Self-Checkout Security a Balancing Act
Like all fraud-prevention efforts, the security components of a self-service setup have to be balanced with customer service.
Putting control of checkout into the hands of the consumer is nightmarishly frightening for many retail executivesincluding that part where the consumers figure out how much money they are going to give the retailer. "Loss Prevention would love to have security gates and frisking" at the self-service terminals, said Dusty Lutz, the FastLane product manager for NCR Corp., who added that such requests are clearly not practical. "How much do you put into a system for security?"
Click here to read about some of the technological, legal and practical challenges facing self-service retail checkout systems.
Greg Buzek, president of the IHL Consulting Group, said the fraud deterred most by the self-service systems is not customer fraud, but rather one employee fraud technique called "sweethearting."
"Sweethearting is unfortunately quite common among regular cashiers who give their friends five-finger discounts by covering the UPC code of the expensive item as they pass by the scanner. Although the features of the self-checkout provide deterrents, they are designed more to eliminate the employee-aided theft rather than customer theft," Buzek said. "If a customer is going to steal something on their own, they will do it somewhere else in the store before they come to the self-checkout area with the camera, an employee watching them and a scale to monitor their purchases."
Buzek also makes an election-year observation: He notes that retail chains are very selectively rolling out self-service plans based on where they perceive the fraud risks to be high and low.
"All of the red states that went for Bush [in 2000]? Thats where self-service is most penetrated," he said. "The blue states that went for Gore is where its least penetrated." Why? Buzek said that companies expect less fraud in the more affluent and conservative areas than in the larger cities.
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