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The next VDTA/SDTA Convention & Show will be in |
Haul Out the Holly & Other Thoughts on December by Rich Kizer & Georganne Bender December is the BEST month to be a retailer. The store is dressed for the holidays and the shelves are brimming with wonderful product. Happy customers come in with lists, looking for the perfect gifts, then pick up a little something extra for themselves. Sales are brisk and that’s a good thing. We’re especially busy in December. One of our favorite things to do each holiday season is -- are your ready? -- shop. Yep, we hit the streets the week before Thanksgiving and never look back until early January. We stand in the shadows and just watch customers shop. For hours. And we are always intrigued by what they do in stores and what they tell us in exit interviews. The Medias are interested, too. In December, reporters come at us from all sides, asking about stores and shoppers and retailing in general. A few times each December we even take a reporter shopping with us -- trying to blend in, and keep the hidden camera hidden, is always a good time. We also look forward to the traditional and off-the-wall things retailers do to attract shoppers and keep them in the store longer. Every retailer has a trick or two up their sleeves. We’re sure that you do too, but if you haven’t quite tackled that list of things to do to spin your doors this holiday season, there’s still time: Step outside and consider your storefront. Stand just inside the front door. Another part of your store’s ambiance embrace is music. The right music can actually make customers stay in the store longer and spend more money while they’re there. Choose fun music with a good beat, especially when the store is busy. We like disco -- it’s the sound of money. Check your Decompression Zone. This is where shoppers refocus and collect themselves for the shopping ahead. They will miss anything you place in the Decompression Zone, so let it do its job and leave this area empty. Just beyond the Decompression Zone is where they begin shopping. Shopping Carts and Baskets. Place carts just past the Decompression Zone. Baskets should be near the carts, and also throughout the store, so they are within reach when a customer decides she needs one. Encourage associates to watch for customers carrying product, then get them a cart ASAP. Studies show that customers stop shopping when their hands are full. If your store doesn’t offer carts or baskets, then watch for customers carrying around product. They tend to stop shopping when their hands are full, so by all means take the product from them and set it aside at the cash wrap. Plan your Impulse Zones. Set your End Features to sell with product customers simply have to have: great new items, hot deals, and value buys. Try to display three items or less per end feature, and use Vertical Merchandising -- product displayed in vertical rows -- as your primary display technique. Vertical Merchandising exposes customers to a greater variety of merchandise at every eye level. When shoppers see more, they tend to buy more. Each of your Impulse Zone displays should be reset as least once a week, more often if your store is heavily shopped. This sounds like a lot of work, but it’s not: simply moving items from one Impulse Zone to another makes the product look brand new to shoppers. Cross-Merchandise everywhere you can. Highlight Gift Cards. Encourage Impulse Buying at the Cash Wrap. We wish the strong December sales lasted all year long, but they don’t -- you only have a limited amount of time to make your Golden Quarter golden. You have to take advantage of the gift-buying frenzy while you can, so take this checklist out to your sales floor and do a complete walk-thru. Note which areas to change, set your priorities and get to work. And if you need a pep talk, we’re just a telephone call away. Call at the right time and you just might end up on that hidden camera footage! Rich Kizer and Georganne Bender are nationally recognized experts on customer diversity, “messing with the media,” marketing and everything retail. They will present the 2008 keynote during the VDTA/SDTA Convention on Feb. 21. Attend the keynote and meet them in person. KIZER & BENDER have presented their “Retail Adventures in the REAL World™” keynotes and seminars to diverse audiences since 1989. In 2004, KIZER & BENDER were named “Two of Retailing’s Most Influential People.” KIZER & BENDER’s retail observations are widely featured in the Medias. Their book Champagne Strategies on a Beer Budget! has helped thousands of retailers improve their bottom line; their client list reads like a Who’s Who in American business; and their column, “Georganne & Rich on the Road” which appears in Craftrends Magazine, was honored with The American Society of Business Publications Award of Excellence (ASBPE) in 2004 and again in 2006. Contact Rich & Georganne at 1-888-215-1839 or via their Web site: www.KIZERandBENDER.com Reprinted from SQE Professional, December 2007 |