April 24, 2024

Attention Shopper: Stores Are Tracking Your Cell

But when Nordstrom posted a sign telling customers it was tracking them, shoppers were unnerved.

“We did hear some complaints,” said Tara Darrow, a spokeswoman for the store. Nordstrom ended the experiment in May, she said, in part because of the comments.

Nordstrom’s experiment is part of a movement by retailers to gather data about in-store shoppers’ behavior and moods, using video surveillance and signals from their cellphones and apps to learn information as varied as their sex, how many minutes they spend in the candy aisle and how long they look at merchandise before buying it.

All sorts of retailers — including national chains, like Family Dollar, Cabela’s and Mothercare, a British company, and specialty stores like Benetton and Warby Parker — are testing these technologies and using them to decide on matters like changing store layouts and offering customized coupons.

But while consumers seem to have no problem with cookies, profiles and other online tools that let e-commerce sites know who they are and how they shop, some bristle at the physical version, at a time when government surveillance — of telephone calls, Internet activity and Postal Service deliveries — is front and center because of the leaks by Edward J. Snowden.

“Way over the line,” one consumer posted to Facebook in response to a local news story about Nordstrom’s efforts at some of its stores. Nordstrom says the counts were made anonymous. Technology specialists, though, say the tracking is worrisome.

“The idea that you’re being stalked in a store is, I think, a bit creepy, as opposed to, it’s only a cookie — they don’t really know who I am,” said Robert Plant, a computer information systems professor at the University of Miami School of Business Administration, noting that consumers can rarely control or have access to this data.

Some consumers wonder how the information is used.

“The creepy thing isn’t the privacy violation, it’s how much they can infer,” said Bradley Voytek, a neuroscientist who had stopped in at Philz Coffee in Berkeley, Calif. Philz uses technology from Euclid Analytics, of Palo Alto, Calif., the company that worked on the Nordstrom experiment, to measure the signals between a smartphone and a Wi-Fi antenna to count how many people walk by a store and how many enter.

Still, physical retailers argue that they are doing nothing more than what is routinely done online.

“Brick-and-mortar stores have been disadvantaged compared with online retailers, which get people’s digital crumbs,” said Guido Jouret, the head of Cisco’s emerging technologies group, which supplies tracking cameras to stores. Why, Mr. Jouret asked, should physical stores not “be able to tell if someone who didn’t buy was put off by prices, or was just coming in from the cold?” The companies that provide this technology offer a wide range of services.

One, RetailNext, uses video footage to study how shoppers navigate, determining, say, that men spend only one minute in the coat department, which may help a store streamline its men’s outerwear layout. It also differentiates men from women, and children from adults.

RetailNext, based in San Jose, Calif., adds data from shoppers’ smartphones to deduce even more specific patterns. If a shopper’s phone is set to look for Wi-Fi networks, a store that offers Wi-Fi can pinpoint where the shopper is in the store, within a 10-foot radius, even if the shopper does not connect to the network, said Tim Callan, RetailNext’s chief marketing officer.

The store can also recognize returning shoppers, because mobile devices send unique identification codes when they search for networks. That means stores can now tell how repeat customers behave and the average time between visits.

RetailNext also uses data to map customers’ paths; perhaps the shopper is 70 percent likely to go right immediately, or 14 percent likely to linger at a display, Mr. Callan said.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/07/15/business/attention-shopper-stores-are-tracking-your-cell.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

DealBook: Talbots Attracts a Private Equity Suitor

Talbots, the struggling women’s retailer with a stuffy image, has fallen out of favor with shoppers. But it looks attractive to private equity.

Sycamore Partners, a private equity firm, disclosed Monday that it held a 9.9 percent stake in Talbots. In a securities filing, Sycamore said it believed Talbots stock was undervalued and expected to discuss with management the company’s strategy and operations.

Shares of Talbots got pummeled in June, dropping nearly 40 percent after the chain, which is bases in Hingham, Mass., announced poor sales figures and plans to close about one-fifth of its roughly 550 stores. Known for its conservative tweeds and twin sets, Talbots has lost appeal with more fashion-forward shoppers.

Investors snapped up Talbots stock on Monday. In midday trading, shares rose about 50 cents, or 15 percent, to $4 on heavy volume.

Sycamore’s stake in Talbots could result in the firm’s eventual acquisition of the company, say several private equity deal makers. Its investment mirrors that of a recent play for BJ’s Wholesale Club. In the case of BJ’s, the private equity firm Leonard Green Partners first took a 9.3 percent stake in the company last year before acquiring it with CVC Capital Partners in June for $2.8 billion.

Another retailer, Family Dollar, has also seen private investors buy up its shares in the hopes of an eventual buyout. In February, Family Dollar rejected a takeover offer from Trian, the fund run by the financier Nelson Peltz, after it took a large stake in the company. William A. Ackman’s Pershing Square has also acquired a stake of just under 10 percent.

Sycamore, a new firm focused on retail and consumer companies, is looking to get in on the game. Based in New York, Sycamore was started this year by Stefan Kaluzny, a former partner at the private equity firm Golden Gate Capital. Mr. Kaluzny worked on a number of prominent retail deals at Golden Gate, including the firm’s acquisition last year of the jewelry chain Zales.

Can Sycamore come up with the cash to take Talbots private? The firm’s 9.9 percent stake cost it about $22 million. A buyout of Talbot’s, which has a market value of about $265 million, would require considerably more cash than that. A recent article in Buyouts magazine said that Sycamore recently did a first close at $300 million and was targeting a $750 million and $1 billion fund.

A Sycamore spokesman declined to comment.

Given the company’s depressed value and the fact that Sycamore has effectively put Talbots in play, a number of other private equity firms could be logical buyers of the company. Sun Capital Partners, for example, is known for buying distressed retailers and owns Limited Stores. Advent International bought Charlotte Russe.

Mr. Kaluzny appears to have sizable ambitions, if for no other reason than because of Sycamore’s location. According to Monday’s securities filing, the firm is located at 9 West 57th Street, one of Manhattan’s most prestigious and expensive business addresses. The firm’s neighbors in the building include a number of the world’s largest private equity firms, including Kohlberg Kravis Roberts Company, Apollo Global Management and Silver Lake Partners.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=46459f5a5e19f6392718f09a2bd5b4b9