All Time Toys
How Retailer All Time Toys Survived Natural Disaster with Retail Pro
“Retail Pro is easily customizable, which, in a business like ours is crucial. We customized the user interface to include fields for the exact data we need to sell online – things like name, subname, item, weight, dimensions, UPC, and at least three photos which we get from our wholesalers.”
– Jason Barnes, owner All Time Toys
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Unlike your retail strategy or your promotions, natural disasters come unscheduled and the full brunt of their impact is never quite in line with the forecast. In addition, the threat of cyberterrorists holding your retail data hostage – with a minimum ransom value of millions – is a reality in retail today.
Thus, disaster preparedness is an absolute necessity for every business to mitigate risk and secure their retail data.
This is the retail case study of the retail store All Time Toys:
- How it was built up from a stand at the flea market to a bustling brick-and-mortar and online operation
- How it was impacted by the flash flood that destroyed much of life and commerce in Ellicott City, Maryland
- How owner Jason Barnes is rebuilding his business in the aftermath
Before the Flood
Jason Barnes – a true comic book aficionado at heart – started with All Time Toys over 10 years ago, when it was just a flea market operation full of hope and big superhero dreams. Through determination, perseverance, and a lot of hard work, he and the All Time Toys then-owners built the business up, moving into a brick & mortar store in Ellicott City, Maryland – one of the cities in Howard County, which in 2015 was the 3rd wealthiest county in the US.
In 2011, the company invested in the Retail Pro retail management platform for its POS and back office ERP functionality.
“Retail Pro was the perfect fit for our needs and I like the software much more than Micros or what we used in the military, which is basically the software Walmart uses,” Barnes explained. “We use Retail Pro to keep track of our 60 thousand inventory items, product and gift card sales, and critical KPIs.”
When asked what he likes about Retail Pro, Barnes said, “Retail Pro is easily customizable, which, in a business like ours is crucial. Our shelves have Voltron sitting next to Luke Skywalker, sitting next to Rapunzel and all kinds of action figures, 3D statues, Marvel superheroes…. If it’s very cool, very unique or very vintage, we sell it. Some of our product is very old though – like 1980s video games – and, for example, they might not have UPCs. So we need a software that allows us to determine what data we enter. We customized the user interface to include fields for the exact data we need to sell online – things like name, subname, item, weight, dimensions, UPC, and at least three photos which we get from our wholesalers.”
All Time Toys uses a Retail Pro-Retail Dimensions integration that syncs data from Retail Pro directly to their website and eBay account, giving them omnichannel data connectivity. “The greatest asset we have in our business is the ability to pull data from the Retail Pro Point of Sale for our website and eBay,” said Barnes, “And the Retail Pro-Retail Dimensions integration automatically does about 90% of the data work needed to upload products to these market places.”
In June 2016, Barnes used his family nest egg to buy out the toy store he had come to love. He planned to invigorate the business in three years, adding product and expanding to multiple locations.
Disaster Strikes
The very next month, however, All Time Toys and all of Ellicott City were devastated by a deadly 1-in-1000-year flash flood.
“It was a perfectly normal, sunny day. A good sales day,” Barnes recounts. “The worst thing up to that point was all the people playing Pokémon Go!”
And then the storm clouds rolled in.
Ellicott City was hit with over 6 inches of rain in 3 hours, with some places seeing over 8.22 inches of rain, according to the National Weather Service.
During a break in the weather, Barnes sent his employee home, and soon after, he closed up shop and headed for home himself, an hour’s drive during good weather.
But he decided to turn back and check on his inventory in the shop’s basement – and with this providential decision, he unknowingly positioned himself at the right time and place in history to lead the rescue of a young woman trapped in her car in the middle of the dirty, furious torrent of floodwaters.
“It was very surreal. The sidewalk is made of brick and the water was just destroying it – I could feel the bricks hitting my legs under the water. Jonny reached out to me and the human chain just formed naturally to get me over to her, but we came up short – so I knew I would have to let go to get her out. I remember noise, things hitting my feet. 20 minutes later, the water started receding. That’s when you really started to see the destruction – the buildings were blown out, sidewalks broken, cars everywhere, sirens, people screaming. And then the smell of gas.”
When commended for his heroism, Barnes said simply, “I just think that’s the bare-line, minimal, decent thing you could do. I’ve always had high faith in humanity, that people will do the right thing when it’s presented.”
In the Aftermath
“The county allowed us into our stores for about 10 minutes. I was only able to get my server at that time. Two-thirds of my inventory and store displays were damaged by the flood. My whole section of inventory for eBay sales is destroyed.” Barnes tallies the loss to be about $30,000 in inventory.
