Showing posts with label loss prevention. Show all posts
Showing posts with label loss prevention. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 8, 2015

Small and Significant

 
Fred Minnick     

This article was published in the August 2015 issue of STORES Magazine.

Retailers are taking the right steps to fight shrinkage

Retailers have been fighting the good fight against shrinkage for decades. But when NRF’s “National Retail Security Survey” was published every year, they’d see only marginal improvements.

Not this year: The retail industry has gained a significant edge. Retailers surveyed for the 24th annual report saw an average shrink rate of 1.38 percent in 2014 — $44 billion in losses out of $3.2 trillion for total 2014 sales, compared with the $44.25 billion lost by retailers the previous year.

“That’s a pretty remarkably low number, which is good news for the retailers,” says Richard Hollinger, co-author of the study and professor of sociology, criminology and law at the University of Florida. “Not all retailers report their shrinkage, so it’s not a complete examination of every retailer, but in general it’s a good trend.”
 
Shoplifting and organized retail crime accounted for 38 percent of inventory shrinkage in 2014.
 
National Retail Security Survey

By the numbers
A total of 100 retailers participated in the survey, representing more than 20 retail market categories. The largest sample (24 percent) came from retailers seeing $1 billion to $2.49 billion in sales.
The study represents a significant investigation into where shrinkage takes place.

“For some time we’ve been looking to compare where the shrinkage is coming from, and for the most part the highest percentage has been internal theft,” Hollinger says. “For the first time, it’s actually seeing shoplifting … exceed the internal numbers.”

Shoplifting and organized retail crime accounted for 38 percent of inventory shrinkage; employee theft accounted for 35 percent and administrative error 17 percent.

The efforts to combat shrinkage are significant. Retailers use loss prevention systems “almost universally,” but loss prevention budgets represented less than 1 percent of overall 2014 sales. Specialty apparel retailers spent an average of 0.63 percent of sales on loss prevention measures; grocery stores used 0.36 percent.

Almost all respondents are pursuing efforts to cut down on high-risk employees, which Hollinger calls a key point. “The focus in the report should be whether or not the loss prevention attention is being placed on pre-employment activities,” he says.

Some 89 percent said they’re conducting criminal conviction checks, while 86 percent conduct multiple interviews and 73 percent verify employment history. Men’s and women’s specialty apparel stores and supermarkets are pre-employment screening leaders, with 92 percent checking criminal convictions and 83 percent verifying past employment. Grocery stores and supermarkets reported 100 percent criminal background checks; 83 percent test for drugs.

Training plays an important role, as do hotlines and incentives.

“Everybody seems to be doing something in that regard,” Hollinger says. “One can argue that retailers are making greater use of the Internet and various digital training systems … . There’s a number of different training mechanisms in place.”

Of those surveyed, 95 percent have an anonymous hotline and 88 percent use awareness posters; more than half offer a variety of training programs and notification systems. The leading program continues to be videos (72 percent), but more than 55 percent use Internet-based systems and 54 percent offer “honesty incentives” such as cash and gifts.

Employee incentives offer great value to loss prevention strategies, but retailers still have to prove theft.

“I think there’s greater use of cameras, particularly digital cameras linked to computer software that is interpreting what the camera’s seeing,” Hollinger says.

All respondents use burglar alarms and 93 percent use digital video recorders; 66 percent use live hidden closed-circuit television. More than 69 percent use point-of-sale data mining to help losses at the till. In-store deterrence — plain-clothes detectives (41 percent), receipt checkers (38 percent) and signage (36 percent) — are also gaining traction.

A third of department stores use acousto-magnetic electronic security tags, but all men’s and women’s specialty apparel stores and sporting goods retailers use them.

Hollinger says the best programs are a combination of human resources and technology.

“We’ve been seeing this for years: Hire the best people, train them as well as you possibly can by making them aware of the impact of shrinkage, control your merchandise to make sure you know where it is and where it’s going and then finally develop a range of technologies to apprehend those who are stealing from you,” he says.

“There still has been a tremendous change in the order of which those items appear from the last study … . It does show that the takeaway is greater reliance on technology, as opposed to personnel catching other personnel.”

In human resources, loss prevention staff can make a budget work and are leaders in diversity. About one in four loss prevention managers are women, slightly higher than the national trend that sees 22 percent of senior leadership roles filled by women. Almost 10 percent of loss prevention managers are Hispanic.
 
“Hire the best people, train them as well as you possibly can, control your merchandise and develop a range of technologies to apprehend those who are stealing from you.”
Richard Hollinger, University of Florida

The future
The war against ORC has transcended the retail industry and become a national issue. Major cities from Minnesota to Utah are forming their own retail crime alliances. “The way that we should be tackling crime as a whole is by making sure we come at it from an organized crime perspective,” St. Paul Police Sergeant Charlie Anderson said in May after the formation of the Twin Cities Organized Retail Crime Association.

