They may have been texting or checking Facebook updates, but now grocery customers could use mobile devices to plan meals, organize lists, download coupons, compare prices, check rewards points, get personalized sale offers and scan bar codes
Mobile technology is the latest front opened by a growing number of supermarket chains in their fight for customers. Many grocers are rushing to offer mobile tools that they hope will differentiate their stores and boost customer loyalty.
On Wednesday, Safeway launched "Just For U," a mobile shopping tool that lets customers use their smartphones for features such as downloading personalized deals to Safeway rewards cards. The Pleasanton, Calif.-based chain, with 30 Baltimore area stores, hopes the savings in time and money will persuade shoppers to visit its stores more regularly.
"This will make it more convenient for people to shop more exclusively at Safeway," Steve Neibergall, president of Safeway's Eastern Division, said in an interview last week. "Everyone is looking for savings and bargains. When people see how much money they can save … they won't feel they have to go to Target or Walmart."
Safeway is the latest chain to offer a mobile application. Giant rolled out a program last year that links to the grocer's loyalty cards and allows customers to access store circulars, download specials to rewards cards and monitor gas reward points. Wegmans, Harris Teeter and Peapod, the online delivery service, have also launched or upgraded mobile shopping tools recently.
Grocers, like other retailers, want to be in the smartphone realm because that's where customers can be found.
"They want to go where the consumer is going, and this is one way they can do it," said Darren Seifer, food and beverage analyst for NPD Group, a market research firm. "Food marketers have a huge opportunity to connect directly with tech-savvy consumers. … Retailers will find ways to find out where the consumer is and connect with them at that point, on phones or tablets or some other device to be invented down the road."
Seifer said targeted marketing, such as Safeway's Just for U program, appears to be a twist on grocers' long-standing frequent-shopper programs.
"It seems as though Safeway [and others] are trying to harness a new technology that goes beyond the physical structure of the store," Seifer said.
Research points to increases in mobile device use when it comes to finding grocery deals, shopping for food and connecting with brands. Coupon apps are used by about 25 million Americans each month, most frequently in households with children, according to NPD's National Eating Trends report released in May.
Another NPD study found that consumers who use smartphone apps say they are more loyal to brand-name items versus private label — another explanation for the flurry of retailers trying to get their names on consumers' devices, Seifer said.
Still, shopping online for food is far from mainstream. NPD found that only 7 percent of consumers shop for food and beverages at least every two to three months on Amazon.com, and that percentage is higher than for grocery sites such as Peapod.com.
While retailers have long tracked consumer trends and behavior, mobile apps link spending history and interests to a consumer's identity. That may be fine, especially if consumers get something tangible, such as a coupon, said Rebecca Jeschke, a digital rights analyst for the Electronic Frontier Foundation, an advocate for privacy and consumer rights in the digital world.
But she warned that "when you are helping retailers or anyone else create a data trail on you … it's important to look at privacy policies and try to figure out who else can get access and if your information is sold or traded.
"There are all sorts of mobile apps in phones, and so many can do cool things," she said. "The question is what do these companies do with this information. Right now, consumers don't have good access to the answers."
The retailers say they are not only following, but staying ahead of, consumer trends.
Wegmans has monitored how customers are shifting from desktops or laptops to mobile devices to access its stores electronically, said Josh Culhane, an application development manager for customer technology in Wegmans' IT department.
The retailer's iPhone app, also available for iPads and iPod touch devices, lets shoppers click items online or scan them at home to build shopping lists. The app also offers access to hundreds of recipes and a way to move each ingredient to the shopping list. The lists are automatically organized by aisle in the store where the customer shops to ease the shopping experience. As customers add impulse buys in the store, they can use their mobile devices to add them to their list, which then can be used to speed check out.
It's not an awards ceremony, you're only shopping! Vanessa Hudgens changes outfits FOUR times in one day - Daily Mail
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Everyone knows that celebrities like to change a few times when they're appearing on stage, but they don't normally make that much effort everyday - except for Vanessa Hudgens.
The 23-year-old actress managed to change her outfit four times yesterday as she split her time between family and her boyfriend.
Hudgens enjoyed a spot of retail therapy with her younger sister Stella and also went to the supermarket with Austin Butler.
Look at what I've bought! Vanessa Hudgens changed outfits during a shopping trip in California yesterday
Another outfit! The actress was spotted modelling a dress, beads and a floral headband on the same day as her shopping trip
Perhaps the High School Musical star just has so many clothes that she can't find the time to wear them all on separate days, or maybe she couldn't resist changing into her new purchases.
First of all she was seen arriving at the Westfield mall in California with her sibling wearing black off-the-shoulder top with dark printed shorts and black boots.
However, once she's spent some of her hard-earned money, Hudgens emerged from the shopping complex carrying a full shopping bag and wearing white denim shorts, which she may have just purchased.
Earlier on the day she was seen sporting a very different look wearing a grey dress, a brown beaded necklace and a floral headband.
Can't make up her mind! Hudgens also wore jeans and a jumper on the same day as her trip to the mall
Me and my man: Perhaps the High School Musical star wanted to change because she was meeting up with Austin Butler
Hudgens clearly couldn't make up her mind though and ditched this outfit as well to go food shopping with her beau Butler.
As the happy couple headed to the shops, the brunette could be seen wearing blue ripped jeans, a light-brown jumper and black boots as she clung onto her actor boyfriend.
Though the High School Musical Star has been one of the biggest - and highest paid - Disney stars in the past decade, her work schedule has slowed considerably.
Sisterly time: The star's sibling Stella wore a similar outfit of tiny shorts, a vest and chunky boots
She finished the principal photography on Spring Breakers in March and doesn't appear to have any other work lined up.
Spring Breakers is a film also starring Selena Gomez and James Franco.
'It’s really like pop art,” Vanessa told Glamour South Africa about the film.
'It’s a funny spin on how youth nowadays can be doing things that are really crazy, but yet they are so pure... They just don’t think about the future – they are just doing what they feel is right.'
WHO are these people that can be so CRITICAL... yet obviously have "nothing better to do" than COUNT how many times someone ELSE changes clothes ??
- Brenda, West Virginia, USA, 16/6/2012 23:51
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