Shortly after Bill Nuti, president and chief executive of
NCR Corp.,
pledged to dominate the self-service industry,
NCR unveiled several new or improved applications.
Most notable among them was a self-service mailing kiosk built on
NCR’s full-function FastLane Mini self-checkout kiosk platform.
The application, which was first demonstrated last month at a
self-service conference NCR hosted in Barcelona, Spain, is being developed in
partnership with Pitney Bowes. That company, best known for postage machines
that are as much a part of mailroom life as paper cuts and paper clips, June
13-15 introduced several new mailing services at eBay! Live in Las Vegas.
"Collectively, we have more than 200 years of experience" serving
self-service users and postal customers, Webster said.
The self-service shipping kiosk, which allows users to choose
from a variety of carriers as well as a country’s postal service, is expected to
be piloted around the world by the third and fourth quarters of this year.
Beyond consumer demand
But consumer demand is only part of the kiosk’s equation.
"Many of our retailers are giving us feedback that by putting a
shipping kiosk in a retail environment, they can use that as an attraction for
foot traffic and get greater loyalty by creating a convenient experience,
particularly for the small-office or home-office business," Webster said.
Also at the conference
FastLane Mini. The "full-function" version of this
small-footprint self-checkout kiosk now accepts all forms of tender, including
cash. The unit was designed primarily for the international market, where retail
floor space is scarce, but also for retail environments in the United States.
The machine can function with only a 6-inch buffer on either side, and can
handle nine languages, six simultaneously.
TouchPort II C. NCR and subsidiary Kinetics have upgraded
their airport check-in kiosk to include optional passport scanning. The small
footprint TouchPort family, found in 285 airports and used by 12 of the top 14
airlines, now is able to print more than 2,500 types of documents and features
integrated barcode-imaging for easier passenger identification. The kiosk also
works with common-use self-service (CUSS) applications, where multiple airlines
can be accessed from one kiosk.
EasyPoint Xpress Check-In.
The check-in kiosk now can be ordered with signature pads to electronically
capture guests’ signatures. Units also can encrypt hotel keycards.
The EasyPoint Xpress Order,
developed with NCR subsidiary InfoAmerica, has been around for a while at
McDonald’s and Burger King locations, but is now in pilot phase at "one of the
top three QSRs," a company spokesperson said. It can accept cash and process it
through a currency recycler, making it more affordable for the deployer by
reducing the cash-replenishment frequency.
"Our Touchware interface improves order accuracy and enhances
upsell success, creates a more pleasant customer experience and increases
revenue," said Paul Knight, CEO of InfoAmerica. "The NCR EasyPoint kiosk is an
ideal platform for the quick-service industry with flexible payment options and
multimedia capabilities."
The EasyPoint Xpress Payment
kiosk is now able to function wirelessly and is moving beyond its
cellular-payment proving grounds to interface with utility and cable companies.
The Personas 71 is a weatherized ATM that can serve customers
who want outdoor access to cash without the bank having to build a
through-the-wall unit or obtain a building permit for a dedicated structure.
Aptra Relate is ATM software that allows personalization
that includes stored preferences such as language, common withdrawal amounts and
receipt preferences. Bank customers also may sign up to receive text messages on
their cell phones when withdrawals are made.
NCR Branch Assist.
NCR showcased units that provide bank personnel
information about customers using counter-mounted kiosks that allow tellers to
offer products like specifically tailored loans and investments. Tellers can
serve between three and five customers at a time, similar to attendants who
monitor self-checkout kiosks at grocery stores.