An ethnography of Electronic Shelf Labels. The resisted digitization of prices in contemporary supermarkets

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Date

2017

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Abstract

Contemporary retail markets have experienced and are experiencing an important digitization shift in the form of computers and associated technologies. Among a large array of digital innovations, Electronic Shelf Labels (ESLs) deserve particular attention. ESLs, despite their long history and many benefits, have not become ubiquitous. The purpose of this paper is to account for this “resisted evolution” of digitized prices. It draws theoretically upon science and technology studies, infrastructure studies, market studies, and previous literature on price representations in retailing. It draws empirically on a combination of ethnographic and historical methods. The paper shows that ESLs do not replace paper prices, but, rather, work together with them: on one hand, they compete to represent prices with their respective features, and on the other, they co-operate in order to reinforce the visibility and attractiveness of products and promotions.

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Keywords

market studies, electronic shelf labels, price representation, retailing, visibility

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