Advertisement

The deception of the self check-out

|
Friday, July 20, 2012 9:35 PM

I like to do things in person. I would rather talk to someone face-to-face than over the telephone or Skype. I usually prefer to go inside to see bank tellers over the drive-thru or using electronic banking. Despite the many advantages of telecommunications technology, there is nothing that beats the charm of doing things, “the old fashioned way.”

There is, however, at least one glaring exception to this sentiment. I usually like to do things the old fashioned way, except when checking out at the grocery store. When I’ve filled up my basket with sustenance for the week, I walk straight past the traditional check-out lanes with their conveyor belts and little divider thingies, and go for the self check-out kiosks instead.

There are obvious reasons for this choice. The self check-out has the image of speed and ease. I go to the self check-out stand thinking it will be quick and easy and I won’t have to wait in line. In reality, it is rarely as quick or easy as I expected. As confused customers cannot properly price their celery and needs assistance, an awkward line forms that is far worse than any of the lines at the normal check-out lanes.

The self check-out seems like it should be easy, but this is a deception. It can actually be a very high-pressure, stressful situation. When you are at the self check-out, there is an unsaid expectation to be fast and know exactly what you are doing. People who are going for the quick and easy option are not always the most patient or understanding. Therefore, the only thing worse than standing in the awkward, backlogged line is awareness of being the cause of it.

You are going about your business, scanning and bagging your items as fast as possible, when you accidentally press a wrong button and the message appears on the screen, both annoying and shameful, “an attendant has been notified to assist you.” All you can do is wait for the so-called assistance to arrive while the people in line are glaring at you, the stupid person who made the speedy check-out so agonizingly slow.

For me, though, going to the self check-out isn’t about speed or ease, even though that is how I rationalize it. Experience tells me the idea of the self check-out being somehow superior to its older counterpart is obviously a myth. Many times I have gone to the self-check out and noticed the traditional lanes were somehow moving faster than the more modern option. When you go to the self check-out, you are saying you can do the job better than people who are trained to do it, but this is just not true. Cashiers are better than customers at their jobs, therefore the self check-out is neither quick nor easy and you still have to wait in line.

The real reason for my predisposition for the self check-out is born more out of self-consciousness than a desire for efficiency. The simple truth is I just don’t want someone looking at all the things I buy and making silent judgments. Not that I am buying anything bad or suspicious, but I can still imagine the cashier thinking, “Really? You’re going to eat nothing but Lucky Charms and cream soda for a week?”

Advertisement