International Retailers Do androids dream of electric sheep?
In Germany, regional supermarket chain Tegut, based in the central German town of Fulda in the state of Hesse, believed it found a way out of the almost national ban on Sunday trading: 40 fully automated mini-shops, or robo-stores if you will. Essentially, argued Tegut, large, walk-in vending machines, and not prone to the workday stresses of German living, or in need of their Sunday rest. Nein, ruled the hatchet-faced judiciary of the highest administrative court in the state. Sonntagsruhe (that’s Sunday rest) must stand, whether the workers are made of flesh and blood, or, as in this case, not. The stores, which are rustically built to resemble a wooden barrel covered with a living roof of grass, stock 1,000 lines, in such necessities as milk, butter, fresh fruit and vegetables, condoms, and pregnancy tests. Germany’s service sector union Verdi came down hard on the proposition, fearing the knock-on effect any Sunday store opening might have on actual retail workers.
Comment: In this age of automation and AI, every business decision should start with the question: do we believe that people have any purpose other than to consume? Then take things from there.