Small
Business Solutions
Dow Shoes
Roanoke
Retailer
The Business
Dow Shoes, a five-employee store in a small strip mall in Roanoke, sells mens and
womens shoes off-the-rack.The Players
Dallas Jarrell, owner, who bought the store five years ago. Local police, through the Star
City Business Watch program.
The Problem
A shoe store like Jarrells, with all its inventory on display, is particularly
susceptible to shoplifting. And the stores location in a small strip mall
made late-night security an issue.
The Background
Jarrell hasnt had major problems with shoplifting, but every loss eats into the
bottom line. "And once somebody has shoplifted, you cant do anything about it.
Its very hard to make an arrest," he says. An employee has to see a customer
conceal merchandise and then wait until the thief has left the store before intervening.
"The best thing for me was to reduce the opportunity for shoplifting," he says.
Jarrells store has security cameras operating during store hours as a deterrent
to theft. But employees often had no experience or training in preventing shoplifting or
detecting credit card and check fraud, he says. And while the store has never been robbed,
employees locking up the shop late at night were understandably nervous about security.
The Solution
Jarrell sought help from the citys own theft-prevention experts the Roanoke
City Police Department. Last fall the department began a program called the Star City
Business Watch, a theft prevention program to help businesses. At Jarrells request,
police came to the store and did an on-site assessment of his security prevention. They
recommended changes in store layout to make it easier for employees to monitor
customers movements and to keep merchandise away from the front entrance, where
thieves could easily grab it and run.
The police also trained Jarrells employees. "They recommended we greet all
of our customers, make eye contact and let them know that were aware that
theyre in the store," Jarrell says. They also taught employees to give as
detailed a description of a suspect as possible to police, and they gave the store a
measuring tape to place by the door to gauge a suspects height.
Police gave tips on identifying bad checks and preventing the use of stolen credit
cards. Such fraud often works because employees arent paying attention, says Officer
Brian Lawrence. He told Jarrells employees to take their time, inspect the check or
credit card and check the persons identification. "If someone complains, let
them know this is to protect them," he says.
Jarrells store got the training in late January. Its too soon to tell
whether it has reduced incidents of theft, but the shop owner says employees feel better
prepared. "Anybody feels more secure the more they know about how to handle a
situation," he says.
Roanoke police Sgt. Butch Steahly says about 40 businesses in a variety of industries
are taking part in the program. Officers have done assessments for companies like Roanoke
Gas, Babies R Us and several merchants in the citys Times Square shopping area.
Besides shoplifting and fraud-prevention training, police also show merchants ways to
avoid robbery, burglary and employee theft. The program also sends out a newsletter with
tips on crime prevention, and police use a "fax alert" system to warn merchants
if a particular kind of fraud is spreading through the region.
The program costs merchants nothing, which makes it especially appealing for small
businesses like Jarrells.
Steahly says Roanoke County runs a similar program and the two police departments share
information. He hopes it will spread to surrounding localities. "Its a good
program," he says, "and its free."
If you have a case study in problem-solving, contact Robert Burke at rburke@va-business.com.
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