Monoprix, an umbrella of several brands, has been transforming urban retail for over 90 years. The company aims to satisfy customers’ every need—be it textile, home, leisure, beauty, or food—at any time of day. Its 22,000 employees operate a robust network of more than 842 stores in city centers, serving more than 3 million customers daily and making 3.1 million annual deliveries. The group includes the Monoprix, Monop’, Monop’daily, Monop’beauty, Monop’station, Monoprix Maison, and Naturalia brands, as well as its online shopping site, Monoprix.fr, and the logistics subsidiary SAMADA.
Monoprix handles 700,000 to 1 million transactions per day, with an average yearly revenue of €5 billion. However, due to a 2023 regulatory requirement, Monoprix was required to issue digital receipts for all transactions, only issuing paper receipts upon customer request, resulting in the need for significant IT system developments.
An early start
In 2021 Monoprix began designing its initial solution for digitizing receipts based on information provided by the Association for Retail Technology Standards (ARTS), an international organization dedicated to reducing technology costs in the retail sector.
The following year, the company launched Ticket Online, based on MongoDB Atlas, giving users smartphone access to digitized receipts. The company provided an additional improvement: an application called Markdown Rates, which enables the company to calculate its actual revenue in relation to in-store promotions as well as facilitate the verification of shopping carts or baskets at store exits by security guards.
“But we must go further and open the scope to all transactions,” said Emmanuel Lecomte, Information Systems Architect at Monoprix.

