Insider Brief
- Simbe Robotics and Solum expanded their partnership to integrate autonomous shelf-scanning robots with Solum’s Newton electronic shelf label infrastructure across European retail stores.
- Simbe’s Tally 4.0 robot captures real-time shelf data using computer vision and edge computing to detect pricing errors, out-of-stocks and merchandising gaps.
- Data from the robots feeds directly into Solum’s ESL platform, allowing retailers to automatically update digital price labels and reduce manual store audits while improving shelf accuracy.
Simbe Robotics and Solum have expanded a strategic partnership aimed at linking autonomous store intelligence with electronic shelf label infrastructure across European retail environments, the companies announced. The collaboration, highlighted during a live demonstration at EuroShop, integrates Simbe’s shelf-scanning robotics with Solum’s Newton electronic shelf label platform to connect real-time shelf data with digital pricing and merchandising systems.
Simbe recently introduced Tally 4.0, the latest version of its autonomous shelf-scanning robot designed to automate store audits and capture detailed information about shelf conditions. According to the company, the system features extended operating time, upgraded edge computing and enhanced computer vision, enabling the robot to analyze shelf layouts, detect pricing discrepancies and identify out-of-stock items at scale.
Under the partnership, data collected by Tally robots can feed directly into Solum’s Newton ESL infrastructure. The platform is designed to support centralized pricing updates, stable connectivity and cloud-based control across large retail store networks.
The companies said linking shelf-level insights with digital labeling systems allows retailers to respond more quickly to pricing errors, stock gaps and merchandising issues. By automating shelf monitoring and synchronizing that data with electronic shelf labels, retailers can reduce manual store audits while maintaining more consistent pricing and product availability.
Solum, founded in 2015 as a spin-off from Samsung Electro-Mechanics and listed on the KOSPI exchange, develops power solutions, display technologies and electronic shelf labels used by retailers globally.
Simbe develops retail automation systems centered on its Store Intelligence platform, which uses computer vision and AI-driven robotics to provide real-time shelf monitoring. The company said its technology is deployed in 10 countries and across multiple retail sectors to help operators improve inventory visibility and store operations.




