Secret Weapon in Mall Battle: Parking Apps

By JACLYN TROP
November 27, 2013

Phoebe Scott of Orange County, Calif., has a new routine before 
heading to the mall.

She checks the parking lots on her ParkMe smartphone app "so that I 
can see what I'm up against, or if I need to change my plans." If a 
lot is below 90 percent full, the trip is on. Her favorite, not far 
from her workplace, is a garage at the Santa Monica Place mall, where 
sensors and lights guide her to a specific open space.

"It's a daily battle," said Ms. Scott, 29, the founder of Laudville, 
a social technology start-up. "Anything to make it easier makes a 
really big difference."

The fight for a mall parking spot, long a necessary evil of Black 
Friday, is growing easier thanks to the proliferation of new 
technologies, from apps and sensors to color-coded lights and 
electronic boards.

It's one way that malls and shopping districts are trying to lure 
customers away from their computers, into the realm of their 
brick-and-mortar stores.

"What happens when there's no spots? People drive around and become 
frustrated," said Kathy Grannis, a spokeswoman for the National 
Retail Federation. "Who wants to start their shopping experience 
frustrated?"

ParkMe, which tracks more than 28,000 locations worldwide, has 
emerged as a mainstay app for mall customers navigating the nation's 
parking lots. With the app, they can find the closest and least 
expensive lots, as well as alternative garage entrances. The app's 
user base surged 97 percent in the past year, and it is adding 
hundreds of garages to its database.

...

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/11/28/business/secret-weapon-in-mall-battle-parking-apps.html


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