Jason had just started working with his Retail Pro Business Partner, Complete Data Systems, when he bought the store. Prior to that, they had not been actively using the data they collected in Retail Pro – but they also had not taken steps to secure the data.
If his store computer would have been damaged, all of his data would have been lost in the flood, because the store had no data backups. Jason would have to reenter all of the thousands of his inventory items and his employee data, and collect all new customer data. All of his vendor history would have been lost, as well as all of the sales data he would have used to make projections.
Thankfully, his computer did not suffer damage and all of that data was preserved in the Retail Pro archive.
“Our first action item was to do a remote backup of that information so we could put that onto new computers, so he does not have to start at zero,” said Michael Armstrong, Sales Director at Complete Data Systems. “We are fortunate that his loss wasn’t completely catastrophic and we were able to go back to his database, save all of his data, and then reinstall that on new hardware.”
While the County was busily rebuilding the streets of Ellicott City, Barnes was working from home with his children, busily planning for his grand reopening – recovering data and upgrading his Retail Pro with Complete Data Systems, and preparing his inventory. On January 21, 2017, Barnes and all of the All Time Toys fans celebrated that grand reopening, complete with R2-D2 and a light saber for the ribbon cutting.
Online Sales
In addition, All Time Toys is rebuilding their website with Retail Dimensions.
Retail Dimensions built a website on X-cart for All Time Toys and integrated it to their new Retail Pro 9. With this integration, Barnes will have the ease of:
- Dynamically updating categories and product assignments
- Merchandising items for the web while keeping item quantities and prices current
- Automatically downloading orders and customers to Retail Pro
- Automatically updating orders on the site upon shipment
“We are excited to be part of Jason’s team in rebuilding All Time Toys! Retail Dimensions is helping him get his site back up so the integration to Retail Pro will be running again when his store reopens. And we are suspending all fees for him until he’s able to get back on his feet after all this. Jason is an amazing story of persistence, resilience and faith,” said Kurt Beeken, President of Retail Dimensions.
We Will Rebuild
Even with so much unforeseen loss in the first month of owning his business, Barnes is undeterred from his goal of reinvigorating the toy store, and the whole world is playing a part in it! In recognition of his heroism, Barnes was award the Governor’s Award for Excellence, Ellicott City Heroism Award, and the Birdland Hero Award from the Major League Baseball team the Baltimore Orioles, and he has been nominated for a Carnegie Heroism Award.
In addition, the rescue video went viral and people from all over the world are donating to a Go Fund Me set up for Barnes – enabling him to quickly reinvest in his business.
“Now that we’ve reopened and our shelves are getting well-stocked again, we hope to be in a position to open a second brick & mortar by the fall of 2017,” Barnes disclosed.
Move ‘Em Out: How to Sell What’s Not Selling
As we wrote this post we stopped every once in a while to sing the theme song from the TV show “Rawhide.” The retail tie-in pertains to the refrain, “Move ’em on, head ’em up; Head ’em up, move ’em on; Move ’em on, head ’em up… Rawhide!” That’s exactly what you do each time you take a markdown: Head ’em up and move ’em out. At least that’s what we hope you do. Consider the retailer who was convinced by a dubious financial counselor to invest $1000. The counselor promised that $1000 investment would yield $2,500 within 12 months, so the retailer handed over her hard earned cash Three months later the retailer called the financial counselor to see how her money was growing. The answer was disappointing: her investment was down to $815, but the counselor encouraged her not to be discouraged. Another three months passed and the retailer called again, this time her $1000 investment was down to $488. Six months later its value was just $104.00. Not exactly a happy ending. This scenario happens in retail stores all across the country each year, maybe even in yours. You might be that financial counselor if you’ve ever held on to merchandise far past its selling life, you’ve been there. Sometimes you hold on to product so long that it begins to fade, wear a little around the edges, and fall out of style. You might even have some of this merchandise on your sales floor right now. Here’s the thing: the fashion and seasonal items you carry have limited life cycles. You should never wait until shoppers turn up their noses and walk away from a display as the only hint that it’s time for a markdown. The basic items you need to stock every day can become shopworn and need to go too, even if it means reordering that same item. Just because you loved it when you bought it doesn’t mean that customers will too, and it doesn’t mean that it’s guaranteed to sell. We call buying things you personally you fall in love with the “halo effect,” which is dangerous to your bottom line. You need to make sure that your invested money works smarter and harder for you, supplying a return on your investment. Let’s look at the key areas you need to manage to move ’em out: Calculate your Turn. Inventory turnover, or turn, is a measure of the number of times inventory is sold within a period of time, usually a year. The easiest to way to determine your inventory turn figure is to simply divide your last year’s total retail sales by your year ending inventory at retail value. To achieve a better turn rate, you need to closely control your inventory. Be