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Customer story

Six months on the shop floor at EasyHours Brighton.

EasyHours is an independent convenience store in Brighton. For the past six months it has run QuantumEye on the cameras it already had. We asked store manager Ali Serdar what changed.

BrightonIndependent convenience store6-month deployment
Ali Serdar, Store Manager at EasyHours Brighton
“QuantumEye has flagged suspicious activity we would have completely missed.”
ASAli SerdarStore Manager, EasyHours Brighton
What changed

A second pair of eyes that never looks away.

On a busy convenience floor, one or two people are running tills, facing up shelves and serving customers at once. Nobody can watch every aisle on a wall of monitors at the same time.

QuantumEye runs on the store's existing cameras and watches continuously. It only speaks up when something looks wrong, a concealment, an unusual movement at the till, or a face on the store's watchlist, flagging the moment to staff to review. Every alert is for a person to judge; the system never acts on its own.

The point is not to replace the people on the floor. It is to make sure the moments they would have missed, because they were serving a customer or restocking a shelf, do not go unseen.

See it in your store

Want this watching your floor?

A 30-day pilot, on the cameras you already have, run against your own store. 20 minutes to scope it, online.