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    What Are the Most Exciting Innovations Reshaping Grocery Retail?

    June 29, 2026
    14 minute read
    Written By: Doug Bonderud
    What Are the Most Exciting Innovations Reshaping Grocery Retail?

    The grocery market is changing, with new tools and technologies paving the way for enhanced customer experiences and intelligent data analytics.

    For grocery brands, this creates an opportunity — if they can select, deploy, and manage the right combination of cutting-edge tools. 

    Here’s a look at some of the most exciting innovations reshaping grocery retail, and how companies can make the most of new tech to improve short- and long-term return on investment (ROI).

    Why Grocery Brands Can’t Afford To Fall Behind

    As omnichannel becomes the new normal, grocery ecommerce is a main mover progressing the industry.

    According to research by the Food Industry Association (FMI) and NielsenIQ, total U.S. online grocery sales will reach $452 billion by 2028.

    And according to data from Mintel, 13.1% of all U.K. grocery store sales were online in 2023, with similar strides in 2024 and 2025. 

    To meet demand, U.K. supermarkets have stepped in to create their own branded services, such as Tesco Whoosh, which accompany other wildly popular options, like Deliveroo, Uber Eats, and Just Eat.

    The result is a grocery market with both more customers and more competition. If brands can’t distinguish themselves in the growing market, or if they find themselves beaten on service or price by ecommerce or physical stores, they can quickly face unsustainable operations.

    Salsify’s 2023 consumer research data reported that 78% of U.S. shoppers were looking for discounts or free delivery to offset the growing cost of products.

    Three years later in 2026, "prices for all food are predicted to increase 3.2 percent, with a prediction interval of 2.2 to 4.2 percent, while food-at-home prices are predicted to increase 2.8 percent, with a prediction interval of 1.4 to 4.4 percent," according to the USDA.

    Salsify's "2026 Consumer Research" report shows that 39% of shoppers are comparing prices more carefully before purchasing, and most shoppers (65%) shop online because they believe they'll find better pricing than in-store.

    65% of shoppers purchase online vs. in-store due to better pricing

    As far as what shoppers describe as the most important product detail page (PDP) element for driving them to purchase, high-quality images and videos (61%) barely eked out pricing and availability (60%). 

    61% of Shoppers Say Product Images and Videos are the Most Important Product Page Elements for Completing a Purchase

    This all makes for interesting fodder for food and beverage brands — if you fail to deliver experiences that reflect consumer priorities, you risk losing customers who have plenty of other choices. And if companies start falling behind, the increasing pace of change makes it almost impossible to catch up. 

    Top Tech: 7 Solutions That Are Changing Grocery Retail

    To capture customer interest and keep them coming back, brands need to deploy solutions that speak to changing consumer preferences. Here are six solutions making significant strides.

    1. Automated Checkout Systems

    Automated checkout systems can reduce the time required for customers to complete their purchases. As noted by Grocery Dive, Global installations of self-checkout terminals are predicted to reach 2 million by 2029.

    What makes checkout automation successful? Managing speed and shrinkage. If terminals are complicated or directions are unclear, customers may avoid using them. Companies also need a way to ensure that products scanned match the products in consumer baskets.

    For ecommerce retailers, meanwhile, improving the checkout experience may include offers of free shipping and returns, discounts on customers’ first orders, and the ability to check out as a guest without creating an account.

    2. Smart Shelves, Carts, and Digital Price Tags

    Smart shelves and carts offer a way to improve the in-store experience. Using a combination of sensors, radio frequency identification (RFID) tags, and cameras, smart shelves can detect when products are running low and alert staff that goods need to be replenished. Smart carts can start (or even complete) the checkout process so shoppers can get in and get out. 

    These shelves and carts also provide actionable data — by analyzing what sells, what doesn’t, and how often products need to be restocked, grocery stores can improve inventory management.

    Digital price tags, meanwhile, can help retailers cut down on the time and effort required for manual price changes, and ensure that customers always see the most up-to-date price based on availability and other factors. 

    As noted by Modern Retail, however, grocery stores need to treat digital price tags cautiously — Walmart’s recent announcement of the shift to digital tags came with pushback over concerns the company might adopt a surge pricing model that could negatively impact consumers.

    3. Ecommerce AI Personalization and Agentic Commerce

    Personalized experiences help drive customer loyalty. For example, if first-time buyers receive follow-up emails containing discounts or special offers for items related to their initial purchase, they’re more inclined to return. In fact, 71% of customers now want personalized shopping experiences, and 76% are frustrated when it doesn’t happen, according to McKinsey & Company

    One way for grocery companies to make the most of personalization is by using AI.

