Off the bat, it's probably more that they will save on the materials and labor of having to send out reams of tags to every store in a company every week, and having employees come in, usually on 3rd shift, to swap tags. Having spent a lot of time working in a grocery store however, I can guarantee that these will malfunction regularly and most employees won't actually be trained in how to fix them.
Down the road I tho, "surge" pricing seems inevitable. Also raising prices based on inventory on hand. "Oh that item is twice the price because it's the last one left, sorry."
Off the bat, it's probably more that they will save on the materials and labor of having to send out reams of tags to every store in a company every week, and having employees come in, usually on 3rd shift, to swap tags. Having spent a lot of time working in a grocery store however, I can guarantee that these will malfunction regularly and most employees won't actually be trained in how to fix them.
Down the road I tho, "surge" pricing seems inevitable. Also raising prices based on inventory on hand. "Oh that item is twice the price because it's the last one left, sorry."