Retailers are increasingly concerned about employee safety considering the rising number of organized retail theft crimes. This not only leads to the loss of valuable merchandise but also disrupts store operations and compromises the security of personnel. A recent National Retail Federation (NRF) survey found that retail crime accounted for $112.1 billion in losses in 2022. The bulk of the amount can be attributed to organized retail crime.
What is Organized Retail Crime?
Unlike individual shoplifting thefts, organized retail crime (ORC) involves multiple thieves swarming stores for products they can resell online. Law enforcement experts say the individuals act as a gang and brazenly walk into a store collecting items that can be then resold either on online marketplaces or on peer-to-peer shopping websites.
In contrast to random theft or low-level shoplifting, organized retail crime is characterized by meticulous planning, the deliberate targeting of retailers, and sophisticated coordination. Shoplifting crimes are viewed as opportunistic also known as a “theft of need” due to economics. Retail executives view the methods of retail crime gangs as a “theft of greed.”
Retail crime experts say organized retail thefts are methodical in their approach to unsuspecting businesses as these “individuals steal frequently, often moving across county and state lines.” These syndicates are systematic in which retailer(s) they target and which merchandise to steal.
Another key differentiator of organized retail crime actors from a small group of thieves working in consort? These individuals have specific fencing operations to sell their stolen merchandise and may often be part of multi-national criminal enterprises.
More Violent Retail Crime Acts
In the 2023 survey, 67% of respondents reported more violence associated with organized retail crime than a year ago. Recent cases include:
- Nashville: the suspects sprayed a security guard with bear spray. Several bystanders were exposed to the fumes, prompting EMS units to come to the mall. Mall managers say thankfully nobody was seriously injured or transported.
- San Francisco: Police arrested six people in connection with an organized retail theft ring. The suspects entered a business wearing masks and quickly filled their bags and a wagon with store merchandise. At one store, police say one of the thieves warned an employee that intervening
- New York City: Four masked men marched in a line through a big-box store one afternoon. Surveillance video caught two of the men pushing carts stacked with product out of the store.
Unfortunately, this scenario has become all too prevalent in stores of all sizes. Small, independent retailers are particularly vulnerable due to their limited resources and late operating hours. Unlike national chain stores, “mom ‘n’ pop” shops are less likely to have robust insurance coverage, making business resiliency a greater challenge.
Keeping Employees Safe Storewide
Many retailers tell employees not to intervene in suspected cases of shoplifting, as the companies have asset-protection associates trained to confront shoplifters. In some cases, intervening during a crime in progress goes against company policy. Some store managers believe the risk of harm to the employee or surrounding customers is too great a risk to take over replaceable products.
While employers assert their duty of care encourages, and often demands employees not engage with a crime in progress – using mobile panic button solutions become a reliable call for help, but a crime fighting tool.
Found mostly in higher-end retailers, relying on a physical panic button is cumbersome and may be cost prohibitive for smaller businesses and office settings.
Physical panic buttons are typically located behind the register or along the counter. The familiar location makes them easy to locate for cashiers, but floor and frontline employees may be left without a way to call for help or alert law enforcement.
Mobile panic buttons are more reachable to all staff, as store employees have peace of mind with a call for help right in their pocket all the time and just a screen tap away.
In the case of emergencies mobile panic buttons found in safety apps like Rave AppArmor allow a staff member to call for help discreetly with a push the panic button icon. The mobile panic button would automatically send the location and a notification to security.
The store’s Security team can then decide to escalate the emergency and trigger a mass notification to all staff members (or specific groups of) in a manner of seconds using Rave Alert.
The notification can then be pushed via multiple communication channels such as through their custom AppArmor app, SMS, email, a desktop-notification and more.
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