
It may have been this year's venue - the colossal Gaylord Opryland Resort and Convention Center in Nashville, Tenn. - that attracted more than 1,300 attendees and 120 companies, targeted to meet the needs of the typical convenience-store operator, to the eleventh annual NACStech show.
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Or maybe this year marked the first bright spot in the economy since pre-9/11. Either way, said Jeff Lenard, director of public affairs for the National Association of Convenience Stores - which puts on the show - NACStech 2005 broke its 2001 record for the number of companies in attendance, the number of square feet covered by exhibitors' booths and the expected total number of attendees.
The show's size increased 21 percent from last year.
But as attendees and exhibitors roamed the showroom floor, they quickly noticed most companies in attendance were showcasing similar products. In fact, it appeared that the number of booths touting touchscreen pay-at-the-pump technology far outnumbered the booths that had other systems to promote. And that didn't come as a shock to show organizers, Lenard said, since 70 percent of a c-store's sales are gas sales.
"If you don't innovate and figure out how to sell more while you have the customer's attention, somebody else will," Lenard said. "We sell time. If you don't get what you have more efficient, it's going to be difficult to compete."
ATM technology, however, was not a show highlight, but it did have a presence. Here's a glimpse of what NACStech 2005 had to offer:
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| Wincor's i-Service Station is a range of solutions built around the NAMOS Compact POS solution, which is shown above. |
NAMOS connects the back- and front-offices, including the c-store's ATM and gas pump operations.
Wincor's NAMOS Compact software, the foundation of i-Service, is used in 17 countries. And earlier this year Wincor inked a deal with Chevron Texaco Corp. for service in Australia and the Philippines, as well as other parts of Asia. Wincor expects deployment of the software to hit the States in October, when it's launched at the Oct. 29 - Nov. 1 NACS Show in New Orleans.
Wincor demonstrated its solution on the Wincor Beetle POS system.
Like Wincor, TNS also views the c-store from an all-inclusive perspective. But TNS brings it all together through networking.
The POS is the core of the c-store, but peripheral services also are economic drivers. As more self-service options emerge, network connectivity and communication will be a necessity for c-stores, said Don Bumgardner, vice president of sales and marketing for FusionPoint from TNS.
TNS focuses on connecting a c-store's POS, ATM and lottery machine data, for instance, and transmitting it over an IP network.
TNS's network and communications services help c-store operators manage connectivity. With FusionPoint from TNS, a c-store can send data from different systems over one network connection, Bumgardner said. FusionPoint is an extension of TNS's Retail Link solution. "We have a converter point that communicates with the network. So even if it's a dial-up ATM, we can transmit the data over the IP. We have connections to all major processors, for ATM and credit, and we have a back-end connection to processors around the world."
For example, Tidel tracked and calculated cash management for one of its Sentinel c-store customers, and found that the c-store chain reached 100 percent ROI after one year, said Matt Johnson, Tidel vice president of marketing. "The saved manager time, saved courier expense, PIN-based audit system and back-office/POS integration and reporting capabilities put the Sentinel in a new class of cash-management systems," Johnson said.
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| Allied Electronics and Flexible Manufacturing launched the PayQuick Island Cashier about 18 months ago. |
At the Tidel booth also stood the Tidel 3600, a flexible ATM with a small footprint, attractive to most c-store operators.
The Colony, Texas-based Armor Safe Technologies and Pasadena, Calif.-based AT Systems Inc. showcased under-the-counter cash-dispensing safes that can reconcile the drawer or till at closing time. AT Systems, which has a fleet of about 1,200 armored trucks, also transports cash. Its CashLINK system, which is geared toward retailers, electronically monitors transactions and reconciles balances from the safe.
The two companies introduced the PayQuick Island Cashier about 18 months ago. With the looks of an ATM, this self-service cashier accepts credit, debit and cash, and will soon dispense change in coins and bills, said Dave Silberfarb, FMI's project manager. "It will have full ATM functions, once we add the cash-dispensing (option)," which is underway. FMI manufactures the PayQuick cashier; Allied provides the software, which is proprietary.
Allied also had its NeXGen site controller on display - a controller with a single Ethernet connection that can connect multiple forecourt devices. The controller has ports to connect up to 16 devices.
The NeXGen will be available at the end of 2005 and will complement the ANDI (Allied Network Dispenser Interface) forecourt controller, introduced during the early 1990s, and the ANDINet controller.
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| TNS displayed its FusionPoint by TNS solution, an extension of Retail Link, which pulls a c-store's networks together. |
Since 2004, the number of ATMs on Fiserv's network has grown 62 percent, no doubt a result of VISA U.S.A. Inc.'s two-tier interchange rating, which hit earlier this year.
Fiserv expects its ATM base to reach between 90,000 and 100,000 ATMs by the end of the year, said David Munno, vice president of sales for Fiserv. "We're growing," Munno said. "We also provide access to debit gateway(s) and we work with third-party processors that drive ATMs."





















