Retail is operating in real time. ICA retailers across Sweden have adopted an occupancy monitoring solution built on reliable people counting sensors and live dashboards. With 21 stores now equipped, managers see instant in-store occupancy, align staffing to retail footfall analytics, and keep shopper experience smooth during peaks.
This post breaks down how chain operators standardize rollouts, why full-coverage sensor placement matters, and what results stores can expect in the first weeks.
Manual clickers and ad-hoc counts break as soon as traffic surges. A chain-grade system uses ceiling-mounted visitor counting sensors at every entry and exit, streams data into a single source of truth, and applies business rules for capacity, alarms, and staffing targets. Managers and associates see the same reality in one dashboard, in real time.
Glossary — Occupancy vs. Footfall:Chain leaders typically start with a pilot group of stores with diverse layouts (Maxi, Kvantum, Supermarket). Once the operational playbook is proven, the installation scales. Each new store follows the same pattern: survey, sensor plan, quick install after hours, calibration, and go-live with a shared template in the CountMatters dashboard.
Accuracy comes from coverage. To generate trustworthy occupancy, stores place sensors at all public entries/exits, staff doors, elevators, and any back-of-house routes that intersect customer areas. CountMatters validates sensor health and drift automatically and flags anomalies for quick checks.
Early wins show up fast: queues shorten, lane openings happen earlier, and replenishment moves off peak. Stores shift from guessing to acting on trusted retail footfall analytics. Regional leaders finally compare location patterns apples-to-apples and schedule proactively for known surges.
Some stores publish a simple entrance widget with a green/amber/red state, while others keep it internal. Both are supported. Traffic lights can trigger automatically when occupancy crosses a limit, protecting safety standards without slowing checkout.
CountMatters processes aggregated counts only. No faces, no biometric identifiers, no tracking of individuals. The system is designed to be GDPR-conscious by default, with data minimization, short retention for raw streams, and strict role-based access.
Sensors: ceiling-mounted people counting sensors at all entries/exits and staff doors. Connectivity: secure network path to the CountMatters platform. Dashboards: role-based access for store, region, HQ. Alerts: real-time notifications with simple rules the teams understand.
With full coverage and correct mounting height, chain-grade 3D sensors deliver high accuracy suitable for staffing and safety decisions.
Yes. The solution works on anonymized, aggregate occupancy and visitor flow metrics. No personal data is stored.
Budgets vary by store layout and scale. Most chains justify the investment through queue reduction, better labor alignment, and improved conversion rather than unit prices of a people counting sensor.
Pilots stand up quickly. Multi-store phases follow a repeatable kit and installation plan.
Live occupancy is now a standard operational control. ICA’s adoption shows how fast chains can move from manual estimates to consistent, trustworthy data. With an occupancy monitoring solution built on proven sensors and a simple playbook, managers act sooner, shoppers queue less, and stores trade better.
CountMatters — Chain deployment playbooks (Retail), 2025.
Xovis — People counting sensor technology overview, 2024.