Amazon has announced that its palm-reading payment system, Amazon One, will be rolled out to all Whole Foods Market stores in the US by the end of 2023.
Owing to rising adoption of Amazon One among third-party retailers and their customers, Amazon said it will 鈥渄ouble down鈥 on the deployment of its palm-reading terminals.
Under unveiled this month, all 500+ Whole Foods Market stores in the US will offer Amazon One as a payment option and Prime membership reward system by year-end.
At present, Amazon One is already available at 200+ Whole Foods Market Stores, so the expansion will more than double the system鈥檚 current deployment.
Built by Amazon Web Services (AWS), Amazon One is a palm recognition platform that can be used for payment, identification and loyalty reward purposes.
Combining Whole Foods Market and other retailers, Amazon One is currently available at more than 400 locations in the US, and has already surpassed the 鈥渃ritical milestone鈥 of 3m uses, according to Amazon.
Previous deployments
In March, as covered by VIXIO, the Panera Bread restaurant chain began using Amazon One as a payment method and reward system for members of its MyPanera loyalty scheme.
Also this year, Amazon One at Coors Field, home of the Colorado Rockies MLB team, where it can be used for payments and age verification purposes.
Other sports and entertainment venues have adopted Amazon One for the same use cases, as have airport retailers such as Hudson, CREWS and OHM.
Amazon One is not to be confused with Just Walk Out, the autonomous checkout technology used by the Amazon Go and Amazon Fresh stores.
Sarmishta Ramesh, PR lead for identity and checkout at AWS, told VIXIO that Just Walk Out is at only two Whole Foods Market stores in the US, in California and Washington respectively.
However, Amazon One can be used, and is being used, to identify oneself when checking in at Amazon Go and Amazon Fresh, i.e., when entering the store.
Card payments without the card
When using Amazon One for the first time, each user must enter a debit or credit card into the terminal to link to their biometric identity.
Users do not need to have an Amazon account to use Amazon One 鈥 they can enrol using only a phone number and a debit or credit card.
However, if a user does have an Amazon account, they can 鈥減re-enrol鈥 at home before scanning their palm for the first time at an Amazon One terminal.
For Prime members, once enrolled with Amazon One, Prime savings and discounts are automatically applied to their Whole Foods Market store purchases.
Richard Crone, CEO of Crone Consulting LLC, an independent payments advisory based in San Carlos, California, said his firm was among the first to use Amazon One during testing almost ten years ago.
Speaking to VIXIO, Crone said that Amazon One provides a bridge between the online and offline shopping worlds that allows retailers to 鈥減ersonalise鈥 the in-store experience.
鈥淲hen customers use Amazon One's palm reader to make purchases, they tap into a proprietary digital wallet feeding into a comprehensive customer data platform (CDP) across all channels, both online and offline,鈥 he said.
鈥淭his platform houses detailed, stock keeping unit (SKU)-level data of customers' offline purchases from physical stores, and this data informs the customer鈥檚 online purchases on Amazon.鈥
The idea is that these new data streams can generate offline-to-online marketing strategies that are tailored to each customer, complementing the traditional online-to-offline approach.
鈥淭his data aids Amazon's generative AI and algorithms in creating a more personalised omni-channel customer experience,鈥 said Crone.
鈥淣ote that more than one-third of Amazon.com and app sales are generated from the personalised recommendations during the shopping journey.鈥
Not just a payment system
In Crone鈥檚 view, Amazon One is not 鈥渏ust鈥 a payment system, it is a certification authority and a federated identity platform that also includes payment credentials.
鈥淎mazon One intertwines customer identity, cell phone credentials, payment credentials and transaction histories to form a holistic view of each individual consumer,鈥 he said.
鈥淯nique palm registration further enhances this approach, making a customer's comprehensive data profile readily available and essentially placing their purchasing history and preferences in the palm of their hand.鈥
With platforms like Amazon One, which tracks in-store customer activities and establishes clear purchasing journeys, retailers can further increase their earnings by demonstrating their role in driving new sales with an attribution audit trail.
Going forward, Crone said that Amazon One and other similar technologies will increasingly be used to facilitate in-store customer identification and autonomous checkout experiences.
To get ahead of its rivals, sources say that Amazon is offering to 鈥渞etro-fit鈥 the stores of third-party retailers with these new technologies in exchange for the data streams they produce.
Although only a 鈥渞umour鈥 at this stage, Crone said the offer, if true, is 鈥渢estament to the value of customer data in today's retail landscape鈥.


