The Kroger Co. and NVIDIA have announced a collaboration to reimagine the shopping experience using AI-enabled applications and services.
Kroger and NVIDIA will build an AI lab and demonstration center to expand Kroger’s freshness initiatives, improve shipping logistics and create a better shopping experience in stores through digital twin simulations — virtual models designed to accurately reflect store layouts and other operations.
“Our collaboration with NVIDIA supports Kroger’s ‘Fresh for Everyone’ commitment,” said Wesley Rhodes, VP of technology transformation and research and development at Kroger. “We look forward to learning more about how AI and data analytics will further our journey to provide our customers with anything, anytime, anywhere.”
The lab will be located in Kroger’s Cincinnati-based headquarters office. It will use the NVIDIA AI Enterprise software suite for retail, NVIDIA Omniverse Enterprise to build digital twin simulations and NVIDIA cuOpt to explore logistics optimizations. The initial installation will use nine NVIDIA DGX A100 systems, NVIDIA InfiniBand networking and NVIDIA RTX workstations to gather actionable insights on the grocer’s nearly 2,800 stores across the U.S.
“NVIDIA and Kroger’s collaboration on AI and digital twins will further expand Kroger’s digital technology leadership,” said Azita Martin, VP and general manager of retail at NVIDIA. “Kroger already is delivering excellent customer experiences in stores and providing fast home delivery. With NVIDIA AI, shoppers gain more personalized experiences in physical stores and online.”
The companies will explore how NVIDIA technology can:
- Identify early indicators of deteriorating freshness through computer vision and analytics;
- Use dynamic routing for last-mile delivery to ensure freshness from farm to plate; and
- Optimize store efficiency and processes with digital twin store simulation.
For more about Kroger’s AI journey in the NVIDIA GTC AI Implementers Panel, click here.
To learn more about NVIDIA AI software, watch the GTC 2022 keynote from NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang.