By Taihei Ishikawa / Yomiuri Shimbun Staff Writer
Seven-Eleven Japan Co. on Tuesday began testing the use of several types of robots to handle tasks such as restocking shelves with drinks and cleaning windows and floors at a store in Tokyo.
Over the next three months, the company will confirm how effective the robots are at saving labor and consider expanding their use to other stores.
The trial is underway at the company-operated Arakawa Nishiogu 7-Chome store in Tokyo's Arakawa Ward. A monitor installed beside the self-checkout register enables remote customer service staff to answer inquiries and recommend products. Multilingual support for foreign customers is also available.
Seven-Eleven estimates that employees currently spend an average of one to two hours per day transporting beverages from storage to shelves for display. They expect to see employee workload reduced by about 30% through the use of robots during this experiment.
Hiroki Takei, head of operations at the company, said: "We aim to increase productivity and create an environment where we can challenge ourselves to create new product assortments and services."
In response to rising labor costs and labor shortages, major convenience store chains are expanding their use of digital technology. FamilyMart Co. has begun using floor cleaning robots in over 1,000 stores, while Lawson Inc. utilizes automated cooking robots and other technological solutions.
----
This article is from The Yomiuri Shimbun. Neither Dow Jones Newswires, MarketWatch, Barron's nor The Wall Street Journal were involved in the creation of this content.
YDN-M0000142583-1
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
September 10, 2025 08:53 ET (12:53 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2025 The Yomiuri Shimbun

