See the best time to avoid queues at your local supermarket
- Publish Date
- Wednesday, 8 April 2020, 10:00AM
If you want to avoid queues at your local supermarket, then Google Maps's Popular Times feature can help you time your shopping run.
The tool uses anonymised data from Android phone and Google Maps users to show the most popular times of the day, by hour, to visit any given location.
To see it, go to Google Maps on your computer or smartphone (Android phones come with Google Maps pre-installed. Apple users can download it from the App Store).
Search for a location such as "Hobsonville Countdown", then scroll down past the phone number and website details until you see the 'Popular Times" bar chart.
If you're on a laptop, go to the search result pane that appears on the right of your screen after a Google search, then scroll down. You might have to click a "More about ..." down arrow.
Other tools that could help you skip queues include Dunedin software developer and former Wuhan resident Gareth Hayes' howlongistheline.org - a crowdsourcing effort that relies on its users turning on location tracking, then dragging a slider when they're in a local queue.
READ MORE:
• 101-year-old Italian man leaves hospital after beating Coronavirus
• This is how long Covid-19 reportedly lives on clothes for
And Foodstuffs, which owns New World, Pak'n Save and Four Square, is trialling a virtual check-in for shoppers where they text the supermarket they want to shop in and get alerted when it's their turn.
The possible solution to shoppers' queuing woes is currently being trialled at New World Kumeu and Pak'nSave Royal Oak to "overwhelmingly positive customer feedback",
Simon Kennedy, Foodstuffs North Island Chief Digital Officer, says.
Customers are given two options to "check-in" at participating stores – virtually or physically. However, regardless of their choice, all customers check-in at entry.
The solution is easy, free and all customers need is a mobile phone.
The four-step process will see a customer texting to "check-in" to secure a place in line.
They will then get a text reply confirming their place in the line, allowing them to wait somewhere else more comfortable, including their car.
The upmarket Farro Fresh chain, meanwhile, is using a QR-code based system to let customers pre-register online to save time filling in details when they enter one of its stores.
Â
This article was originally posted by NZ Herald and reproduced here with permission.