insistent about delivery dates, and implement a strong markdown program to clear out product that’s past its sell date. Tell vendors when you want to receive your orders. Before you place that order ask yourself when the product actually needs to be in the store, and then tell your vendors what you need. It’s foolish to take late-season deliveries if that can hurt you, and it’s just as foolish to receive goods – and have to pay for them – far in advance of your actual need time. So request delivery dates. You won’t always get your wish, but if you don’t ask, the vendor will always get theirs. It’s fabric, not wine. It doesn’t get better over time.To manage your inventory and return on investment (ROI), you need to know the age of every item on your sales floor and in your back room. When did it arrive? You don’t always have time to run to your computer or POS system to look it up. And let’s be honest, when was the last time you actually did that? Instead, adopt a system to mark each item with a “received date” code that allows you to instantly determine age without having to leave the sales floor to check a report. We like a simple bin ticket for this task. Bin tickets are stickers that you place on each shelf or fixture to indicate the item’s designated home. Bin tickets should include the information that’s important to you, including SKU number, maximum and minimum quantities, price, cost (in code shoppers can’t decipher), vendor, and date code. The date code tells you when the item was received so you’ll know at a glance which products are selling and which are not. Let’s say a customer asks for a particular item, so you lead the customer to the place it’s supposed to be. The bin ticket is there, but the shelf is empty. Or worse, the space has been filled in with another product. How long has this merchandise been out of stock? Is there more in the back room? How do you know? Here’s where our Dot System comes into play. You’ll need a supply of small red and green adhesive dots. A green dot on the bin ticket means there is more of this particular available product in the back room. A red dot on the bin ticket means there is no more in the back room. No dot on the bin ticket means there isn’t any more of this product in the back room and this item is not to be reordered. Train your associates to check the stock room each time they come across an empty shelf and a bin ticket with a green dot. This product is available and needs to be restocked ASAP. Know when to take a markdown. Markdowns are not your enemy; in fact it’s smart retailing to ditch the dogs. Stores do not close because they had to take markdowns. They close when product is not sold fast enough to create the cash flow needed to cover expenses. When taken on time, the first markdown is always the cheapest markdown. Clearing out merchandise before the price/value relationship is destroyed is critical. You should mark down items as soon as sales start to slow down. Let’s say you have an item that’s currently priced at $25.00 but it isn’t selling. If you mark that item down to $19.99, its value goes up in the customer’s mind. If markdowns are not taken in time it will take much larger discounts to create value. Just ask an apparel retailer who’s trying to sell prom dresses at full price in July. Keep this in mind: Markdowns allow you to maximize your invested dollars. When you get those dollars back you can reinvest into newer items that will yield higher margins and better inventory turn. One of your jobs is to be on the lookout for merchandise that’s past its prime, taking take markdowns as frequently as necessary to clear this merchandise. Sales on seasonal merchandise should start just before the season ends; waiting until after the season/holiday is over will severely hurt your return. Packing product way for next year isn’t a good idea either. Get the cash out of your investment and keep it working with new, fresh goods. Properly display markdown merchandise. When you run a sale, run a SALE. Display the product near the front of the store or in its normal home. You can also use your speed bump displays to house this merchandise during the sale. Highlight the displays with banners or signs created specifically for the sale. We’ve seen too many clearance areas that look like disaster zones; that’s no way to create value. Clearance items should be merchandised with the same care as regularly priced product. When running a clearance sale, display this product near the front of the store. After the sale move it to a small clearance area near the rear of the store so that shoppers have to pass through displays of new product to get to it. Clearly sign your clearance area so that shoppers will want to stop and check it out before heading to the cash wrap. “Hot Spot” and “One to the Right”. Every section of every fixture has what’s called a hot spot; it’s the part of the fixture that sells product the best. To find the hot spot in any fixture, draw an imaginary cross through the center of the fixture – the hot spot is at eye level (about 5 feet 4 inches) where the two lines intersect. Customers tend to stop in the center of a display to peruse the product, so this area is easily seen. Use it to display important product you don’t want shoppers to miss. Here’s an insider tip: Remember “Hot Spot and One to the Right.” Shoppers do a lot of things they don’t realize they do, like reaching for product with their right hand. This means that the position just to the right of the Hot Spot is also a strong display space. You can use this area to display new items or to energize product that’s still in its selling season but isn’t moving. It’s also a great place to house product that’s a tough sell. Display impulse items at the cashwrap. A lot more happens at the cash wrap besides just ringing the sale; it’s where impulse purchases live. Load