WALMART customers have repeatedly complained about the expansion of in-store self-checkout.
Walmart shoppers even abandoned full carts instead of using self-checkout.
Like many others in the industry, the store added more self-service registers despite customer backlash.
“I won’t do self-checkout, I force them to do it”, he wrote a client on X, formerly known as Twitter.
“I once went out and left a cart full of stuff because a very hateful Walmart employee refused to do so.”
Another customer said long checkout lines led her to stop shopping at Walmart altogether.
“Yes, Walmart. I needed just one more reason to stop shopping here, and this seals the deal,” they captioned a photo of themselves at the end of a long line.
“So apparently only Walmart Plus members can use self-checkout now. Sorry, Target, for cheating on you.”
Walmart Plus is the retailer’s $98-a-year subscription service meant to rival Amazon Prime.
Recently, some Walmart locations began limiting self-checkout lanes for Walmart Plus subscribers and Spark Delivery drivers.
Subscribers can use the Scan and Go option at the lanes, which allows them to scan items as they shop and pay for them in one go.
So let me get this straight. Do you want me to pay a subscription to take a look?” another buyer wrote on Facebook.
“Here I am waiting behind 20 people while there is no line at the cash register, with a cashier standing there doing nothing but watching to make sure no one uses it except the Walmart Plus people.
“But all the other cash registers have more than 10 people.
MORE CHANGES TO CHECKOUT
Walmart customers are fed up with the launch of in-store digital price tags.
Company representatives announced that digital shelf labels will be in all stores by 2026, as there are currently only about 1,400.
A pilot test at a store in Grapevine, Texas, found that the labels improved staff productivity and the customer experience.
Changing price tags on shelves used to take up to two days, but with digital labels it can be done in minutes.
But customers think the labels are being implemented for another reason.
Latest self-checkout changes
Retailers are evolving their self-checkout strategy in an effort to speed checkout times and reduce theft.
Walmart shoppers were shocked when self-checkout lanes at several locations were made available only to Walmart+ members.
Other customers reported that self-checkout was closed at specific times and they were offered more cashiers.
While shoppers feared that shoplifting would fuel the updates, a Walmart spokesperson revealed that store managers are simply experimenting with ways to improve checkout performance.
One bizarre experiment included an RFID-powered self-checkout kiosk that would thwart fiercely contested receipt checks.
However, this test has been discontinued.
At Target, items are being limited in auto-checkout.
Last fall, the brand researched new express self-checkout lanes in 200 stores with 10 items or less for added convenience.
In March 2024, this policy was expanded to 2,000 stores in the US.
“Instant group pricing” he wrote A person.
“This is just the first step in introducing a dynamic pricing model…basically, price increases for groceries that are based on real-time demand and inventory levels,” another shopper speculated.
Another said the labels were already installed in the store and were extremely difficult to read.
“The text was so small that not even the employee helping me could read it, and she was about 10 centimeters away from the label,” they wrote.
But Greg Cathey, Walmart’s senior vice president of transformation and innovation, said the tags won’t lead to price increases.
“It won’t take an hour at all; it’s that price, and the next hour it’s not,” he said during Walmart’s annual shareholder meeting.
Despite the company’s constant updates, they recently announced that a store is closing due to poor performance.
Take a look at five upcoming changes to Walmart’s aisles.
This story originally appeared on The-sun.com read the full story