Display your stores with a plan. The list below is a combination - TopicsExpress



          

Display your stores with a plan. The list below is a combination of what Major Chain Brands use to set up their stores to design a profitable display of products. 1. Make windows shine. Many small retailers dont do window displays, letting customers simply look straight into the shop. Thats a mistake, says store design and display consultant Linda Cahan of Cahan & Co. in West Linn, Ore. Just like your eyes are the windows of your soul, store windows are the eyes of the store, she says. Each window should tell a story. To create an appealing display, use a single color theme to grab attention and communicate your stores image. Its also important to avoid clutter because in retailing, space equals luxury, Cahan says. If you cram items together in a window, theyll look cheap. Think of how Tiffany displays just a few items in the window, communicating that they are special. 2. Make an arresting first impression. When customers enter your store, an eye-catching display up front should make them slow down. Otherwise, they may hurry on through the store and buy little. Notice how Costco sets up large seasonal displays at its entrances, often with a product pulled out of its box -- a kitchen appliance or fresh plants -- that shoppers can stop to touch, smell or try. 3. Steer customers to the right. Retailers should design their stores to draw shoppers to the right side of the entryway. Studies have shown that most people naturally look first left, then right as they enter a store, says Brian Dyches, chief experience officer of retail branding firm Ikonic Tonic in Los Angeles. Shoppers usually then prefer to move right and walk counter-clockwise around the store. For instance, enter a Safeway grocery store in the chains upscale Marketplace format, and your eye is drawn to the floral department on the right. The bright colors and floral scents remind shoppers of happy times in their lives, Dyches says, both putting them in a good mood and encouraging them to move right and begin walking the store counter-clockwise At 136-year-old Hermann Furniture in Brenham, Texas, visitors enter a foyer dominated by a round table of seasonal merchandise. Shoppers must pause at the table and decide how to navigate around it. A wider aisle on the right encourages them to move around the table in that direction. 4. Lead them somewhere. Often, small retailers fail to put a compelling display at the end of an aisle, says store designer Cahan. They create an aisle that ends at nothing, either a back wall or a stockroom or the bathroom. Instead, Dyches says, retailers might use a long aisle to lead customers to a new department laid out perpendicular to other racks. 5. Have an angle. While its most efficient to lay out aisles parallel to the stores exterior walls, retailers can create more visual interest by placing them at an angle, Cahan says. Ideally, aisles could angle in from both sides to a central aisle, forming an arrow layout that ends in a back-wall display. But only take an angular approach if you can keep aisles wide enough for customers to navigate easily. 6. Create breaks. In studying shopping patterns with his clients, Dyches says he finds that up to 20 percent of the stores merchandise is skipped over. Thats because long, uninterrupted aisles dont get peoples attention. Low-Cost Ways to Improve Your Layout On a tight budget? Consider these tips to begin improving your layout. Ask key employees and your best customers to walk through the store and offer feedback, says Dick Outcalt, co-owner of Outcalt & Johnson, which offers a questionnaire designed to help pinpoint trouble spots. Another approach is to take photos of your store, then gather staff for an analysis. Look for affordable help to make the changes you decide on if store design and merchandising arent your forte. You might share the services and costs of a design professional with several nearby retailers, for instance, or hire a college student from a merchandising or marketing program who might work for minimum wage or just course credit, says Cahan. To make low-cost displays, collect cheap decorative items that can be repainted and reused to fit different themes and seasons. Such items include empty picture frames, old watering cans and wooden chairs that can serve as shelving. All of those can be picked up at yard sales or from closeout bins at craft stores, Cahan says. Dont consider it a finished job once youve made your changes. You need to change displays regularly to give customers a fresh experience every time they shop. Theres never an area where we dont change things nearly every day, says Jennifer Hermann, owner of Hermann Furniture. Thats fun, and makes customers want to buy.
Posted on: Thu, 24 Oct 2013 17:25:12 +0000

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