    AI commerce capabilities can suggest new products for buyers based on their purchase and browsing history, geography, and more, and then send these suggestions via various channels, including right on PDPs.

    Instacart's Smart Shop, for example, uses generative artificial intelligence and advanced machine learning models to better understand customers’ dietary preferences and shopping habits, notes Grocery Dive.

    Google’s Universal Commerce Protocol (UCP), for example, enables autonomous AI agents to seamlessly connect with other ecommerce tools to help users find, research, and purchase products. With UCP, AI agents can contextualize users’ search queries to provide personalized results, then autonomously place orders and facilitate payments.

    For brands and retailers, UCP poses new opportunities to evolve ecommerce practices. With UCP, the entire shopping journey — from brand awareness to conversion — gets distilled into an AI agent’s platform. To meet this need, ecommerce brands need to create content and product feeds that are highly detailed and relevant to the ways AI agents search and analyze information.

    Similar agentic commerce innovations exist from Stripe, Shopify, PayPal, Visa and Mastercard, and retailers like Etsy, Walmart, Wayfair, and Target are beginning to employ these technologies to launch their own agentic shelves.

    4. Robotic Fulfillment, Agentic Inventory Management

    The robots have arrived — and they’re absolutely fantastic at packing groceries. By equipping fulfillment facilities with picking and packing robots, brands can save time and money in getting customers’ orders ready. 

    According to PYMNTS, Midwestern grocery chain Hy-Vee announced a partnership to ramp up its robot workforce, in turn allowing the company to improve direct order fulfillment efficiency.

    Additionally, the bots on the web can now take automation even further. As AI agents become increasingly sophisticated at streamlining repeatable processes with (some) human oversight, brands can lean more heavily on these technologies to track sales, stock, and so on. 

    5. Sustainable Packaging

    Sustainable packaging is another way to stand out from the crowd — if brands effectively implement it. 

    Here, it’s crucial to balance convenience and environmental consciousness. For example, if brands lean too far into convenience, you get ridiculous outcomes like bananas packaged in individual plastic containers. 

    Go too far in the other direction, and you could run afoul of some of the ire customers show for paper straws. 

    For example, Sustainable Brands says that 71% of European consumers want to buy more sustainable products, and the same number of U.S. consumers say they want products with as little packaging as possible.

    Many customers struggle to identify the more eco-friendly option. As a result, brands need to select packaging that’s sustainable and clearly communicates its environmental benefits to buyers. Companies must also consider the importance of accurate product data. Even sustainable packaging won’t be enough to keep consumers coming back if products are missing critical data or the data isn’t accurate.

    6. End-to-End Tracking

    The more consumers know about where their food came from, where it was processed or handled, and how it got to their front door, the better. And more information doesn’t just drive ROI — it’s also required under FDA labeling requirements such as the Food Safety Modernization Act (FSMA). 

    While the act only requires certain information on labels, such as the name and location of where the food was manufactured or processed, retailers can boost consumer confidence by offering end-to-end tracking that provides complete visibility.  

    This isn’t a cheap undertaking — IoT sensors, analytics software, and trusted third-party providers are all required — but it can help drive both ecommerce and retail revenue.

    7. Ultra-Fast Delivery

    Beyond knowing where products have been, ultra-fast delivery is another undertaking: Amazon Now is a newer endeavor offering delivery on tons of consumer packaged goods (CPGs) items in 30 minutes or less.

    Walmart is also investing heavily in a drone delivery program, focusing first in areas of Houston, Texas. Of course, the retailer isn't the first to foray into drone delivery (Amazon, Google). 

    Navigating Grocery Retail 2.0

    The next generation of grocery retail isn’t either/or — it’s a combination of positive customer experiences across both ecommerce and physical stores. 

    Delivering these experiences depends on the effective implementation of technologies that streamline purchases, improve personalization, and meet evolving customer needs.

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    What’s the Next Gen PXM?

    Keep customers coming back with a superior grocery experience. Discover how with Salsify’s new whitepaper, which explores the next generation of product experience management.

    DOWNLOAD WHITEPAPER

    Written by: Doug Bonderud

    Doug Bonderud (he/him) is an award-winning writer with expertise in ecommerce, customer experience, and the human condition. His ability to create readable, relatable articles is second to none.

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    What’s the Next Gen PXM? Keep customers coming back with a superior grocery experience. Discover how with Salsify’s new whitepaper, which explores the next generation of product experience management. DOWNLOAD WHITEPAPER