The site under discussion is here: <http://www.citypaper.com/2003-10-01/feature.html>

Cheers,
RAH
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<http://www.citypaper.com/2003-10-01/pf/feature_pf.html>

October  1 - October  7, 2003 

Card Games 

Should Buyers Beware of How Supermarkets Use "Loyalty Cards" to Collect Personal Data? 

ByJoab Jackson 
Everyone gets worn down and submits, eventually. Even the most resistant. Even Rob 
Carlson, a privacy-minded person who hated the idea of having a supermarket savings 
card. 

Living in Catonsville at the time, Web programmer Carlson usually foraged at the Metro 
Food Market on Baltimore National Pike, which he says had the lowest prices. 
Occasionally, he stopped by the Giant Food on Wilkens Avenue, since it was closer to 
where he lived. He wasn't happy about it, though. Once Giant offered what seemed to 
Carlson to be the lowest prices in the area, but when it introduced its Bonus Card in 
September 2000 it appeared that most of the sales quickly became exclusive to 
cardholders. 

Did these people know what they were giving up by signing onto these programs? Carlson 
thought. 

"My job is to design and maintain databases, and I'm constantly amazed at the things 
that can be discovered when you have enough data and you know how to ask the right 
questions," Carlson says. "I think a lot of people who use a supermarket club card 
either don't realize what data is being collected about them, or don't care." 

It was during one of his trips of convenience, to purchase a decorative fountain, when 
Carlson caved. The cashier noted he could save $15 if he used a Giant card. It would 
take only a minute to fill in the application with a name, address, and phone number. 
Can't argue with a $15 discount. 

And so Carlson slid into the fold, as do many of us. 

Still, does anybody actually want to carry around these cards? Some 80 percent of 
supermarket chains nationwide have card programs, plowing millions of dollars into 
them. They goad us into applying for cards. But why? What are supermarkets getting out 
of these cards, exactly? 

Just as card sharks read the telltale behavioral tics of their opponents to win more 
of their money, so supermarkets want to watch their customers' purchasing habits 
closely to better know how to sell to them. "What we get out of it is insight into the 
needs of our customers, so we can provide them better service," explains Frank 
Gallagher, a director of marketing planning and analysis for Giant. The information 
Giant keeps is basic stuff: the customer's name, address, and phone number (if he or 
she elects to submit it), along with a list of all the items he or she purchased with 
that card. In return, shoppers are rewarded with lower prices on certain items. 

But, if anything, the controversy of who is playing who has just begun. Privacy 
advocates worry about the data being collected and how it will be applied, and 
consumer watchdogs grumble about whether or not the cards actually save shoppers 
money. And coming down the road in a few years is a new technology--product-tracking 
tags--that will make shopping cards look like the ragged tricks of a small-town con 
artist. 

How did we end up carrying around a stack of shopper cards just to get some good 
deals? It's our own fault, say retail industry observers. We're shopping sluts, always 
looking for a quick fix, hastily plucking whatever item is cheapest from the shelf, 
from whatever store is nearest. 

Within the supermarket industry, these plastic rectangles are known as "loyalty 
cards," a term that amuses John Stanton, a professor of marketing at Philadelphia's 
St. Joseph's University and co-author of a book on product marketing titled Success 
Leaves Clues . Many consumers carry around thick stacks of the cards, he points out: 
"It's like if I said to my wife, 'I'll be loyal to you and four other women.'" 

On a sunny afternoon last month, I accosted about a dozen shoppers in the parking lots 
of three shopper-card-carrying local supermarkets. "Why do you shop here?" I asked. In 
almost every instance, I got the same response: convenience. "It was on the way home 
from work," said one patron outside the Charles Village Safeway, as he loaded parcels 
into the trunk of his car. Not one of the participants said that a loyalty card gave 
him or her the slightest motivation to go out of his or her way to shop at a specific 
store. 

Fifty or so years ago, grocery-store customers were a more predictable lot, says Ron 
Swift, a vice president of strategic customer relations for Teradata, a division of 
NCR, formerly National Cash Register Corp. Customers mostly shopped at their 
neighborhood store and bought the same basic items each time out. The grocer would 
have a pretty good idea of what would be in the register at the end of the day and 
what would need to be replaced on the shelves. 

Those days are gone. People got smarter. Hopping in their cars, they shopped around, 
compared prices, used coupons. So, like a spurned lover who turns to a private dick to 
learn more about a beloved's philandering ways, the supermarket chains turned to 
technology, hoping to find out more about what shoppers buy, and to understand why 
they buy it. 

