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by smackfu
5301 days ago
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What I didn't see in this article is why retailers don't do this today. I see a lot of positives listed and no negatives, so it seems like a no-brainer, right? Yet the biggest retailers like Walmart and Target have tons of lanes, and even do staggered front/back lanes which are terrible for the customers. Is it because there are negative feelings to seeing a long line, and that people do not expect it to be fast so they abandon their purchase? |
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Spatially, its actually quite complex to make one long line (it will probably have to snake around your store, and you'll need those awful movable tape barriers everywhere to make sure everyone keeps in line - customers hate these) and then to make one long line split evenly into several end points is not easy either (doing this may also take up a lot of valuable floor space).
Also, you could just have a store layout inherited from the 60s and its too expensive to change it right now...