Every time I walk into a modern supermarket, I have the vague sensation that I’m participating in a very polite psychological experiment.
Soft lighting. Strategic fruit displays. Twelve brands of
the same oat milk arranged like they’re auditioning for a minimalist design
magazine. And somewhere, silently judging me, a row of protein bars that taste
like sweetened drywall but promise health, energy, and, in some ways, moral
superiority.
Hard to imagine, but before 1916, you couldn’t wander a
grocery store making questionable life choices next to the frozen waffles. You
walked in, handed a clerk your list, and waited while they retrieved your food
like a polite, edible library system. Sometimes they suggested things.
Sometimes they judged you. Mostly they controlled the flow of the entire
experience.
That was shopping.
Then along came Clarence Saunders, a grocery wholesaler in
Memphis who apparently woke up one morning and thought, ‘What if we just…
let people touch things?’ A radical notion. Borderline chaos. The retail
equivalent of letting toddlers run a city council meeting.
Everyone thought he was ridiculous. Competitors even ran ads
mocking the idea, which is comforting in a bleak sort of way. History shows
that whenever something genuinely new appears, the first public response is
usually laughter followed by panic, like someone spotting a chimp on an
airplane.
Saunders opened his store anyway and gave it the deeply
unserious name Piggly Wiggly, which sounds less like a business and more
like a children’s book character. When people asked why he chose the name, he
basically said, “So you’d ask”. Which, honestly, is better branding
logic than most million-dollar startups manage today.
But the name wasn’t the real disruption. The layout was.
Customers entered through a turnstile, grabbed a basket,
walked down aisles, saw clearly marked prices, picked whatever they wanted, and
paid at the front. No middleman, just you, your list, and your impulses.
It was the first self-service grocery store in America, and
within a year, Saunders was franchising. By 1923, there were more than a
thousand of them.
Which means one slightly stubborn man rearranged how an
entire country bought food. Not with new technology. Not with an app. Just by
removing a step everyone assumed was necessary.
That part fascinates me. Because we live in an age obsessed
with adding things. More features. More layers. More dashboards explaining
other dashboards.
Saunders did the opposite. He took something away. And in
doing so, he quietly invented impulse buying … the economic engine of late
capitalism and my personal weakness around dark chocolate covered almonds. When
customers had to walk past every product, they didn’t just buy what they
needed. They bought what looked good, what felt comforting, what whispered, “You
deserve this,” in the gentle tone usually reserved for bad decisions.
He even put candy at checkout, which is either genius
merchandising or the earliest documented form of emotional manipulation,
depending on how recently you’ve tried to parent a six-year-old.
The wild part is that today we’d call this “behavioral
design.” We’d build a conference around it. Someone would write a book with a
bright orange cover and a subtitle containing the word habit.
But a century ago, it was just a guy rearranging shelves and
trusting human nature to do the rest.
That’s the lesson hiding under the nostalgia and the oddly
named store: real disruption isn’t always about inventing something new. Sometimes
it’s about noticing the invisible friction everyone else politely ignores.
And friction is everywhere right now.
We’ve built digital lives filled with tiny clerks: algorithms
suggesting what to watch, what to read, what to think, what to want. Helpful,
efficient, and faintly suffocating. Like being wrapped in a very soft, very
intelligent blanket you didn’t ask for.
Convenience, we’re told, is the highest good. Faster.
Easier. Smoother.
But Saunders’ story makes me wonder if we’ve misunderstood
the assignment. Because convenience isn’t just about removing effort. It’s
about deciding which effort matters.
He removed the clerk, but he added wandering. He removed
waiting, but he added choice. He removed control, and accidentally created
temptation.
That trade-off feels more honest than most modern design,
which tries to erase effort entirely, as if a meaningful life should feel like
scrolling through a menu that never ends and never quite satisfies.
Maybe the real rebellion now isn’t building smarter systems.
Maybe it’s noticing where the friction is doing something useful: The pause
before buying. The silence before speaking. The boredom before an idea. All the
uncomfortable little spaces where thinking actually happens.