your cash wrap with product customers just can’t pass up. Think of the add-on sales possibilities! If you have a wall behind your cash wrap, use it to create displays that keep customers thinking about product – it’s also the perfect place to introduce new products Cross-merchandising. Why just sell one item when you can sell two or three? Here’s where cross-merchandising come in handy. Display different products or categories together on the same fixture. Cross-merchandising helps shoppers easily visualize how the items will look or work together. This technique is always a safe bet for the speed bump displays at the front of the store. Merchandise Outposts. The next time you are at a department store take a look at the product that’s displayed in the main aisles. Chances are you’ll find tables of product that’s not in its traditional home on the sales floor. These clever displays are called Merchandise Outposts; their sole purpose is to encourage impulse purchases. They make shoppers stop and think, “I need that!” Merchandise Outposts will work on your sales floor, too. Maximize in-store signing. Signs act as silent salespeople, helping customers when no one is available to help. Women read signs for information; men rely on them to make decisions. And since 70 percent of purchase decisions are made in-store, your signs actually entice shoppers to buy. To be effective your signs must be three things:- Easy-to-read. Use at least a 30 point font so shoppers can see them even without their reading glasses. Use both upper and lower case letters, all caps are harder for older eyes to read. Most books, newspapers, and magazines use a serif font because this type is easier to read. Times New Roman, Palatino, Georgia, Courier, Bookman, and Garamond are popular serif fonts.
- Easy-to-understand. The offer or item description on the sign must be is perfectly clear. Use small, simple words so the sign is easy to scan.
- Professional. Print signs on your computer on a neutral colored paper. (Know what neon paper says to a shopper? It says, “This stuff sucks and we can’t give it away.”). Use proper sign holders, not tape, to display signs. And unless handwritten signing is part of your brand, don’t do it.
Mobile purchasing looks set for major growth in 2016.Source: Study: Mobile retail to grow as much as 68% in 2016 – Drug Store News
Running an online store is no small thing. First you have to construct a site. Then you have to invest in and manage your inventory, which is an expensive endeavor (see Amazon). By the time your site is finally up and running, you’re flat broke! And who has the extra money to hire a marketing firm to get their products out to the entire Internet? I know I don’t. I have, however, managed to find a few simple ways to showcase my store and close sales. Here are a few simple principles that will help you market your store to prospective clients without breaking the bank. Make the checkout process seamless There’s nothing more annoying than getting held up at the checkout. We’re not in 1996 anymore, when people limped around the Internet using dial-up service. If a YouTube video fails to load in 10 seconds, people are taking their eyeballs elsewhere. At a brick and mortar store, people will complain about slow service, but they’ll put up with it. In your eCommerce store, you’ve lost the sale. Unlike the local big box store that can invest money in extra cashiers to expedite checkout, you must make your checkout process seamless and simple with a few clicks. The easier it is to check out, the less likely customers are to abort their purchase. Quick checkouts = more cash in the bank. Here are a few tips to make your checkout simple in order to boost those online sales. Don’t require users to register for your site in order to check out. While contact information is helpful, research shows that customers leave their carts and move on when they have to register. Give them a guest checkout option. When shoppers do register, let them save their information. When they return to shop again, their checkout is much faster, which will bring them back in the future. Make the process visual by adding checkout phases. Break up the checkout into phases so that customers feel they are making progress. When the checkout is visual, customers understand that they are getting closer to being finished. Now, I realize you probably don’t have a developer on call to make this happen for you. Luckily, there are companies like Shopify (www.shopify.com) that offer one click plugin products to handle this for you. Make product recommendations at the checkout. Upsell, upsell, upsell! Amazon’s product recommendation engine is absolutely brilliant. Just prior to me paying, Amazon splashes a host of closely related products up on the screen. The result? I end up shelling out more money than I initially planned. Right before your customers pay, upsell them on related products. Give them deals they won’t get anywhere else. Convince them that they have to have the warranty or the cleaning solution or whatever it is that you want them to buy. They are already in a buying mindset, which gives you a psychological advantage. Give products away for free If you’ve got a limited marketing budget you should seriously consider influencer marketing. Influencers are incredibly powerful because they serve as online referrals. If you can connect with the right ones, you can drives tons of motivated traffic to your website. Personally, I love using Instagram for influencer outreach because most people are willing to promote your brand simply for giving them the product for free. I use a simple process to find influencers: 1) Head over to http://websta.me/search and type in some keywords related to your product. 2) The platform will return the latest content with that hashtag. 3) Sift through the posts (this takes time) to find ones with high engagement. 