Good service is a good deterrent.
Even then, it was estimated we lost at least 5 per cent of our stock. We rarely caught anyone in the act but often found the evidence afterwards.
When I was working in a homeware store 10 years ago, the objects were often larger and harder to sneak out but were still frequently stolen.
For the thieves, it must seem like such a harmless crime - who's going to notice one missing jumper, one stolen tool set?
Every theft has implications - in each job we were judged by how much stock our stores lost, which would impact our performance ratings and our (minuscule already) pay rises.
It must be hard for small-business owners who not only lose the stock they work so hard to provide, but are faced with the knowledge they've been targeted by someone from their own neighbourhood.
It's a small crime that can have big consequences for the victims.