Fast planning - smart solution
The regional Edeka Group North Bavaria-Saxony-Thuringia has launched an individual self-checkout solution for its independent retailers. The express terminals are customized according to their own specifications and are relatively inexpensive to purchase and maintain. The systems are designed for use throughout the Edeka Group.
The 700 or so supermarkets operated by Edeka-Handelsgesellschaft Nordbayern-Sachsen-Thüringen, almost all of which are run by independent retailers, are also increasingly paying in non-cash. The average cash share for 2018 as a whole was 57.3% - in the first quarter of 2021, however, only 41% of goods were paid for in cash. At the same time, self-checkout services are also increasingly being used. To date, the 700 stores have around 190 SCO terminals have been set up in various constellations. Between 15 and 20 percent of sales are usually processed there, with peaks of more than 40 percent. "Clear trends that demonstrate customers' willingness to use modern checkout options," says Pierre Vieweg, Head of IT/Retail at the regional group.
With this in mind, Edeka Nordbayern-Sachsen-Thüringen decided in November 2019 to develop a new stationary solution in the form of compact express terminals. "We want to offer our independent retailers a smart self-checkout that bridges the gap between the large SCO systems and conventional checkouts," explains Pierre Vieweg. The specifications: based on standard checkout hardware, compact and space-saving, flexibly expandable, less susceptible to faults, easy to install and integrate as plug & play, and therefore cost-effective overall. The system also had to be suitable for mass roll-out and for all store types (supermarket, e-center, Marktkauf, discount stores) within the Edeka Group.
TO THE PROTOTYPE IN 6 MONTHS
Edeka's head office in Hamburg pursues a vendor pool strategy and works with technology providers ITAB and Diebold Nixdorf for SCO systems. However, a different approach was chosen for the Northern Bavaria-Saxony-Thuringia regional company's project. "If there is nothing comparable on the market that meets our requirements, we have to pursue our own solution," explains Pierre Vieweg. The partner for this is the Freiburg-based company Pyramid, which is also part of the headquarters' supplier group.
The technology provider is building the new SCO hardware according to Edeka's specifications. The project timeline: idea in November 2019, project start in December 2019, first visualizations of the terminals in January 2020, approval of design, functionalities and other requirements in February 2020, prototype delivery and acceptance tests from June 2020, finally piloting in August 2020, at the E Center of Edeka retailer Stefan Scharrer in Fürth. "The use of existing resources and expertise, face-to-face consultations and short decision-making paths, and a high level of trust between the business partners are the prerequisites for meeting such an ambitious timeline," says Pierre Vieweg.