4) Those highly engaged posts generally belong to someone who has a large, engaged following. 5) Most influencers have a contact email in their bio. If they don’t, you can send them a direct message. Simply let them know you love their content and ask them if they’re interested in checking out your product, free of charge. This can be a lot of work on your end but I promise you, it’s well worth it. Take advantage of online advertisements Social media is a gateway to closing sales and promoting your business at an extremely affordable price. The beautiful thing is that it targets consumers suited for your store on its own. You don’t have to do anything. Just purchase the ads and let social media work for you. Many social media sites offer ad budgeting options, meaning you can set a daily budget (some start as low as $1), and then when your budget for the day is spent, your ad quits running. It’s a great way to stay within your means while still reaching out to potential customers online. Facebook ads are a tremendously effective way to find customers at an extremely low cost. I don’t want to hear the argument “my customers aren’t on Facebook.” Mark Zuckerberg posted a status a few weeks ago that announced Facebook had reached a new milestone. For the first time in the history of the network, 1 billion users were logged in at the same time. 1 billion users. Your audience is on Facebook, trust me. Build a community of loyal fans Invest your time in building a community of fans. If you own a business, you need to have a social media page, and you MUST work to build a following. People who like your page and share your page are doing your legwork for you, so it’s literally a free marketing tool where others work for you. Keep your social media up to date. Post upcoming sales, offer coupons, and promote new products on your page. Encourage your fans to share your information with others, and it will spread the word quickly about what you have to offer. Build email lists and run email marketing campaigns. There are tons of free email newsletter creators online that can help you design and email you fans. Create quality content Quality content on your page is one of the most important marketing techniques you can have. As in a brick and mortar store, your customers want to feel like they matter. Quality content that speaks directly to them, not down to them, creates that connection. Talk about what you believe in with regard to your products, and then tell customers why they need those products. If your content is just trying to hard sell customers, they’ll be just as turned off as they would with a pushy salesman in a store. Be creative, be genuine, and be yourself! Conclusion If ECommerce were easy, every joker and his mom would do it. It requires strategic thinking and careful execution. Small mistakes, like a cumbersome checkout process, can cost you serious cash. But with thoughtful implementation, you can create an ECommerce store that creates significant revenue for you.Source: 5 Easy Ways to Build Ecommerce Sales | Independent Retailer
Understanding your customer is key when it comes to offering service that meets and anticipates customer needs, cultivates loyalty, and stimulates repeat business. Retail Pro® provides native functionality that allows you to capture and analyze the exact information you need to understand your customers’ shopping habits, needs, and expectations across channels. Data collection with user-defined fields User-defined fields (UDF) in Retail Pro allow you to track a virtually unlimited number of data elements. UDF and auxiliary fields can be completely customized to ensure you capture the specific type of data you need to inform, for example, your merchandising or marketing strategies. Capture customer preferences like favorite colors, styles, and activities to personalize your marketing campaigns, or arm your sales associates with access to those details on a mobile device so they can make meaningful recommendations. For example, a cosmetics retailer might track a customer’s favorite brand, shade of eye shadow or lip tint, or their skin type based on their transaction history, and can send special offers for those products when they shop online or come into your stores during their birthday month. Data analysis with calculated field Calculated fields like total sales, total transactions, total units, and the total number of visits enable you to analyze your customers’ sales history and determine their lifetime value. Then, using that key criteria, build targeted customer lists to increase the effectiveness of your marketing across channels. For example, you can create segments to market to customers with total sales over $10,000 or every customer whose favorite hobby is fishing. Whatever your engagement strategy, Retail Pro gives you the tools you need to gather and analyze the customer data that helps you drive effectiveness and build greater loyalty and customer satisfaction. Retail Pro News: Learn the latest Retail Pro news and industry updates first.Source: How to use customer data to understand your shoppers better | Retail Pro Blog
By Robert Harrow Retailers know there is a major shift currently underway in the payment industry. More and more consumers are beginning to leave their credit cards at home, in favor of keeping digital versions saved in their smartphones. Through the use of technologies such as Apple Pay, Android Pay, and Samsung Pay, individuals can carry out everyday transactions without ever reaching for their wallets. Outside of being popular and trendy, these “mobile wallets” come with their own set of positives and negatives. There are a few major considerations business owners should take into account before deciding whether or not to support this new payment platform. Improved security over conventional card payments. