Vemco Group is proud to announce a major new enhancement to the VemTrack module: AI-powered Re-ID Technology - designed to give retailers, shopping centers, and property owners deeper insight into individual visitor behavior while remaining fully privacy-safe.
With this new feature, VemTrack moves beyond traditional people counting and occupancy monitoring by enabling connected visitor journey analysis across multiple zones and touchpoints.
For years, VemTrack has helped businesses understand how many people enter and move through their spaces. The introduction of Re-ID Technology now adds the ability to anonymously recognize movement patterns across different areas, creating a much clearer picture of how visitors actually engage with a physical environment.
By combining AI-driven analytics with existing sensor infrastructure, businesses can now access more advanced insights such as:
This allows businesses to make more informed operational, commercial, and layout decisions based on real visitor behavior — not assumptions.
VemTrack’s Re-ID Technology is designed with privacy and compliance in mind. The system assigns anonymous identifiers to visitors without using personal data or storing identifiable information.
This means businesses can benefit from advanced visitor analytics while maintaining full privacy compliance and customer trust.
One of the key advantages of the new feature is that it builds on existing VemTrack capabilities and sensor setups. Businesses can unlock richer behavioral insights without replacing their current infrastructure.
The enhanced platform enables organizations to:
As physical spaces continue to evolve, understanding visitor behavior has become more important than ever. With AI-powered Re-ID Technology, VemTrack helps businesses move beyond counting people and toward truly understanding behavior patterns inside their spaces.
The result is a smarter, more connected approach to visitor intelligence.
Want to see how AI-powered Re-ID Technology can help your business better understand visitor behavior?