Tag: walmart asset protection policy
Defining and Measuring Total Retail Loss
Professionals in the retail universe agree that loss is a problem. What they have not agreed on in the past is what actually makes...
A.C. Moore Achieves Million-Dollar ROI with Cloud-Based POS Plugin from Genetec
A.C. Moore opened its first arts and crafts store in 1985 in Moorestown, NJ. Today, the national retailer sells an assortment of merchandise in...
Securing the Luxury Retail Market from Rodeo Drive to Madison Avenue (Protection 1)
All retailers are susceptible to losses due to theft and fraud, but maybe none as much as the luxury-branded retailer. Its high-priced, highly desirable...
When You Deserve It, You Deserve It
In the last sixty days, the LP industry had two senior executives announce their retirements. One was Karl Langhorst of Kroger. Jack Trlica and...
No Product Left Behind with Axis (Axis)
In order to fulfill its promise of same- or next-day delivery, home furnishings retailer RC Willey manages $500 million of inventory in warehouses and...
Painting Pictures Is Never Easy
Loss prevention and asset protection decision-makers need clearer pictures of the causes and dynamics of their crime and loss issues. Precise, cost-effective solutions addressing...
Largest LPRC Conference Concludes in Advance of Hurricane Matthew
Over 260 loss prevention professionals, solution providers, and retail manufacturers gathered at the University of Florida (UF) in Gainesville October 3–5 for the annual...
People On the Move: November-December 2016
Joshua Vote is now a District Manager of AP at Abercrombie & Fitch.
Charles Delgado, LPC has been named Regional VP of Store Operations for...
Predictive Data Analytics
In the 2015 US Retail Fraud Survey, retailers across the country identified analytics and monitoring as the number one area of need. With the...
Holiday Crooks Are Here; Get Ready Inside and Out
You’ve readied your technical systems, stocked up security supplies, gone over loss prevention protocols with staff, and tried to hire only honest seasonal workers. Now, it’s time for shoppers—and criminals—to start filling your stores.