While the local grocery market is stable, these companies feel competitive pressures 
from elsewhere, says Jeffrey Metzger, publisher of Food World , the Mid-Atlantic's 
regional supermarket trade journal. In the past five years or so 
nonsupermarkets--mostly Wal-Mart and drug-store chains like Rite Aid and CVS--have 
increasingly taken in more local grocery dollars. In an increasingly competitive 
landscape, a store's profits are hard won: A supermarket may make 3 cents on every 
dollar of merchandise it sells, Metzger says. 

This is where Teradata comes in. This Dayton, Ohio-based company sells data-mining 
systems, computer systems that can hold and analyze vast amounts of data. Ron Swift 
flies around the country selling supermarket companies on the idea that such powerful 
systems can easily characterize the purchasing habits of individual shoppers. Most of 
the companies buy into the idea, Swift says, and such a claim seems credible. In 2002 
alone, Teradata sold about $1.1 billion of data warehouses across the retail sector, 
according to the company's public filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. 

Stores have always known what they've sold, at least after a tally of the day's sales. 
And they have usually had at least a vague idea of what their customers want. Strong 
sales of Puppy Chow indicate that lots of dog lovers live nearby. But what data mining 
promises is "to know the customer's lifestyle and what they prefer," Swift says. 
Through sifting the data it collects, Teradata has found, for instance, that shoppers 
who buy a lot of baby supplies, such as diapers, tend to buy a lot of film for their 
cameras, too. Teradata's systems scour a market's records for such affinities, seeking 
strong bankable connections that supermarkets can utilize. Putting the steak sauce 
next to the steaks, so to speak. 

St. Petersburg, Fla.-based Catalina Marketing is another company that markets customer 
data-collection systems to grocery stores. Catalina installs systems at cash registers 
that spit out coupons with register receipts. By knowing who a shopper is through his 
or her use of a loyalty card, the company claims it can deliver a coupon tailored to 
that customer. 

If you don't know Catalina, chances are Catalina knows you. The company works with 
about 18,000 supermarkets nationwide (its Web site lists Giant, Safeway, Food Lion, 
and CVS as customers, among others), keeping a database of 100,000 households. Their 
shopping records stretch back "at least one year" in order to track long-term buying 
habits, says Trish Brynjolfsson, who is a Catalina vice president of retailer 
marketing. Brynjolfsson would not say how long Catalina keeps the records beyond one 
year. The company charts not only what items you buy but also how often you come into 
the store and how many items you buy when you do. It knows if you like to switch 
brands. 

While some consumers are doggedly brand-loyal, "there are certain customers who are 
promotionally sensitive--they are looking for savings," Brynjolfsson says. In fact, 
she estimates that 80 percent of shoppers switch brands frequently. By using the kind 
of data Catalina collects--in part through loyalty cards--manufacturers of competing 
products can pitch the switch-hitters with instant coupons for their own products. 
Turn over the back of a Catalina-generated receipt and you may very well find a coupon 
for a product you have thought of trying, from a secret admirer of your wandering 
ways. 

Companies like Catalina and Teradata use this data to spot trends and insist they have 
little use for individual information. Brynjolfsson says that it would be 
difficult--though possible--to single out and review one person's buying history, but 
that the company has no business interest in doing such. 

If this all sounds a little manipulative, remember these companies swear that a 
well-executed loyalty-card program can be a win-win for both shopper and shop. And 
they may have a point. 

See, it is bad marketing that offends people, Teradata's Swift says. People get irked 
at useless coupons stuffing their mailboxes, at telemarketing sales pitches for 
products they can't use. But if you were approached with a deal that might actually be 
of interest, you wouldn't see that as marketing, he argues. You'd see that as helpful. 
It'd also be cheaper for the stores. 

"Say a baby-food manufacturer want to target a new product," Giant's Gallagher says. 
"Instead of dropping 4 million coupons in the area, it may want to target customers 
shopping in our stores and already buying their products. It's more efficient for the 
manufacturer and for us as well." 

So why shouldn't we make use of data-mining technology to make our lives more 
convenient, to have our local grocery anticipate our needs like an attentive lover? 

But Rob Carlson, for one, was not ready to let his shopping history go so easily. 
"It's only an ignorant or apathetic consumer who is willing to trade a very personal 
profile of their home life every week for 30 cents off a gallon of milk," Carlson 
says. He thought about what he could do to raise awareness of how these loyalty-card 
systems worked. When he posted his thoughts to an Internet mailing list, someone else 
off-handedly mentioned that there was no reason that the bar-code label on the back of 
each Giant card couldn't be replaced. Reading this, Carlson had the flash of 
inspiration to set up Rob's Giant Bonus Card Swap Meet (http://epistolary. 
org/rob/bonuscard). 

