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Home Depot puts IP cameras to work PDF Print E-mail
Used for customer and store analysis as well as security
 
Written by Neil Sutton, on 14-04-2008 15:09
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Retailers are discovering new uses for security cameras in their stores, providing new information about customers, their shopping habits, and how they respond to in-store marketing.


Roger Senecal, district asset protection manager for Boise, Ida.-area Home Depot stores, has worked in retail security for two decades. Security used to mean hiding behind pillars and spying on suspicious employees and customers, but “the days of asset protection professionals having to use binoculars, run cables and crawl through the ceiling are over,” says Senecal, who spoke at the ISC West conference in Las Vegas earlier this month.

Today’s IP cameras provide sharp images that can be used for security investigations, and analytics software can be put to work for a variety of purposes. For example, if an aisle or fire exit is blocked by a stray pallet, video analytics software will notify staff so they can move it.

They can also be used for human resources purposes. Cameras can catch incidents of workplace violence, says Senecal, as well as substance abuse or sexual harassment. They can also be used to assess worker productivity and compliance with safety policies. “We can see how well stores are managing (potentially) life-threatening activities” like managing heavy equipment or moving large boxes, he says.

Alex Johnson, director of solution services for Verint, says that retailers are beginning to realize the potential that IP cameras and advanced software can provide. The number of customers entering a store is sometimes recorded using a beam counter, but a camera-based system can provide more detailed information. With the right system, a store manager can know not only the number of visitors to his store, but also the departments they visited, how long they spent there and how long they lingered in front of a particular product layout or marketing display.

That information can be used to help managers plan store layouts, optimize space and determine the best place to situate new products. “We want to find ways to use video to solve problems (other than crime),” says Johnson.

Advanced analytics are a relatively new phenomenon in security. “If we were sitting here two years ago, people would have said video analytics doesn’t work,” says Eric Fullerton, chief sales and marketing officer for Milestone Systems. But evidence suggests that it is now working and contributing positively towards retailer goals.

“Video is now becoming an ROI tool and not just a cost,” he says, adding that users should only be thinking about IP-based video when rolling out new systems or upgrading, since IP video is “futureproof. Analogue is not.”

The use of IP video for store and customer analysis can be a boon, but its value as a pure security solution should not be undervalued, says Senecal. Security cameras are helping to reduce store theft and “sweethearting” – the practice of store employees offering unauthorized deep discounts on products to friends or family – but they can also be used to thwart much more serious crimes. Shoplifters are sometimes also involved in rape or murder cases and in-store video can be used to positively identify and locate violent criminals.





Last update: 14-04-2008 15:49

Published in : CCTV, News

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