Home Contact Us

Baby Shopping Cart

Baby Shopping Cart

A shopping cart ( carriage , buggy or trolley ) is a cart supplied by a shop, especially a supermarket, for use by customers inside the shop for transport of merchandise to the check-out counter during shopping, and often to the customer's car after paying as well. Often, customers are allowed to leave the carts in the parking lot, and store personnel return the carts to the shop.

Design

Almost all shopping carts are made of metal or plastic and designed to nest within each other in a line to facilitate moving many at one time, and to save on storage space. The carts can come in many sizes, with larger ones able to carry a child. There are also specialized carts designed for two children, and electric mobility scooters with baskets designed for disabled customers. 24,000 children in the USA are injured each year in shopping carts. Some stores have child carts that look like a car or van with a seat where a child can sit. Such "Car-Carts" or "Beans", as some call them in the cart business, may offer protection and convenience by keeping the child restrained, lower to the ground, protected from falling items, and amused.

Shopping carts are usually fitted with four wheels. However, if any one wheel jams the cart can become difficult to handle. Most American carts have swivel wheels (caster wheels) at the front, while the rear wheels are fixed in orientation, whilst in Europe it is more common to have four swivel wheels. An alternative to the shopping cart is a small handheld shopping basket . A customer may prefer a basket for a small amount of merchandise. Small shops, where carts would be impractical, often supply only baskets. A collapsible utility cart has a basket pivotally mounted to a forward facing, C-shaped cart frame. As the lower portion of the C-shaped cart frame is moved under a flat bed (station wagon, etc), the upper part containing the basket slides onto the truck bed. The frame is then pivoted upward around the truck bumper and about the basket and conveniently stored around the basket. U.S. Patent 5,503,424 details this invention, which is marketed as Autocarts.

History

One of the first shopping carts were introduced on June 4, 1937, the invention of Sylvan Goldman, owner of the Humpty Dumpty supermarket chain in Oklahoma City (another shopping-cart innovator was Orla Watson). One night, in 1936, Goldman sat in his office wondering how customers might move more groceries. He stared idly at a wooden folding chair. Put a basket on the seat and wheels on the legs. Goldman and one of his employees, Fred Young, a mechanic, began tinkering. Their first shopping cart was a metal frame that held two wire baskets. Since they were inspired by the folding chair, Goldman called his carts "folding basket carriers". Another mechanic, Arthur Kosted, developed a method to mass produce the carts by inventing an assembly line capable of forming and welding the wire. The cart was awarded patent number 2,196,914 on April 9, 1940 (Filing date: March 14, 1938), titled, "Folding Basket Carriage for Self-Service Stores". They advertised the invention as part of a new “No Basket Carrying Plan."

The invention did not catch on immediately. Men found them effeminate; women found them suggestive of a baby carriage. "I've pushed my last baby buggy," an offended woman informed him. After hiring several male and female models to push his new invention around his store and demonstrate their utility, as well as greeters to explain their use, shopping carts became extremely popular and Goldman became a multimillionaire. Goldman continued to make modifications to his original design, and the basket size of the shopping cart increased as stores realized that their customers purchased more as its size increased. Today, most big-box stores and supermarkets have shopping carts for the convenience of the shoppers.

Recent studies determined that cartless retailers such as Sears and J.C. Penney have suffered slow sales in recent years. Retailers that do use shopping carts, Wal-Mart among them, have had booming sales. In large part this could be attributed to the ease of shopping made possible by the shopping cart.

There has been little progress in the design of shopping carts in the last decade. Recently researchers developed prototypes of computerized context aware shopping cart by attaching a Tablet PC to an ordinary cart. Initial field trials showed that the prototype and it's context-awareness provide an opportunity for enhancing and affecting the shopping experience.

Rental

In many countries, the customer has to pay a small deposit by inserting a coin, which is returned if and when the customer returns the cart to a designated cart parking point. The motivation behind the deposit systems is not theft deterrent since the trolley is worth significantly more than the deposit, however through this fee the retailer seeks to reduce the expense of their employees having to gather the carts that were not returned, and to avoid damages by runaway trolleys.

Although common in Europe, the deposit system has not been widely adopted in the United States, with the exception of some chains like Aldi, who require a $0.25 deposit. Other stores such as Costco and ShopRite also use the coin deposit system, but it is not used at all of their locations.

In Australia, deposit systems are common in some local government areas as they have been made compulsory by local law. Usually, all ALDI stores, and most Coles and Safeway stores will have a lock mechanism on their trolley which requires a $1 or $2 coin to unlock.

