The future of shopping will look like this
The future of shopping will look like this

In January 2018, Amazon opened Amazon Go, the world’s first checkout-free store in Seattle. In November of the same year, Nike opened its six-story flagship store in New York – where there’s only one cashier. The world of shopping is changing fast, and brands that can’t keep up are bearing the brunt of high-street closures. From drone delivery to VR tech, here are 23 ways shopping is set to transform in the future.
1. Invisible payment

2. Online chatbots

3. Shopping through Facebook messenger

4. Showrooms, not stores

5. “Cold zones” to try on coats

6. Facial-recognition technology

7. Smart mirrors

8. Smiling to pay

9. …Or paying with the wave of a hand

10. 30-minute drone delivery

11. Stores using GPS to target customers

12. Blurred lines between e-commerce and physical shops

13. Digital pricing in stores

14. Virtual reality experiences

15. Augmented reality glasses

16. Digital inventories instead of warehouses

17. Car parks will become shopping centres

If the success of seed company startup CommonSense Robotoics is anything to go by, grocery shopping may look very different in the future. The company, which won the Startup Showcase in WIRED Retail 2015, ran a small yet successful seed-picking unit in an underground car park in Tel Aviv, where robots picked and packed orders for customers, which were delivered within just one hour. It’s in its early stages, but if the process can be replicated for other groceries it could be a more efficient way to shop.
18. Digital butlers

Many of us have already got Google Assistant or Amazon's Alexa at our beck and call, which can create shopping lists and even complete purchases for us. Yet with the $2 billion (£1.6bn) voice shopping industry expected to grow to $40 billion (£31.6bn) by 2022, we might see further development: as the apps gather more information about us, they may learn what we want, and when we want it, without us even needing to ask.
Amazon's future plans: from cashier-less stores to home robots
19. Immersive screens in stores

20. Sound and light shows

21. Robot shop assistants

Robot shop assistants have had some bad press in recent years. In January 2018, the first robotic retail assistant ‘Fabio’ was trialled in a grocery store in Edinburgh – only to get the sack a week later for annoying customers and being too efficient when handing out meat samples. However, the (human) shop assistants involved in the trial believed that robots could, when more fully developed, be useful for dealing with simple requests like product location and stock.
22. Shopping ‘micro-cities’

23. Ultra-specialised retail

With Amazon selling everything from pickle-flavoured lip balm to wine for cats, it can be hard for small independents to survive. One answer is that they’ll become uber-specialised, with many stores in Berlin already doing this: there’s a liquorice store, a button store, and even a store that exclusively sells decorative cushions in the shape of different meats. With millennials driving the trend for specialist products, it’s thought these stores will gain traction in the future.
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