Amazon to soon open its first full-size, cashier-less grocery store

Amazon is going big in the US grocery industry by investing 800 billion USD in cashier-less grocery store with big brands like Kroger, Walmart, Kroger, Instacart and 7-Eleven.

Amazon is going big in the US grocery industry by investing 800 billion USD just like big brands like Kroger, Walmart, Kroger, Instacart and 7-Eleven. The e-commerce is coming up with its maiden full-size chairless grocery store. The company has come out with its first grocery store for the past five years in 2015 close to Seattle with a venture called Amazon Go Grocery. The company has been working on this project in an area of 10,400 square feet located at 610 E. Pike St. that incorporates the same technology, which is found in the two dozen or so Amazon Go locations. 

Amazon cashierless grocery store
Amazon cashierless grocery store

This store will allow the shoppers to walk inside free and scan the QR Code with the Amazon mobile apps and then carry products over their baskets inside the store and then walk out once they are finished. The Zero human interactions are needed via the store that will have the staff with a couple of people to help to keep the stock shelves and then address the questions of the shoppers. Cameron Janes the VP of Amazon said that it was seen with a lot of strode in the store and claimed that it can be produced with a big example. 

He said that they are just starting here and then came the declining comment on the number of grocery stores that Amazon is going to open. It further said with the physical stores they are all working backward from the client and then deliver the same with a great difference. However, the space in Seattle seems still smaller even than any other grocery store one can see in the country with not more than 40,000 square feet. The Amazon Go Grocery is going to stock the kitchen cabinets of the shoppers and help them with dinner, while Amazon Go stores on the other side are meant to serve the bustling business districts during the lunch and supper hours claimed Janes.

The said store is likely to stock not less than 5,000 items in it which include fresh produce, dairy, meats, packaged seafood, bakery treats including doughnuts, and household goods like napkins, paper towels plus meal kits and a wide range of liquor selection with wines and beer. With every item in the store, however, would be priced individually, which means it would not be required to produce for instance the Bananas for 19 cents or other cost or like avocados are 49 cents. The technology of Amazon is all set to track the shoppers choosing them bagging their produce in the store and that comes with the biggest incremental challenge to make the customers shop and do not worry about anything.