- My Forums
- Tiger Rant
- LSU Recruiting
- SEC Rant
- Saints Talk
- Pelicans Talk
- More Sports Board
- Fantasy Sports
- Golf Board
- Soccer Board
- O-T Lounge
- Tech Board
- Home/Garden Board
- Outdoor Board
- Health/Fitness Board
- Movie/TV Board
- Book Board
- Music Board
- Political Talk
- Money Talk
- Fark Board
- Gaming Board
- Travel Board
- Food/Drink Board
- Ticket Exchange
- TD Help Board
Customize My Forums- View All Forums
- Show Left Links
- Topic Sort Options
- Trending Topics
- Recent Topics
- Active Topics
Started By
Message

Anyone in data collection?
Posted on 1/17/23 at 12:58 am
Posted on 1/17/23 at 12:58 am
I was using a self checkout at a grocery store and wondered if all the grocery stores have to maintain their own database of UPC information or was there a service they all get that information from.
The thing that really prompted the question was it seemed the bagging area knew the weight of each product. Is someone at each company weighing each individual item in the store?
The thing that really prompted the question was it seemed the bagging area knew the weight of each product. Is someone at each company weighing each individual item in the store?
This post was edited on 1/17/23 at 1:01 am
Posted on 1/17/23 at 1:01 am to TigerFox
Are you collecting data about data collectors?
Posted on 1/17/23 at 1:05 am to JudgeHolden
I suppose I am, more intrigued of what data is collected and if someone wants to use that data how does that transaction work
Posted on 1/17/23 at 1:11 am to TigerFox
The first rule of data collection is . . . .
Posted on 1/17/23 at 1:26 am to momentoftruth87
Yeah that’s for checking the against whatever database the computer is using.
Posted on 1/17/23 at 3:56 am to JudgeHolden
quote:
Are you collecting data about data collectors?

Posted on 1/17/23 at 4:32 am to TigerFox
quote:
Is someone at each company weighing each individual item in the store?
Doubt it.
Probably an approximation from a database of averages.
Posted on 1/17/23 at 6:16 am to TigerFox
These are the kinds of questions that keep me awake at night.
Posted on 1/17/23 at 7:37 am to TigerFox
The store has a system where all the information is entered for each item. That includes upc, weight, dimensions, etc.
Posted on 1/17/23 at 7:43 am to OysterPoBoy
quote:
The store has a system where all the information is entered for each item. That includes upc, weight, dimensions, etc.
Correct, which is how they can accurately keep up with quantity and stock.
Wal Mart was one of the first major stores to start a database for all this information and it gave them a huge boost in effeciency, which basically put K-Mart down.
Posted on 1/17/23 at 7:54 am to 0x15E
quote:
Probably an approximation from a database of averages.
This is my best guess. On produce, they would have to have a range of weight for items. So if you put 20 limes in the bag, and ring it up as one lime, the weight discrepancy would set off an alert. But likely wouldn't know the difference between 18 or 19 limes, vs 20. They don't weigh each lime individually. It gives an expected weight of the quantity entered and has a margin of what it should weigh at checkout.
Posted on 1/17/23 at 8:00 am to TigerFox
If the legwork has been done correctly, the amount of data they're collecting is incredible.
I'm in the middle of a user analytics project at my company. Basically, I've created about 40 work assignments that go to different modules within our product suite. Within that module, I'm giving direction on what data to capture. For example, the user clicked "run", upon the run button being clicked, capture the following:
1. Filter options selected
2. Row volume based off of filter options
3. Count of run clicks in general
4. Count if run clicks by this user
5. Uniqueness of query (completely different project)
6. Capture a heat map displaying where the users cursor is located during this query execution for 10 second (I'll overlay all users cursor maps to find insights into what they're doing immediately after their query)
This is just 1 example. There's 40 different modules all with slightly different questions we're interested in.
This insights enables us to spend on pieces that the user gives a shite about, and ditch pieces the users never touch.
I'm in the middle of a user analytics project at my company. Basically, I've created about 40 work assignments that go to different modules within our product suite. Within that module, I'm giving direction on what data to capture. For example, the user clicked "run", upon the run button being clicked, capture the following:
1. Filter options selected
2. Row volume based off of filter options
3. Count of run clicks in general
4. Count if run clicks by this user
5. Uniqueness of query (completely different project)
6. Capture a heat map displaying where the users cursor is located during this query execution for 10 second (I'll overlay all users cursor maps to find insights into what they're doing immediately after their query)
This is just 1 example. There's 40 different modules all with slightly different questions we're interested in.
This insights enables us to spend on pieces that the user gives a shite about, and ditch pieces the users never touch.
Posted on 1/17/23 at 8:03 am to thegreatboudini
I work in data for a top 10 insurance company. Put it this way, if we are legally allowed to collect it, we're going to collect it.
Posted on 1/17/23 at 8:32 am to BoogaBear
quote:
I work in data for a top 10 insurance company.
How long before insurance companies start looking at your credit card purchases? I can imagine health insurance companies would love to know how often someone goes out to eat.
Posted on 1/17/23 at 8:58 am to TigerFox
Grocery stores certainly collect a ton of data that eventually makes it to my desk 

Posted on 1/17/23 at 9:02 am to TigerFox
quote:
The thing that really prompted the question was it seemed the bagging area knew the weight of each product. Is someone at each company weighing each individual item in the store?
Don't know about grocery, but before I went back to school I worked receiving/inventory in a warehouse at an electronics manufacturing company for a few years. Our shipping side was moving to voice pick, and for it to be efficient enough to outweigh the costs to implement it, we had to have dimensions for every single product in the warehouse. I spent months on an order picker with a list of our SKUs measuring dimensions of boxes, master cartons, and individual items. It was a fricking pain in the arse. I went back to school and left the company before we were finished.
Popular
Back to top
