No Limits

No Limits

Video-based customer-counting system increased data accuracy by 42 percent

For The Limited, an established U.S. women’s fashion retailer with 220 stores and 2,600 employees, finding better ways to manage and improve customer service, staffing levels, merchandising effectiveness and profitability is key to continued success.

As with all retailers, The Limited maintains a careful balance between staffing and cost, ensuring enough salespeople are on hand so that customers aren’t kept waiting but without overstaffing to the point of inefficiency and decreased profits.

“We need enough staff at any given time to communicate with customers, help them find their size and maybe try on some different outfits,” said Roger Coville, CEO of the The Limited. Such personal attention and overall experience helps convert store traffic into sales and builds customer loyalty.

The more timely and accurate the customer traffic data is, the easier it is to maintain proper staffing levels. For years, The Limited generated this critical information manually, via store estimates and hand counters. The main goals: keep the staff-to-customer ratio fine-tuned to minimize labor costs while maximizing the customer experience; compare the traffic count to sales to understand how well each store converts visitors to buyers; and, ultimately, be more profitable.

With new technology opportunities, it became clear that there were better solutions than manually gathering and analyzing data.

The Need for a precise Automated System

The Limited wanted an automated in-store traffic counting and analysis system that could help managers keep stores staffed with the optimal number of employees, enhance the customer experience and maximize sales.

Because its stores are small, with just a few salespeople at any given time, The Limited sought a system that delivered highly accurate traffic counts to manage personnel optimally throughout store hours.

In addition, management wanted the ability to correlate traffic information with key data, such as sales results, to gain better insight into customers’ purchasing habits and to track shoppers-to-buyers conversion ratios. They wanted a “dashboard” that consolidated multiple data inputs into a real-time view of business operations to better manage store efficiencies and maintain competitive advantage.

Clearer Images, Greater Accuracy

The Limited’s first attempt at automation was a thermal imaging system set up as a one-store pilot program. The system detected shoppers entering the store by sensing body heat. At night, raw data transmitted to the thermal imaging vendor’s headquarters were converted to a traffic count and posted on a website the following day. But this system was limited by both time delays and questionable customer count accuracy.

Coville discovered a better solution at a trade show, where video and data management software provider DIGIOP Inc. demonstrated its video-based retail counting system calculating the number of passing trade show attendees in real time. The integrated system included DIGIOP software, powered by a purposebuilt Dell computer, and a video camera.

“The real-time images meant the traffic count could be independently verified by looking at the visual record. This capability excited us,” Coville said. “An instore comparison of the DIGIOP system to the thermal imaging system revealed a dramatic difference. There was a 30-person discrepancy between the two counts, and the video record proved that the DIGIOP system was accurate. We were sold.”

Based on those results, The Limited implemented DIGIOP’s video management system solution in all 220 of its stores.

The integrated system enables The Limited to capture and analyze in-store data to optimize the customer experience while minimizing labor costs. Additionally, The Limited’s employees are compensated partly on sales conversion rates, making traffic counting accuracy very important to all. The DIGIOP system has satisfied this requirement, delivering images with accuracy rates far superior to the thermal imaging system.

A Powerful, Scalable Solution

Today, video cameras are connected to a DIGIOP Digital Video Management System in each store to gather intelligence. The Limited uses up to six cameras per store—one positioned at the store entrance to count traffic, and the others aimed at the checkout area to help prevent theft and monitor checkout lines and customer wait times. A video capture board converts the analog video signals to digital, enabling a number of useful analytics. For example, the digital video can be correlated with other data sources, such as point-of-sale transactions, and the DIGIOP system can automatically classify objects, such as people, within the video.

Each DIGIOP system produces an in-store traffic count every 15 minutes and transmits this data to a secure website for access and analysis by both store managers and corporate managers.

The system provides traditional surveillance benefits of increased security and risk management, as well, and The Limited plans to add complex loss-prevention tools in the future.