Carlson's site works like this: You enter your Giant card number on a form. It puts 
this number into a pool of numbers gathered from participants. Drawing from this pool, 
it displays for each visitor a bar-code replica of someone else's number, allowing the 
visitor to print it out and tape onto his or her own card. Should you actually take 
the time to do this and then visit the local Giant to use this card, you are, to 
Giant, someone else. If enough people do this, the argument goes, Giant's shopper 
profiles are rendered muddied and ultimately useless. 

Online since January 2001, the site has gotten thousands of hits. Carlson has no 
illusions that there will ever be enough of a groundswell to make any difference to 
Giant, however. "The intent of a card swap or a site like mine is less about affecting 
the supermarket and more about educating the consumer," Carlson says. 

Giant wouldn't comment on Carlson's site, though Catalina's Brynjolfsson says that 
tricks like using a fake name or swapping cards has no effect on its records. Such 
tricks only cause the customer him- or herself to be deprived of the "the full 
benefit" of the system, Brynjolfsson says. 

Carlson is not alone in his misgivings. Katherine Albrecht founded Consumers Against 
Supermarket Privacy Invasion and Numbering, or CASPIAN, to alert consumers of the 
potential dangers of supermarkets collecting extensive personal shopping histories 
through loyalty cards. "There are many, many things that nobody's got any business 
knowing about anybody else," the organization's Web Site ( www.nocards.org ) fumes. 

Although most stores say they don't sell the data to outside parties, they do 
frequently sell it to "partners" or companies that do business with the stores, 
CASPIAN claims. Giant does not sell its records to third parties, though it will mail 
coupons to Giant customers for third-party vendors, Gallagher says. While neither 
Safeway nor Super Fresh returned phone calls for this article, the privacy policies 
posted on Super Fresh and Safeway's Web sites look similar to Giant's.  And with the 
data so freely available, it could be put to the wrong uses--even be used against 
you--CASPIAN spokeswoman Liz McIntyre says. 

When asked for past cases of supermarkets and their "partners" misusing data, however, 
McIntyre comes up short. The Web site doesn't offer up many specific cases of abuse, 
either. One supermarket chain turned over all its purchasing records to three federal 
law-enforcement agencies in the days after Sept. 11, 2001--without even being asked to 
do so--according to a July 2002 Village Voice article, but neither the supermarket nor 
the federal agency involved were named. 

Still, privacy concerns are worth noting. Most retail stores seem to have little 
problem in turning your records over to law-enforcement officials or subpoena-wielding 
lawyers. Remember a few years ago when Kramerbooks in Washington refused to hand over 
to special prosecutor Kenneth Starr's minions a list of the books Monica Lewinsky 
purchased on the grounds that it was an invasion of her privacy? Don't expect your 
supermarket to do the same for you. 

Gallagher says that if presented with the proper subpoenas, Giant would disclose 
shopper records. It even states as much on the card application form. 

After hearing the sales pitches of Teradata and Catalina, it's surprising to realize 
that not every store uses loyalty cards. Metro Food Markets, which operates 9 stores 
around Baltimore, eschews use of the cards, as does its parent company, Shoppers Food 
Warehouse. (Soon all Metros will be known as Shoppers Food Warehouses.) The company 
looked at using such systems, says Rick Rodgers, a senior vice president of 
merchandising for Shoppers, but didn't see the benefit to them. "We offer the same 
deal to all our customers. It works for us, and we feel our customers appreciate it," 
he says. 

Although not primarily a vendor of groceries, Wal-Mart, widely considered in the 
industry to be the most efficiently run retail business, is another no-card store. 

Food World publisher Jeffrey Metzger divides the grocery business into two general 
categories. Stores like Metro and Wal-Mart fall into a category Metzger calls 
"everyday low price stores." Such stores draw customers by cutting the prices of all 
items as much as possible. For these stores, there is little value in using in savings 
cards. They compete on price alone. 

The second category is what Metzger calls the "high-low stores." These are stores like 
Giant, Super Fresh, and Safeway that heavily discount selected items, hoping to entice 
people into the store for those savings. The store makes up the difference on other 
items the customer is likely to buy once inside. Consumers Against Supermarket Privacy 
Invasion and Numbering accuses such stores of jacking up their prices and offering 
items for cardholder-only sales at what would normally be the non-sale price, giving 
customers the warm, but false, feeling of saving money. 