Even with the growth in regional and federal assistance, individual retailers have a great responsibility to protect their merchandise and catch those who steal. With that said, what will loss prevention look like in 2020?

 “That’s a tough one. One of the major things that we’re going to see is a continuing emphasis on using technology,” Hollinger says. “I call it looking for the ‘silver bullet.’ There’s always a continued emphasis on trying to find better technologies to monitor and catch shoplifters and employed thieves.”

Hollinger recalls similar questions a decade ago; the outcome has not been what many predicted.
“We thought at one time that RFID would take off, and it has been used — but not to the extent that I think people predicted 10 years ago,” he says. “It’s being used in increasing amounts for inventory control.”

Technology is cheaper than staffing, leading retailers to leverage more computer software and other technologies versus hiring hundreds of people to monitor stores. Hollinger also envisions retailers coming around on technologies they’ve been reluctant to use.

“One is face identification software. We’ve already begun to see that grow in experimentation,” he says. “The gambling industry is using it extensively. The State Department and airline security … are using it, and I would imagine that as the software gets better, face identification software will be used more commonly in the retail environment.”

The use of facial recognition and camera-heavy stores puts the retail industry in the middle of a common debate these days — privacy.

“Retailers are a little afraid that [more cameras] may signal an invasion of privacy issue,” Hollinger says. “So retailers are trying to monitor who’s in the store and monitor their shoppers, monitor their employees, but … that balancing of privacy versus control has always been a major issue in our society.”

To view the original article please visit: NRF

Thursday, February 23, 2012

What is Your Loss Prevention Strategy?

By Scott Kreisberg, CEO One Step Retail Solutions

When it comes to security and protecting your assets, you need a good strategy. You will know how good that strategy is when you try to balance the cash register at the end of the day; when you do your physical count; when you are faced with a computer crash; or when too many of your customers start having identity theft on their cards. Do you want to wait until then to find out that your protection was inadequate?

The most effective method to achieve security has always been a layered approach. In other words, instead of just relying on a single solution, you set up a number of protective layers and thus greatly reduce the chances of being a victim.
Airports are an example of a layered approach: there are visual inspection of ID's and tickets before you are allowed beyond a certain point, there are TSA agents observing via cameras, there are metal detection imaging devices that you must go through, and there are personnel at the ramp to the plane who check tickets and ID's again.

We at One Step Retail take a similar approach to protecting you and your business from both external and internal threats. After all, we have been around helping retailers for 25 years and we hear about disasters from unprotected retailers. Consequently, we want to ensure you do not experience the same thing.
What would happen if all the information stored in your computer were suddenly lost? Or you had a hacker or virus or Trojan attack? Could you recreate this information? If so, how much time would it take? How much would it cost? What about dishonest employees? Most importantly, would your business survive?

In today's economic climate, it is vital to protect your assets and one of the most important assets you have is your data. If you lost it, it could possibly close your store. That may be hard to believe, but look at these statistics from Comdisco Vulnerability Index Research Report:

• 82% of companies are not prepared to handle a computer system disaster
• 83% of corporate data recoveries from tape backup FAIL
• Only 6% of companies that suffer from a catastrophic data loss survive

In our own backyard, we've seen it happen. Two different clients thought they were backing up and protected, but then their computers crashed and they discovered otherwise. After a year of manually inputting all the missing data, one retailer still occasionally scans an item that should be in the system but isn't. Another client lost years of data and had to pay for expensive data recovery but not all of it was recoverable.

In the category of dishonest employees, one client after six months of periodic cycle counts being off, finally traced down the problem to an employee taking fictitious “returns” and giving refunds-to herself. Another client had an employee who, as their Systems Administrator, embezzled money from them for five years. Months of sales information in their computer records was missing and she said they had been lost. Where was the backup? This company went out of business two years later.

One Step has researched resources and partnered with experienced, honest vendors to bring you layers of security specific to your needs as a retailer.
With RetailSafe, you have a professional backup service that knows retail and their data backup needs, plus you as our client get a discount for their services.
With sonicWall you get not only an intelligent state-of-the art firewall protecting you from malware, you get PCI compliance integrated into the system protecting your business from another type of disaster. You can buy firewalls including sonicWall at Amazon but none of them will be PCI Compliant out of the box. You must be trained on how to properly configure the firewall in order to meet PCI compliancy. So, buying them from anywhere else would be an utter waste of money.

With Quadrox you have a Network Video Recording system that can, among other things, integrate with your POS. The POS is a primary location for employee theft or mistakes. For example, you could quickly access the time when an employee issued a return and refund (as noted on the POS) and see actually what happened on the video—no cycle counts for six months to discover the dishonest employee.
So, start getting these layers firmly in place. If you have some or all of them already, make sure:

• they are working,
• you are verifying on a regular basis that they are working
• they are adequate for your specific needs as a retailer
• you understand them and can use all of their features
• you not only can use their features, you are using them