“Our checkout desk cameras can be used for loss-prevention management,” Colville said. “If cash drawers open without corresponding sales, the system would alert us so that we could quickly check for shortages.”

The Limited also can link the system to third-party systems for employee time-and-attendance management.

“It’s easy to add capabilities because the system is digital, PC-based, and simply ties into our back-office systems,” Coville said. “New capabilities are modular, so we can grow as we go. We are exploring additional capabilities to create stores of the future.”

The Limited has been impressed with the system’s clear and crisp video quality, which is important for surveillance purposes as well as capturing images accurately so corresponding data are also reliable. And because the DIGIOP solution is scalable, The Limited can easily add more analog, IP and/or megapixel cameras to any given store without having to switch to a new hardware platform.

Significant Operational Improvements

In the retailer’s initial test of recognizing and counting customers, Coville noted that the video system measured 91 percent accuracy, versus the 64 percent accuracy of the thermal imaging system— a 42 percent improvement. These accuracy levels have been further confirmed in the full installation at all 220 stores, where The Limited is now scheduling staff and calculating sales conversion rates based on this intelligence.

Retail officials have confirmed labor- saving benefits, as well. Labor is the retail industry’s number-one cost and a huge profitability factor. The videobased system has empowered The Limited to match staffing levels to customer levels accurately, helping each store optimize profitability.

Additionally, The Limited has seen an uptick in conversion rates of shoppers to buyers since it installed the DIGIOP solution.

“The traffic data comes back and is available immediately to our corporate office and to the stores,” Colville said. “We aggregate that data with our sales information to provide conversion rates per store. We also integrate the data with point-of-sale data systems and generate conversion rates almost instantly. We have improved rates nationwide by a couple of percentage points—on that scale, 2 percent adds significantly to the bottom line.”

The system delivers business intelligence in real-time, enabling managers to quickly react to store performance. For example, a low conversion rate on a particular day might prompt increases in staffing levels or training. Similarly, managers might see a midday traffic pattern related to nearby office workers shopping during lunch breaks and assign extra staff.

This article originally appeared in the August 2011 issue of Security Today.

Featured

Featured Cybersecurity

Webinars

New Products

  • HD2055 Modular Barricade

    Delta Scientific’s electric HD2055 modular shallow foundation barricade is tested to ASTM M50/P1 with negative penetration from the vehicle upon impact. With a shallow foundation of only 24 inches, the HD2055 can be installed without worrying about buried power lines and other below grade obstructions. The modular make-up of the barrier also allows you to cover wider roadways by adding additional modules to the system. The HD2055 boasts an Emergency Fast Operation of 1.5 seconds giving the guard ample time to deploy under a high threat situation. 3

  • Luma x20

    Luma x20

    Snap One has announced its popular Luma x20 family of surveillance products now offers even greater security and privacy for home and business owners across the globe by giving them full control over integrators’ system access to view live and recorded video. According to Snap One Product Manager Derek Webb, the new “customer handoff” feature provides enhanced user control after initial installation, allowing the owners to have total privacy while also making it easy to reinstate integrator access when maintenance or assistance is required. This new feature is now available to all Luma x20 users globally. “The Luma x20 family of surveillance solutions provides excellent image and audio capture, and with the new customer handoff feature, it now offers absolute privacy for camera feeds and recordings,” Webb said. “With notifications and integrator access controlled through the powerful OvrC remote system management platform, it’s easy for integrators to give their clients full control of their footage and then to get temporary access from the client for any troubleshooting needs.” 3

  • Camden CV-7600 High Security Card Readers

    Camden CV-7600 High Security Card Readers

    Camden Door Controls has relaunched its CV-7600 card readers in response to growing market demand for a more secure alternative to standard proximity credentials that can be easily cloned. CV-7600 readers support MIFARE DESFire EV1 & EV2 encryption technology credentials, making them virtually clone-proof and highly secure. 3