So are savings cards a ruse? Do no-card everyday low price joints really offer lower 
prices every day? On the rainy night of Friday, Sept. 12, I visited four Baltimore 
supermarkets to compare some prices. I visited the Charles Village Safeway, the 
Rotunda Giant, the Super Fresh in Hampden, and the Metro Food in South Baltimore. I 
compared the prices of 36 items ranging from taco shells to Hamburger Helper. I picked 
eight items from each store that were on sale, and four more staple items. 

Admittedly, this study was unscientific, but this is what I found: Metro seems to be 
the cheapest, but just barely. If I were to buy all of the items on my list at Metro, 
it would cost me $66.52. But at Giant, using its Bonus Card, the total would nearly be 
the same, at $67.19. These items would cost a card-carrying Super Fresh member $72.71 
and a Safeway loyalist $76.80. 

Keep in mind, this is a sample from sale items picked more or less at random. Since 
there's only a $10 spread between the least expensive and most expensive store, it 
could be entirely possible that with another 36 items Safeway could have come out 
ahead. 

Beyond raw price comparisons, however, other factors stood out. Each store had its 
share of good deals, as well as its share of high-priced items. (Giant charged $3.79 
for a 15-ounce box of Cheerios, while the other markets had the cereal on sale for 
around $2 a box.) Overall, one store's patrons don't seem to get more overcharged than 
any other store's patrons. But no one store's loyal customer will come out that much 
ahead, either. 

But contrary to CASPIAN's contention, cardholders do enjoy good savings from time to 
time. With your Giant card, you could have scored a 100-ounce container of Tide liquid 
detergent for $4.99 on Sept. 12, while other markets in town--including no-card 
Metro--charged $7.79. But as CASPIAN contends, those club-card-driven savings the 
markets are proud to trumpet are equivalent to regular sales at stores with no cards. 
You may have a Super Savings Card, but it isn't a Super Duper Savings Card. You're 
probably not saving more than you would be in no-card stores. 

One last aspect leaps out: Defiance costs. If you're not using a card at a place that 
wants you to use them, you'll get screwed. Sans cards, my groceries that night would 
have cost $82.55 at Super Fresh, $86.28 at Safeway, and $76.77 at Giant. CASPIAN 
encourages consumers not to use cards when shopping as a way to send a message to the 
markets. Some message. Sending that message to Safeway would have cost you 
$9.48--payable directly to Safeway itself. 

So what is going on here, assuming that these stores offer groceries at more or less 
the same price? No-card stores like Metro and Mars Super Markets try to duke it out on 
price alone, hoping Wal-Mart doesn't come in and crush them. Meanwhile, the high-low 
stores offer similar savings but want to learn a bit more about you in return, like 
what you and people like you tend to buy. So the next time you come in for one item, 
they may better know what other items you might just throw another in the basket that 
you weren't consciously planning on purchasing. Especially items with high profit 
margins. 

In theory, anyway. The dirty little secret of data mining is that stores don't 
actually use these data mining systems very much. In many cases, chains install the 
systems at considerable expense (prices start at $500,000 to install Catalina's 
products in a small grocery chain's stores). Yet, after they are installed, the data 
they reap usually isn't analyzed, Professor Stanton says. Many chains have the old 
penny-pinching mentality. So they may invest in a data-collection system but not in 
the software and training needed to get full use of the resulting data. 

Food World 's Metzger agrees that the grocery stores in the Mid-Atlantic region don't 
fully use the collected data. Shoppers Food Warehouse's Rodgers says that part of the 
reason Metro doesn't use shopping cards is that it doesn't see a clear value in having 
all that data. 

Something else is needed to complete the puzzle. Enter the next technology that will 
be pitched to help supermarkets survive in their hypercompetitive, loyalty-starved 
world: tracking tags. 

The tags don't look like much. You can hardly see them, in fact--they are about the 
size of a head of a pin. They are called radio frequency identification tags, or RFID 
tags. If you don't know what they are today, you will in five years. They are widely 
expected to take the place of bar codes, and they also could be used to keep track of 
customers more closely than even the most wildly optimistic loyalty-card pitchman 
could dream. 

The future of this technology may spring from Columbia. There, a technology 
engineering company called Matrics has developed tags, antennas, and readers it hopes 
will be adopted by grocery stores and other retail outlets. It is but one small 
50-person company among a sea of similar manufacturers getting ready to ramp up sales 
of these tags. Many belong to an industry body called the Auto-ID Center. 

A windowless room in Matrics' offices is set up for demonstrations. It resembles a 
mock store. On one side of the room are shelves of typical consumer items: some DVDs, 
a small rack of shirts, some coffee mugs, books, cans of coffee. Each of these items 
bears a small, nearly unnoticeable RFID tag. 

