Surveillance in your store can be a big deterrent for shoplifting and employee theft. The knowledge that your store is protected, or at least that there are cameras capturing images of employees and customers, can help you save thousand of dollars yearly. Employee theft is costing the retail industry millions of dollars every year and installing a type of security in your store can help you reduce the shrinkage you are experiencing.
For more about shoplifting, follow the links below.
Surveillance best cure for shoplifting
Aside from the holiday seasons where people aimlessly weave through cart-to-cart traffic down aisles in department or convenience stores, it’s difficult to predict when there will be spike in theft.
Particularly, shoplifting.
As of Friday, the Hutchinson Police Department has worked two cases of shoplifting this month. Granted, only nine unpredictably cold and not-so cold days have scooted by in March. But January and February were hot months for shoplifting with officers responding to 61 combined reported cases of shoplifting, according to Hutchinson Police bulletin archives.
There were 24 reports of shoplifting in December. Numbers from the archive bulletin suggests the shoplifting occurs at three of the most recognizable stores in the city: Wal-Mart, Dillons and various Kwik Shops.
Hastings, Target, J.C. Penney and Kohl’s are also sprinkled on the list of popularly shoplifted stores.
But why the heart-monitor like spike in thefts recently? Police Lt. Martin Robertson isn’t sure of the answer himself.
US based company allows shoplifters to avoid the police by charging them for an online course
IN THE game of Monopoly, there’s nothing better (apart from maybe winning free parking) than turning over that community chest card to see the words “get out of jail free.”
Now imagine that someone hands you that card after you’ve committed a criminal act in real life.
That is essentially what one company based in the United States is doing.
The Corrective Education Company (CEC) is a start-up, and works with businesses to offer shoplifters an alternative path to reform other than the boring old legal system.
Founded by a pair of Harvard graduates, it offers the chance for apprehended shoplifters to pay $411 ($US320) in order to avoid a phone call to the boys in blue.
That money goes towards the cost of attending an online course which is run by CEC that claims to reduce the likelihood of recidivism for the individual.
The obliging shop owners who refer the shoplifters get a cut of about $US40 per offender, and according to Slate around 20,000 offenders have so far coughed up for the program.
That works out to be $7.2 million that CEC has profited by blatantly circumventing the established judicial system.
Walgreens Shoplifting Duo Captured On Surveillance
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