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Shoppers tracked as they go wild in the aisles

A system of motion-tracking cameras and smartphone-locators monitors shoppers as they move around a store, giving insights to managers on customer behaviour
Watching your habits forming
Watching your habits forming
(Image: Chris Ratcliffe/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

ON YOUR last trip to the supermarket, where did you walk, what did you look at, and which products did you ultimately buy? , a start-up based in Madrid, Spain, wants to know.

Using movement sensors placed around a store, Proximus tracks where individual shoppers go. By combining this data with purchase records, managers can get insights into how to organise their stores to make the most of their customers鈥 habits.

Online, many firms rely on web-analytics to learn about customer browsing and buying behaviour, says Marco Doncel Gabald贸n, co-founder of Proximus. But in the physical world, decisions must be based on much patchier information. 鈥淲e think that approach is wrong,鈥 Gabald贸n says. 鈥淵ou can know the sales, but you don鈥檛 know how many people pass near a product, or the conversion rate of a marketing campaign.鈥

Proximus presented its approach at the Techstars Demo Day in London last week. A handful of low-power sensors placed on the ceiling and shelves and linked by Bluetooth detect any movement up to 50 metres away. Meanwhile, other devices locate shoppers by the ping of their smartphones searching for Wi-Fi. The start-up says they can tell where each customer is to within 1.5 metres at any given moment.

聯The 鈥榩ing鈥 of customers鈥 smartphones searching for Wi-Fi can be used to pinpoint their location聰

This data offers insights into what a store could be doing better. For example, if people tend not to spend time in a given aisle, that can explain why those products are selling poorly. Or if they hover in front of a row of shelves but don鈥檛 buy anything, then perhaps the prices or marketing campaign need to change.

For the last two months, two European supermarket chains have been trying the Proximus technology in their stores, and the start-up is aiming to hit more locations this year.

Tracking customers as they shop . Informing shoppers that they will be tracked might help, says Alfonso Perez, co-founder of Shopperception, a shopper-tracking firm based in Bedford, New York. But he also thinks such technology may be the inevitable next step in a world where we鈥檙e already monitored by banks, social networks and online retailers.

鈥淭he information that鈥檚 being captured by companies like Proximus is not much more intrusive than things being tracked today that we take for granted,鈥 he says.

Topics: Economics