green Checking get 1 percent, he said. “And that’s Citizens Bank’s money, that’s not customer money.”

Source: Providence Business News

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