Retail in High Definition: Monitoring Customer Assistance through Video Analytics

37 Pages Posted: 22 Aug 2015 Last revised: 11 Feb 2016

See all articles by Andres Musalem

Andres Musalem

Universidad de Chile

Marcelo Olivares

University of Chile; University of Chile - Engineering Department

Ariel Schilkrut

SCOPIX

Date Written: February 10, 2016

Abstract

Abstract Staffing decisions typically account for a large portion of a retailer's operational costs. The effectiveness of these decisions has often been analyzed by relating staffing levels to revenues. However, such approach does not explicitly consider the mechanisms by which the staff can contribute to generate revenues, such as customer assistance. This motivates the development of a fast, efficient, high-frequency method to measure customer assistance in real time. The method relies on the use of short videos that track only a portion of a customer's shopping path. The recorded videos may not track all the relevant information to identify a customer-employee interaction, i.e. they might be censored. Accordingly, we develop a survival model to analyze these data, defining unbiased estimates of customer assistance. This methodology also gives insights into how staffing decisions translate into different levels of customer assistance under different congestion scenarios. For example, when the store is congested, increasing the staff from one to four employees can increase the fraction of customers receiving assistance from 38% to 45%. Furthermore, these assistance rate measures can in turn be used to assess the economic impact of assisting customers in terms of conversion or basket size. This introduces important estimation challenges related to the endogeneity of customer assistance (e.g., if the customers that are more likely to purchase are also more likely to seek assistance) and the measurement error in customer assistance rates. We address both issues using an instrumental variables approach that relies on variations on service capacity as a driver of exogenous variance in customer assistance. In particular, we find that raising the assistance rate from 50% to 60% (a one standard deviation increase from the average) increases conversion by about 5 percentage points, corresponding to a 18.5% increase in transaction volume. Finally, we show that the approach developed in this work is useful to support store staffing decisions.

Keywords: empirical OM, Service Operations, Marketing/OM interface, Retail Planning, OM Practice, hazard models, staffing decisions

JEL Classification: C01, C13, C18, C24, C25, C26, C44, C81, J24, L81, M12, M54

Suggested Citation

Musalem, Andres and Olivares, Marcelo and Schilkrut, Ariel, Retail in High Definition: Monitoring Customer Assistance through Video Analytics (February 10, 2016). Columbia Business School Research Paper No. 15-73, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2648334 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2648334

Andres Musalem

Universidad de Chile ( email )

Beauchef 851
Santiago
Chile

HOME PAGE: http://www.dii.uchile.cl/~amusalem

Marcelo Olivares (Contact Author)

University of Chile ( email )

Pío Nono Nº1, Providencia
Santiago, R. Metropolitana 7520421
Chile

University of Chile - Engineering Department ( email )

Republica 701 Santiago
Chile

Ariel Schilkrut

SCOPIX ( email )

1350 Bayshore Hwy
Ste 665
Burlingame, CA 94010
United States

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