November 26th, 2010 | No Comments »

One of the innovation Japan is most famous for is its vending machines. The country has the highest number of vending machines per capita (as of summer of 2009 it averaged 23 per person, though that figure’s most likely increased since then), and the products one can buy from them run an impressive gamut.

Yes, Japanese vending machines tend to be somewhat… unorthodox, and are by no means restricted to just snacks and drinks. Some of the other surprising products people can get from Japanese vending machines are:

  • newspapers
  • neckties
  • batteries
  • sneakers
  • dry ice
  • eggs
  • bowls of hot Ramen
  • live lobsters
  • name cards
  • flight insurance
  • prophylactics
  • fresh Hello Kitty! popcorn
  • underwear
  • paraffin
  • toilet paper
  • flowers
  • pornography
  • rhinoceros beetles

They also have large robot-shaped Coke machines that actually walk around, as well as drink vending machines with photos of a surly looking Tommy Lee Jones endorsing the products.

The latest craze is drink vending machines that use facial recognition technology to make recommendations to customers. When the machine senses someone approaching, a large touch-screen panel takes in and compiles data about them (gender, age) along with information about the weather, date and time to make its recommendation.

A company spokesperson said, “If the customer is a man, the machine is likely to recommend a canned coffee drink, since men tend to prefer these. If the customer is in their 50s, though, that recommendation is likely to be green tea.”

These recommendations come from extensive market research, research that also says women in their 20s are more likely to be recommended something sweeter than coffee or green tea.

One machine was already installed in a Tokyo train station in August and five more are slated to hit the public shortly. According to a representative of the company that designed them, JR East Water Business Co., sales for beverages from these machines are already triple the sales of regular drink vending machines. They plan to roll out about 500 more over the next couple of years.

The question now is, how long will it be before facial-recognition snack vending machines start cropping up in Japan? And how long after that will it take a chubby Japanese kid will throw himself onto the tracks of JR East when their machines offer him a bag of carrot sticks instead of the pack of Pocky he wanted?

At www.USelectIt.com you can find traditional or non-traditional snack vending machines, food, drink vending machines, or coffee vending. USI works with you to develop innovative equipment solutions, financing programs that meet your needs, management systems leading the industry with vending programs to maximize profits for any size location.

David Hurley
P. S. Isn’t it time you dispensed with your Free-Wordpress-Websites.com

Posted in Japan