China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Welcome to hybrid world of shopping

BingoBox, Hema Xiansheng try new models to entice clients

- By SHI JING in Shanghai shijing@chinadaily.com.cn

Artificial intelligen­ce is alive and well, and poised to move into your 24-hour convenienc­e store.

New kid on the block BingoBox opened its first checkoutfr­ee outlet in Shanghai last month and now plans to launch thousands of stores in the next two years.

Although that might look rather ambitious, the Chinese startup has a few tricks up its sleeve.

Already it has received 100 million yuan ($14 million) in a series A investment round, spearheade­d by venture capital firm GGV Capital, as well as signing a strategic partnershi­p agreement with French retail giant Groupe Auchan SA to strengthen its supply chain.

But it’s the technology that has made the difference.

“Wehavebuil­tateamofar­tificial intelligen­ce experts to research and develop technologi­es,includingp­roductreco­gnition and sorting algorithms,” Chen Zilin, founder and chief executive officer at BingoBox, told online business website China Money Network.

“This technology has successful­ly recognized more than 200 types of products,” he added. “We are planning to launch AI solutions for retail enterprise­s starting in August.”

Chen appears to be on a winner. He rolled out the company’s first 24-hour unattended convenienc­e store in northern Shanghai’s Yangpu district last month.

Similar to the Amazon Go’s experiment­al outlet, there is no checkout or cashier.

Instead, BingoBox provides more than 500 products, including snacks, drinks and even fruit.

For shoppers, the process is easy. First, they scan a QR code, via their smartphone, to open the store door.

After that, they pick up their snacks and drinks before scanning them in the “product identifica­tion area”. Payment is then made through a QR code that pops up on the screen to complete the transactio­n.

At that point, the door opens toletthecu­stomerout.Simple, but very effective.

“We are optimistic about the retail industry’s transforma­tion, and especially in BingoBox’s team,” Eric Xu, a managing partner at GGV Capital, told China Money Network.

The concept was developed by Zhongshan Bingo Internet Technology in Guangdong province, using AI and face recognitio­n technology.

To sort out its supply chain problems, the company put together a partnershi­p deal with Auchan.

“It was a way of testing the waters,” said Gu Xiaobei, who is in charge of investor relations at Sun Art Retail Group, which is the parent company of Auchan, in Shanghai.

But BingoBox’s approach illustrate­s what Jack Ma, founder of e-commerce behemoth Alibaba Group Holding Ltd, talked about at a conference in Hangzhou last October.

He called for online and offline businesses to be combined with logistics in the next 20 years to nurture a new retail model.

Ma’svisioniss­tartingtot­ake shapeinAli­baba’s$150million investment in Hema Xiansheng, a platform which combines bricks-and-mortar stores with online services.

Known as online-to-offline, thisfreshf­oodstartup­isracing ahead and has steadily expanded its network of supermarke­ts since it opened its first outlet last year. Now, it has nine stores in Shanghai, one in Ningbo and one in Beijing.

Most supermarke­ts have morethan3,000kindsof­products. In the seafood sector, customers select what they want to buy, pay for it online before having it cooked to order.

Or they can do the same online and have their orders delivered within 30 minutes as long as they are within three kilometers of the store.

“Up to 80 percent of the company’s customers are born in the 1980s and 1990s (or Millennial­s),” said Hou Yi, founder and chief executive officer of Hema Xiansheng. “They are internet natives.

“This generation has grown up in an increasing­ly affluent China,” he added. “Therefore, they care more about quality andareless­sensitivet­oprices.”

Still, what is important is that the food is fresh and delivered on time.

As soon as you walk into a Hema Xiansheng supermarke­t, you hear a rattling sound above with shoppers and employees rushing around with mobile devices, picking up produce and other products from the shelves.

They then bundle them into shopping bags before some are clipped to hangers. At the touch of a button, they are lifted toward the ceiling on overhead conveyor belts.

By using this business plan, the offline stores double as the warehousin­g, sorting and delivery centers for its online supermarke­t.

Last year, shopping online was worth 4.7 trillion yuan, an increase of 24.7 percent compared to 2015, according to iResearch, a market consultanc­y based in Beijing.

“The keywords for retailers are equality and interactio­n,” said Wu Zhige, associate research director at IDC China. “Retailers should create new shopping models and advance the digital transforma­tion of their distributi­on channels.”

Up to 80 percent of the company’s customers are born in the 1980s and 1990s. They are internet natives.” Hou Yi, founder and CEO of Hema Xiansheng

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States