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Adrina Adie

Morrisons restores back human staff to monitor till queues


  • The Intelligent Queue Management (iQM) system has now been scrapped
  • Morrisons's CEO David Potts took over last week and ditched technology
  • It used special sensors to determine how many checkouts should be open
  • But feedback from staff and customers determined it was 'waste of time'
  • Supermarket has also got rid of 'scan rate' which counts items scanned
  • The controversial self-service tills are expected to stay despite changes

The weekly shop has become something of a modern day nightmare with stores asking us to either scan as we shop or use self-service tills.

But now one of Britain's biggest supermarkets has turned its back on technology in favour of human staff manning stores.

Morrisons's new CEO, David Potts, who took over last week has scrapped the Intelligent Queue Management (iQM) system used in shops after receiving feedback from customers and staff.

The technology, which was introduced in 2008, used infrared sensors to determine how many checkouts to open by monitoring the number of customer flowing through the store.

It meant that during quieter periods staff could be taken off the tills and placed in other parts of the store. 

The company's retail team, along with the new boss, concluded that checkout teams would make better and more balanced decisions compared to the iQM computer system.

But while they have brought humans back to monitor queues, the controversial self-scan tills will be here to stay.

Morrisons was the only British retailer to use iQM, which used infrared sensors both at the entrance to the store and over each checkout lanes.

It was supposed to enable checkout managers to predict exactly when shoppers would arrive at the checkouts so the tills were open for them when they got there.

'UNEXPECTED ITEM IN THE BAGGING AREA': THE MODERN DAY TRIALS AND TRIBULATIONS OF SHOPPING

  • Self-service checkouts: Just about every supermarket offers customers the option of scanning and bagging their own shopping. It's supposed to save time, but for those who have tried to buy any age-restricted items like alcohol will know, you can spend longer waiting for the one member of staff manning the area to assist. They also have regular issues with realising an item has in fact been put in the bagging area.
  • Scan as you shop: Some supermarkets have self scan devices that allow you to whizz around the shop and scan your shopping as you go, supposedly cutting out the end part. But you still have to go to another of these machines and dock in before you go for any items that wouldn't scan, ones with security tags and for random spot checks.
  • Misting machines: Last month Morrisons announced it was scrapping misting units used to keep fruit and vegetables fresh. They were criticised by analysts who said the store had 'lost touch' with its core customers.
  • When the iQM system was first rolled out as part of a trial with the promise of cutting customer waiting times it had a five per cent success rate, however, staff claimed the system was pointless.

Some took to online job review website Glassdoor to complain, with a department manager in Felixstowe, Suffolk, describing it as 'a waste of time and money'.

The unnamed manager had added: 'It [the iQM] messes up all the departments in the store and it has a major knock on effect to all other departments with the waste and markdown and rotation.'

A checkout operator from Portsmouth, writing in October last year, said: 'Morrisons needs to go back to basics. We are a superior supermarket and that's what we need to install in customers old and new.

'Customers want to be treated. Show them we care more than the other leading stores.'

After listening to colleagues executives have also decided to scrap another computerised system which measures the amount of products scanned every minute by checkout staff.

The 'scan rate' was introduced in 2012 after imposing new time targets of one item every three seconds, which prompted an outcry from members of the public, who branded the supermarket as turning into a 'battery hen farm'.

Mr Potts, a former executive at Tesco, said: 'We intend to be an organisation that listens very hard to its customers and staff and, wherever possible, responds quickly.

'Our colleagues in our stores are best placed to use their experience and personal judgement in deciding how best to serve their customers, keeping queues low at the checkouts and improving the customer’s shopping trip.'  



 
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