It's because they keep doing it wrong!
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Nah, but known layout is better than unknown.
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Romesh Ranganathan did a comedy skit on this saying this and shitty wifi is what would tip him over to join ISIS
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tv7QNtzUqbw
at about 5:20
Yes it does. It wastes more time and is deliberately designed to make you stay in the store longer and hopefully spend more money.
That was actually me job for a year. I was that asshole at Walmart that moved everything. Better than stocking shelves since it was full time M-F. I still hate it 10 years after i left since i can't locate shit at my Walmart. They moved the pharmacy section all the way across the store.
Some nights my job was to really deep clean the shelves and move maybe a few items to make room for a new product.
The problems came when our sheets tell us how much goes on a shelf and it'seven on the la els but then they just move the tags because they don't want the cereal to look empty at that section. They also doesn't like me in the back room because i would bring back loads of overstock because you let an employee stock an 12 boxes of cherios family size on the shelf and I'm following corporate guidelines that say that size should have 2 facings, not 4.
I will say cap 3, mod team, or whatever they call it was still the best job i had at walmart.
I get mad because I know that they are using the physical space to manipulate shoppers and break down their decision fatigue.
I also know that these corporations specifically target and look to take the most advantage of women. Specifically low income or dependant ones.
Corporate psychology is a naaaasty place. And they specifically take the most advantage of single women and mothers.
We need a standardized grocery store organization system. Like dewey decimal.
What makes you think stores would want that. The reason they reorganize stores to increase profits. They identified certain areas of the store that sell better and move product that they want to increase sales there.
Yeah, but fuck them. That's why we have laws.
I'm curious. Are there countries with laws preventing that? If so, I'm curious which ones and what the law says? I can't think of a good law that would prevent stores from doing that.
Well, the original post was proposing that we make that happen somehow. I propose that we use laws. There are lots of laws regulating the interior of a supermarket already, this is one more, although a potentially complex one.
As someone who spent years working retail, it works and is necessary. Gotta sell stuff to stay in business. It's not always a scam to force you to buy things you wouldn't.
Doesn't even need to be moved to a high traffic area. Sometimes just moving it a few feet makes a difference. People get 'product blind' when it just sits in the same place forever.
The soft drinks and sports drinks used to be right next to each other, now they're 3 aisles apart. What were they thinking?!
sports drinks are a 'health food' now
so they must be separated

Marketing
You know the worst part of it? The reason why is to encourage the "hunter, gatherer" mode in your lizard brain. It's basically a trick to get you to do impulse purchases.
i don't get angry because they rearranged the store, i get angry because they ONLY rearranged the store so some worthless, nepo-baby dipshit can justify their existence at the company because they came to the conclusion--after 25 focus groups-- that it'd increase shareholder value by $0.0003 to move the pasta to aisle 3
I figured they just do it regularly so customers have to look at more extra shit they might impulse buy, rather than based on some study of product location adjacency.
Having worked stock in a grocery store, this is part of it. After asking alot of different people at different levels, the consensus is that shelf space is also paid for by many brands, and what space goes to who is decided way above the store level. So once in a while the stockers get paperwork that moves a ton of stuff around, and no one who works in that location has the authority to say no. Sure, sometimes a manager will do that anyway, but they always have a reason, and it's usually something about the reality of the store configuration, like not putting too many cold items near warm areas, to keep humidity down and reduce spoil.
I think you vastly overestimate the size of grocery store's budgets
The worst one is the eggs, which could be fucking anywhere (except in countries where they’re in the fridge because they’re bleached or some insane shit).
I just don’t understand why the international foods are a separate aisle. Can those sauces not sit next to the other sauces? Can all types of noodles not co-exist in the same aisle? Why can’t masa flour live next to wheat flour?
The more I think about this, the more it annoys me.
There's a lot of time and money spent analyzing where to put things to maximize customer spending. It's why milk and eggs are usually at the back of the store, so that you have to walk through the entire store to get them, and you may find something else to buy on the way there. It's also why "low-interest" items like international foods get put together in their own low-traffic aisle.
International foods might be "low interest" for many consumers, but for me it's the most interesting aisle in the supermarket.
Nothing I like more than finding some unusual (to me!) stuff, so I'm happy they put it all in the same place.
As far as price goes, it's all over. You might find a bottle of Japanese Kewpie mayo for way more than speciality Asian supermarkets ask for, but on the other hand find a huge bag of pistachio nuts for way less money (by volume) than they're charging for nuts in the 'regular' nuts section.
It's genuinely as if supermarkets know they need to sell this stuff, but haven't quite worked out what to do with it yet.
isn't struggling to deal with change one of the classic autism traits?
Yeah but also its incredibly normal to get mad when the shop changes layouts. They do it on purpose, creating extra work for the workers, extra time and effort for you, because they've pushed some bullshit charts around a table and have scientifically deduced that they can squeeze an extra couple of quid out of you.
Actually infuriating.
Is that something that happens regulary in your place? Here in germany, I've only seen it after they renovated or replacex old fridges or something
yes, usa grocery stores change their layouts once every other year or so. it's because they think it will increase sales.
they're just pushing more higher margin products. they'll restock the 'basics' more frequently as a result of giving those things less shelf space.
In Canada, all the fucking time. I find it infuriating. Never more than a year goes by, often less.
That quick in and out isn't quick anymore.
In the USA there's studies and such that track how to maximize money from someone shopping. Milk is a well used staple, so it's always in the fucking back of the store. So you have to go past most everything else to get to it. Then end caps have special, cheap pick up deals for someone who is just here for milk that they may not pass up. Then the checkout the rule is something like $3 and less for items there. Candy, water, soda, everything a kid craves right there to whine and pester the parents about.
It's also normal to become less accepting of change as you age. I think this has to do with decreasing neural plasticity and the "crystalized" intelligence (accumulation of information) that comes with age even as "fluid" intelligence (processing speed, etc) declines.
Synaptic strengthening happens as you age - you will lose neuronal density, but the neuronal connections you still have are stronger and more efficient. The myelin sheaths around these neurons thicken well into middle age. The distracting neuronal channels, things that didn't serve you over your years of experience, have died off leaving only the most effective connections.
So, you're old, you know how stuff is supposed to be. You work well within that framework. When things change, it's harder for you to keep up with it. It puts your brain under proportionally more load.
So you get mad when the bread aisle moves.
Am I the only one feeling super unconfortable seeing these types of memes when the next article in my feed is about how 25% of people worldwide don't have access to clean water?
No, you are not. The vast majority of people here and anywhere else on the Internet live in a luxury bubble compared to most of the world and a disturbing amount of them will never realise that.
I kinda miss grocery stores. Where I stay now there isn't a single store like that, just many small shops. You get used to things maybe being there, maybe not.
That's my life.
This is why I can't fuck with Trader Joe's.
I swear Trader Joes does this specifically to make you walk the whole store. It's small enough that you're probably walking the whole thing anyway, but I can never just run in and grab what I might need.