Tag: internal theft
Rite Aid’s Loss Prevention Strategy Yields Data-Driven Results
EDITOR'S NOTE: Robert "Bob" Oberosler is group vice president of loss prevention for Rite Aid, one of the nation's leading drug store chains with...
Growth, Progress, and Reinvention: Asset Protection at Canadian Retailer Mark’s
Mark's is a retail chain that has succeeded in rebranding itself, amazingly, without alienating its original core customer base. It has achieved an impressive...
U.S. Security: A Suite of Services
U.S. Security Associates Inc, Retail Loss Prevention Services Group provides a “Suite of Services” to the retail community. Visit Booth 605 to learn more.
Leveraging DVR Camera System Analytics Throughout the Organization
When Jen Richard was tasked with building a case for DVR camera system installations in Canadian retailer West 49 stores in 2010, she took...
Rethinking Loss Prevention and Shrink Management
The pace of change in the retail industry has accelerated dramatically over the past few years. The move to online shopping, emergence of mobile...
Inspiring Integrity through Asset Protection
Roslyn Jaffe opened the first dressbarn in Stamford, Connecticut, in 1962 with the intent of serving the newly evolving generation of working women. Building...
The Mobile Point of Sale Marches on in Retail
In 2013, nearly 66 percent of US smartphone owners used their devices to help them shop, and 80 percent of smartphone owners said they...
Winning the Super Bowl of Retail Alarm System Conversions
Headquartered in Camp Hill, Pennsylvania, Rite Aid is the third-largest drugstore chain in the United States. It operates nearly 4,600 stores in 31 states...
Loss Prevention Strategies at Canadas Largest Food Distributor
Dean Henrico is senior vice president of loss prevention for Loblaw Companies Limited where he is responsible for loss prevention strategies across the enterprise....
Asteya and the Attitude of Gratitude: Building a Strong Employee Awareness Program
lululemon's LP philosophy is founded in the roots of Yoga, in the Sanskrit word “Asteya,” which translates from Sanskrit to “non-stealing.”