Joe White, Matrics' senior director of application engineering, shows me a tag, and 
that is exactly what it looks like: a tag with sticky adhesive on the back, one you 
could stick on a package of just about anything. The back peels off to reveal a tiny 
metal chip, .012 inches thick, with little silver threads (its antennas) stemming from 
it. 

The chips are passive. In other words, they have no power source, such as a battery. 
Instead, a transmitter sends out a radio wave of a certain frequency, which 
reverberates with the tags. Each tag holds a unique serial number that is read by the 
RFID antenna. 

White turns on a computer in the corner of the room and launches some software that 
scans everything in the room through antennas built into the wall. The software shows 
a virtual representation of the "store," showing where each and every item is located. 

Despite--or perhaps because of--their size, RFID tags could revolutionize the retail 
industry. Customers would like these tags mostly because, if they were affixed to 
products, those products would no longer have to be taken out of the cart to be paid 
for. A cashier (or an automated checkout machine) could just wave a wand over a cart 
full of items and spit out a grand total within a few seconds. Retailers would like 
them even more (which is why they are all but an inevitability, RFID manufacturers 
reason with fiscal optimism). A store can put readers throughout the shopping area and 
keep tabs on each and every item on its shelves. If a store were running out of one 
item, the manager would know it sooner and be able to restock it faster; supermarket 
chains could spot trends more quickly as well. RFID tags could also make shoplifting 
pretty much impossible: If an item is tagged, a manager will know if it is leaving the 
store without being paid for. 

Industry analysts predict that RFID tags may become widespread on consumer shelves by 
2007 or so. Naturally, RFID tags have consumer advocacy groups spooked. The week of 
Sept. 15, CASPIAN staged a protest outside Chicago's McCormick Place Convention 
Center, where an RFID trade show was taking place, with companies such as Gillette and 
Procter and Gamble showing off how they could tag their products with the devices. 

Privacy advocates have called these RFID tags spy chips. While helpful inside the 
store, the potential problem is that these tags could be used outside the store, after 
the sale. Each tag is individually numbered and, in conjunction with the kind of 
records a loyalty-card system compiles, could theoretically be tracked back to the 
person who bought a particular item. 

CASPIAN's McIntyre paints a picture of a consumer-friendly Orwellian nightmare in an 
RFID world. For instance, she postulates, it would be possible, if not probable, for 
some fiendish corporation or government agency to collect a list of every item you 
own, using the tag numbers of the items you purchased. Then it could track you down, 
merely by scanning the landscape for those tag numbers. With such tags sprinkled about 
your person, a retail store could identify you the moment you enter the front door, 
identifying you from previous purchases you're wearing or carrying. "Immediately you 
can be tracked," McIntyre says. "They will know where you're going and how long you 
linger. How much comparison shopping you do." 

Earlier this year, the Auto-ID Center, recognizing a growing backlash against the 
technology, set forth specifications for ways that the tags could be turned off at the 
checkout counter, not unlike the way anti-shoplifting devices are neutralized--it's 
called a killtag function. McIntyre doubts companies would go for this, however. After 
all, there are plenty of good reasons for enticing customers to leave RFID tags 
active. An active tag could be used to identify products still under warranty, for 
instance. 

Kevin Ashton, executive director of the Auto-ID Center, pooh-pooh's CASPIAN's 
dystopian vision. First of all, he notes, it's highly doubtful retailers would ever 
voluntarily give away any information about who bought their products to other 
businesses: "Retailers are very unlikely to share this kind of information with their 
competition," Ashton says. Secondly, there are very real physical limits to how far 
away these tags can be identified. Tags without their own power supplies--which is to 
say most tags currently proposed--can only be read from a few feet away at most. 
Everyday barriers like water and metal block the signals. "While the technology is 
likely to improve over time, there are some fundamental limits that make things like 
reading RFID from outer space seem unlikely," Ashton says. 

Lastly, and most importantly for Ashton, the problem with this all-seeing RFID 
scenario "is that most customers would hate it, so it wouldn't be very effective," he 
says. 

Or maybe they just won't care. 

Outside the Charles Village Safeway, a woman pulls her plastic bags of groceries from 
her cart. "Doesn't it disturb you that the supermarkets are keeping records of what 
you buy?" I ask. 

"It doesn't bother me, " she says, shrugging. "It's only food." 

-- 
-----------------
R. A. Hettinga <mailto: [EMAIL PROTECTED]>
The Internet Bearer Underwriting Corporation <http://www.ibuc.com/>
44 Farquhar Street, Boston, MA 02131 USA
"... however it may deserve respect for its usefulness and antiquity,
[predicting the end of the world] has not been found agreeable to
experience." -- Edward Gibbon, 'Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire'

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