Listen to this article |
The GroceryShop 2021 show is now history, and this year’s event was the first “in-person” show for the US grocery market produced by the Hyve Group. I attended the show at the Mandalay Bay Hotel in Las Vegas this week to catch up with all of the automation vendors in attendance and to see how the event came together.
I have been to GroceryShop in past years, and the event this year was smaller than any years past, by at least 50% (in my estimation). But, the GroceryShop crew puts on one of the best produced tradeshows of any B2B markets that I’ve attended. The sister event, ShopTalk, is an annual event that focuses on technology and innovation for every type of ecommerce business, while GroceryShop focuses exclusively on the grocery market.
GroceryShow is known for high-quality speakers and content, and this year didn’t disappoint. They are able to attract keynote speakers from the executive levels of brand name grocers. The presentations are well curated and the session tracks are always packed.
In fact, the sessions are so well attended that most of the exhibitors complain that booth traffic is anemic during session hours and only picks up during lunch and networking hours. It’s a double-edged sword. The event attracts the right audience, but they spend all of their time in the sessions.
GroceryShop innovated several years ago with their “vendor speed dating” sessions. This feature enables vendors to buy a “table, and then preshedule 1:1 briefings with attendees/buyers in 15 minute rotations. This is an easy way to quickly triage a buyer and see if they have a budget/project and qualify them. Conversely, buyers get to hear a quick solution pitch without the fear of being stuck in a booth for an extended period of time and without having to rush between booths. It essentially breaks down the classic tradeshow barrier of trying to stop someone walking down the aisle. Vendors know exactly who they are talking to before the show starts.
As a journalist, however, I was able to walk the show floor and have unimpeded time to talk to the leadership of the various vendors in attendance. I would estimate that the exhibition floor was at least 40-50% the size of prior years. But this year, there were a number of automation providers in attendance.
Here’s the list of companies that I talked to this week:
- Autostore
- Attabotics
- Alert automation
- Bastian Solutions
- Dematic
- Hai Robotics
- KPI integration (Autostore integration partner)
- Knapp and Takeoff
- Right hand robotics
- SSI schafer
- Swisslog
- Tompkins robotics
- Vici robotics
The one other innovation that GroceryShop does really well is their “Startup Street” and “Startup City” pavilions. In a prior life, I attended GroceryShop as a vendor in the Startup Steet. This is a simple tabletop booth that’s curated by the GroceryShop team. These are new technology companies that have only recently launched their company/solution.
It was on StartUp Street that I discovered San Jose based startup, Vici Robotics. I talked with founder and CEO, Kyle Smith about the company. They are developing a front of store inventory replenishment AMR that will be able to stock items on the shelf. The AMR has a 7-axis collaborative robot mounted onto a vertical axis. This enables it to reach from the bottom to the top shelf of a normal grocery store. The company plans to sell it in a RaaS business model.
Credit: Source link
Comments are closed.