France’s supermarket sector is now driven by technology at every level — pricing, checkout, shelf execution, and omnichannel fulfilment.
This ranking highlights the top 10 France retail technology companies 2026 that are directly used in supermarket operations, based on a RevNow method: real deployment inside stores + operational impact.
These are the systems behind how supermarkets actually run.
France supermarket retail tech leaders
| Rank | Company | Founded | Core Role in Supermarkets |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | VusionGroup | 1992 | Shelf pricing + in-store IoT |
| 2 | Cegid | 1983 | POS, ERP, retail systems |
| 3 | Ingenico | 1980 | Payments + checkout |
| 4 | SES-imagotag | 1992 | Electronic shelf labels |
| 5 | OneStock | 2010 | Omnichannel order management |
| 6 | SimpliField | 2013 | Store execution & audits |
| 7 | EasyPicky | 2017 | AI shelf monitoring |
| 8 | Veesion | 2018 | AI loss prevention |
| 9 | Recommerce Group | 2009 | Returns & recommerce systems |
| 10 | New Black | 2014 | Commerce infrastructure |
1. VusionGroup (Founded 1992)
VusionGroup sits at the core of modern supermarket operations because it controls how pricing and shelf communication work in real time.
Founded in 1992, the company moved beyond electronic shelf labels into a full in-store IoT platform. Its systems link pricing, promotions, and product data directly to shelves.
For supermarkets, this solves several problems at once. Price updates can be rolled out across hundreds of stores instantly. Promotional errors are reduced. Staff no longer need to manually replace labels.
More importantly, retailers gain real-time visibility of what is happening at shelf level — something that was historically missing in physical stores.
That combination of pricing control and data visibility is why VusionGroup sits at the top of this ranking.
2. Cegid (Founded 1983)
Cegid operates deeper in the system, but its role is just as critical.
Founded in 1983, it provides the software layer that connects stores, finance, inventory, and workforce management. In many supermarket groups, it acts as the central operating system.
This is where transactions are recorded, stock is tracked, and store performance is monitored.
Without this layer, supermarkets lose control over margins and operations. Pricing decisions, staffing, and replenishment all depend on accurate system data.
Cegid’s importance comes from this central position. It is not visible to shoppers, but it underpins how the business runs every day.
3. Ingenico (Founded 1980)
Ingenico controls the final step of the retail process — payment.
Founded in 1980, it built one of the largest global networks of payment terminals and transaction systems. Its technology sits at the checkout, handling card payments, contactless, and digital transactions.
For supermarkets, this is not just about processing payments. It is about speed, reliability, and integration with POS systems.
Any delay or failure at checkout directly affects customer experience and store throughput.
That is why payment infrastructure remains one of the most critical — and least replaceable — parts of retail technology.
4. SES-imagotag (Founded 1992)
SES-imagotag played a key role in scaling electronic shelf labels across European supermarkets.
Founded in 1992, it built a large installed base of pricing systems that allowed retailers to move away from paper labels.
This shift reduced labour costs, improved pricing accuracy, and enabled faster promotional changes.
Even as the market evolves, its systems remain embedded in many store networks.
That legacy footprint still matters, particularly in large supermarket environments where replacing infrastructure takes time and investment.
5. OneStock (Founded 2010)
OneStock focuses on a different challenge — connecting online and in-store retail.
Founded in 2010, it provides an order management system that gives supermarkets a single view of inventory across warehouses and stores.
This allows retailers to offer services like click & collect, ship-from-store, and flexible fulfilment options.
For grocery retailers, where availability and delivery speed are critical, this system becomes a key competitive tool.
It ensures that stock is used efficiently and that customers can access products regardless of where they are stored.
6. SimpliField (Founded 2013)
SimpliField addresses a common problem in supermarkets: execution at store level.
Founded in 2013, its platform is used to manage tasks, audits, and operational checks across store networks.
Head offices can design promotions and merchandising plans, but without execution, those plans fail.
SimpliField ensures that stores follow those plans correctly. It provides visibility into what is actually happening on the shop floor.
For retailers, this reduces the gap between strategy and reality — something that directly affects sales performance.
7. EasyPicky (Founded 2017)
EasyPicky brings automation into shelf monitoring.
Founded in 2017, it uses computer vision and AI to scan shelves and detect issues such as out-of-stock items, pricing errors, and misplaced products.
Traditionally, these checks relied on staff walking the store.
With automation, supermarkets can monitor shelves continuously and react faster to problems.
This has a direct impact on revenue, as product availability is closely linked to sales.
8. Veesion (Founded 2018)
Veesion focuses on loss prevention using AI.
Founded in 2018, it analyses video feeds to identify suspicious gestures linked to theft, rather than relying only on traditional surveillance methods.
Shrink remains a major cost pressure for supermarkets, especially in high-volume environments.
By detecting risk in real time, systems like Veesion help retailers reduce losses without increasing staff workload.
This is becoming more important as retailers look for scalable ways to protect margins.
9. Recommerce Group (Founded 2009)
Recommerce Group reflects the shift toward circular retail models.
Founded in 2009, it builds platforms for refurbished products and returns management, connecting retailers to secondary markets.
For supermarkets, this is still an emerging area, but it is gaining relevance as sustainability targets increase.
Managing returns, waste, and product lifecycle is becoming part of retail operations.
Systems like this help retailers recover value from products that would otherwise be lost.
10. New Black (Founded 2014)
New Black focuses on the future structure of retail systems.
Founded in 2014, it provides a headless commerce platform that allows supermarkets to build flexible digital environments.
Instead of relying on rigid, all-in-one systems, retailers can integrate different tools and adapt faster to changes.
This is particularly important as supermarkets expand digital services and experiment with new customer experiences.
It creates a more adaptable technology foundation for long-term growth.
Why this matters for supermarket operators
This ranking shows that supermarket retail technology is no longer a single system.
It is a stack:
- Shelf layer → VusionGroup, SES-imagotag
- Core systems → Cegid
- Checkout → Ingenico
- Store execution → SimpliField, EasyPicky
- Risk control → Veesion
- Omnichannel → OneStock
- Future architecture → New Black
Each layer directly impacts:
- Cost control
- Shelf availability
- Labour efficiency
- Customer experience
What happens next?
Supermarket technology in France is moving toward deeper integration across France retail tech, store operations, and supply chains.
AI will expand further into in-store execution and analytics.
Pricing systems will become more dynamic and automated at shelf level.
Omnichannel fulfilment will continue to grow as France supermarkets push for faster and more flexible delivery models.
At the same time, pressure on costs and margins is forcing retailers to rely more heavily on data-driven systems across the wider France FMCG ecosystem.
The companies in this list are already embedded in that shift — and their role is likely to expand as technology becomes central to how modern supermarkets operate.
Editors Note: This article is based on publicly available company data, founding records, and retail technology deployment across supermarket operations in France.