The deposit varies, but usually coins of higher value, such as €1 or £1 are used. While the deposit systems usually are designed to accommodate a certain size of domestic coin, foreign coins, former currencies (like DM coins) or even appropriately folded pieces of cardboard can be used to unlock the trolleys as well. Trolley collectors are also usually provided with a special key which they can use to unlock the trolleys from the trolley bay and get the key back.

Some retailers sell "trolley tokens" as an alternative to coins, often for charity. A system similar to the shopping trolley deposit is also used for profit with luggage carts at many airports, where companies like Smarte Carte charge two or more dollars (U.S.) (or equivalent) for rental, and return a small token reward of a quarter (25 ¢) for returning carts to the other end of any dispenser machine.

Theft prevention

Shopping cart theft can be a costly problem with stores that use them. Often the carts end up in apartment complexes, low-income housing, bus stops or locations where the person doing the shopping is unlikely to own a car. The carts, which cost between $75 and $150 each, have been used for such purposes as barbecue pits, go-carts, laundry trolleys and even shelters, or they are simply abandoned. Because such losses can be substantial (up to $800 million globally lost every year), stores have resorted to various systems to prevent theft. Stores may use one or more of these systems (i.e., cart retrieval and electronic).

Cart retrieval service

Some stores utilize a cart retrieval service, which collects carts found off the store's premises and returns them to the store for a fee. The drawbacks of this measure include that it is reactive instead of proactive (i.e., it can only be used once a cart has been taken from the premises), can become costly, and does nothing to deter hoarders. Some retrieval services have also been caught taking carts from the store's parking lot and turning them in as stray carts.

Electronic

Electronic systems are being increasingly used by stores because of their successful deterrence. In principle, the system is similar to electric fences that give dogs' necks a yank when they cross an underground boundary. Each shopping cart is fitted with an electronic locking wheel, or 'boot'. A transmitter with a thin wire is placed around the perimeter of the parking lot. The boot locks when the cart leaves the designated area. Store personnel must then deactivate the lock with a hand-held remote to return the cart to stock. Often a line is painted in front of the broadcast range to warn customers that their cart will stop when rolled past the line.

Kartlock System

Kartlok is a newly introduced and very inexpensive system that costs a mere fraction of what the average retailer loses in just one year. Though new to the United States this kind of system has been used with great success in Europe for many years virtually eliminating the problem of cart abandonment and loss. Maciver Enterprises is the distributor introducing this product in the USA a

Yamee Organic Baby Food - Shopping Cart

Yamee Organic Baby is a range of gourmet organic baby and toddler meals that grows right alongside your bub from the age of six months, offering AGE-APPROPRIATE TEXTURES and ...

mo..

Baby Gear - Baby Shopping Cart Seats - Precious Planet ...

Buy baby shopping cart seats and other baby gear from Precious Planet, Boppy, and more at Babies"R"Us.

mo..

Baby Shopping Cart Covers, Infant Toddler Car Seat Cover, Infant ...

Your child is Born Into Style with Itzy Ritzy baby and toddler products such as designer baby blankets, reversible infant and toddler car seat covers, shopping cart and high chair ...

mo..

Baby Shopping Cart Covers and High Chair Covers

Baby Shopping Cart Covers to protect your child against germs and bacteria.

mo..

Shopping Cart Covers - Infant Car Seat Covers - Baby Car Seat Covers

Handmade one of a kind boutique shopping cart cover, grocery cart covers, car seat covers and nap mats.

mo..

Fingerhut - My Shopping Cart

Baby; Electronics; Health + Beauty; Home; Jewelry; Sports; Tools; Toys; ViewAll ... Review your shopping cart: Change quantities, make final color and size decisions.

mo..

Dear-Born Baby :: Your shopping cart

baby car seats strollers britax toronto perego ... Toll Free: 1-800-567-2229. Canada: 1-905-881-3334

mo..

Baby Shop Shopping Cart - LiliMay Online Baby Shop Brighton and Hove

LiliMay Baby Shops Shopping Cart for Baby Clothes and Baby Furniture in the UK

mo..

The Best Baby Travel Systems

From baby travel seat covers to shopping cart covers. From diaper bags to water bottle baby nipple adaptors. We even have hands free baby bottles!!!

mo..

Baby Gear - Baby Shopping Cart Seats - Precious Planet & Boppy ...

Buy baby shopping cart seats and other baby gear from Precious Planet, Boppy, and more at Babies"R"Us.

mo..