Best Buy combating theft with higher staffing levels in stores

A sign marks the location of a Best Buy store on August 30, 2022 in Chicago, Illinois. (Photo by Scott Olson/Getty Images)

A surge in retail theft across the U.S. over the past few years has led many businesses to take drastic measures to curb shoplifting in stores, but Best Buy has had success in minimizing shrink with a simple solution: More manpower.

Best Buy CEO Corrie Barry acknowledged the nationwide problem in a call with reporters last week, but said the electronics retailer has not experienced the significant loss competitors have thanks to its strategy of higher staffing levels, security, and full-service check-outs.

"In certain parts of the country in particular, there is a real issue around theft and organized crime," Barry said, according to CNN. "With that being said… we have not called out material impacts to our business as a result of shrink for at least the last two years.

"We tend to have more labor coverage in our stores because that interaction is a big part of our model," Barry explained. 

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"Whenever you walk in, hopefully you’re going to see a friendly face in a yellow shirt who has access to cameras all over the store," she said, adding, "We usually just have once entrances to our stores, so not multiple entrances to cover. We don’t really have self-checkout."

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The nation's largest retailers have been sounding the alarm over the rise in brazen retail theft, with Walmart, Target and others warning earlier this year that the situation is only getting worse.

In 2022, total shrink — the loss of inventory due to circumstances such as retail theft — cost retailers nearly $100 billion, David Johnston, vice president of asset protection and retail operations for the National Retail Federation (NRF), told FOX Business

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"Based on what we're hearing already from many of these CEOs and based on what we're experiencing daily in retailers across the nation… I do foresee us to have a much higher loss in 2023," Johnston said. 

But with more retailers facing staffing shortages and embracing self-checkouts while operating on lean crews, Best Buy's opposite approach may have merit.

"Having spent my entire adult life in retail at every level, the one thing that I understand clearly is that the greatest deterrent for any type of theft activity is effective customer service," Lowe's CEO Marvin Ellison said in September, according to Business Insider.

FOX Business' Daniella Genovese contributed to this report. Read more of this story from FOX Business