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smart shopping cart

June 22, 2023

Instacart’s AI-Powered Shopping Cart Arrives at ShopRite and Fairway Market

Today Instacart announced that ShopRite in Spotswood, New Jersey, and Fairway Market in Kips Bay, Manhattan are the first two locations to deploy the company’s latest generation smart shopping cart.

The new Caper Cart, which the company announced last September, is the third generation of the AI-powered smart shopping cart platform and the first version of the cart built entirely on the watch of Instacart, which acquired Caper AI (the startup behind the Caper Cart) in October of 2021.

The updated Caper Cart has scales, sensors, touchscreens, and computer vision to enable self-checkout by the customer. Despite the added features, it is slimmer and lighter than the previous version and has 65% more capacity. Perhaps most important for grocers, the new cart system comes with stacked charging, allowing them to charge batches of carts at once and eliminating the need to charge carts individually or swap out batteries.

From the release:

To get started, customers at the ShopRite of Spotswood and the Fairway Market in New York City can grab a Caper Cart at the front end of the store. Powered by AI and computer vision technology, the Caper Cart recognizes and scans items as they are placed in the Cart, allowing customers to easily stay on budget with a running total shown on the screen. To checkout, customers simply scan the barcode displayed on the Cart’s screen at the store’s self-checkout area.

Instacart’s win with Wakefern Food Corp (a retailer-owned cooperative that includes ShopRite and Fairway Market) comes as its competitors in the smart shopping cart space continue to move forward. In January, smart cart startup Flow announced they’d inked a thousand shopping cart commitment from German retailer Expresso. A month later, Shopic announced they’d locked down a deal for two thousand smart carts with Israel-based grocery chain Shufersal. Stateside, Amazon has deployed its Dash cart to numerous locations.

Not all startups in the space have found the road easy, however. Seattle-based Veeve recently announced it was pivoting towards becoming an extension of grocery retailer media networks, using its in-store shopping cart add-ons as yet another digital screen to offer up promotions and ads to in-store shoppers.

According to Instacart, the carts are available at the ShopRite of Spotswood and will soon be introduced at the Fairway Market in Manhattan.

The Instacart Caper Cart Shopping Cart

July 13, 2021

Shopic Raises $10M for its Clip-On Smart Cart Cashierless Checkout Solution

Smart shopping cart startup Shopic announced today that it has raised $10 million in equity funding. The round was led by Claridge Israel, with participation from existing investors Entrée Capital, IBI Tech Fund, and Tal Capital. This brings the total amount raised by Shopic to $21 million.

The Tel Aviv, Israel-based Shopic creates cashierless checkout retail experiences through its a device that clips on to the handles of existing shopping carts. The Shopic device has cameras and a touchscreen, and uses computer vision to recognize products placed inside the cart. The Shopic system keeps tally of everything in the cart and ties in with a store’s POS so customers can skip the checkout line and get charged automatically upon leaving.

Shopic also promotes its smart carts as advertising vehicles and real-time inventory management systems. In addition to presenting an ongoing receipt as people shop, the touchscreen can also display customized digital promotions and ads based on data such as a customer’s shopping history. Because Shopic’s system is keeping track of what items are placed in the cart (and taken out) and when, it also provides real-time inventory insight as well as information about how customers shop.

The cashierless checkout space has seen a ton of funding and installation activity around the world so far this year. There are a number of solutions coming to market including retrofitting stores with cameras (Trigo, Grabango) and smart shopping carts (Caper, Veeve). Even Shopic’s very specific sub-section of turning existing shopping carts into smart carts is getting crowded, with other players such as SAI, WalkOut and Nomitri vying for grocery retailer dollars as well.

All of this action illustrates how adoption of cashierless checkout is certainly accelerating, thanks in part to its contactless nature and fears stirred by the pandemic. But despite all the funding and the momentum, it will still be awhile before it crosses over into the mainstream. I recently spoke with the CEOs of cashierless checkout startups Trigo and AiFi. The Trigo CEO believes we’ll see cahierless checkout options in every major city of the world as early as next year. That could mean there’s just one store offering it, however. AiFi’s CEO said we’re about a decade away from cashierless checkout becoming mainstream.

In its press announcement today, Shopic said that it is already deploying solutions with major grocery chains around the world, and will use its new funding to accelerate commercial activities and expand its team.

September 15, 2019

The Food Tech Show: Impossible’s First Retail Product is Almost Here And We’re Pretty Excited About It

We’ve been head’s down preparing for the fifth Smart Kitchen Summit (in just three weeks!), but The Spoon crew took some time this week to talk about some of the latest news in Food Tech.

Here are some of the stories we discussed:

  • The Caper smart grocery cart
  • The new bill in California that would require gig economy workers to be treated as employees and the potential impact on food delivery
  • Impossible’s first retail product, which looks like it will be a pound of “ground beef”
  • A look at this year’s class of Startup Showcase finalists for the Smart Kitchen Summit

If you want to see the startups we talk about or hang out with the Spoon crew, make sure to go to the Smart Kitchen Summit and get your tickets before they’re gone! Use discount code PODCAST for 25% off of tickets at www.smartkitchensummit.com.

As always, you can listen to the podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts. You can also download the episode directly to your device or just simply hit play below.

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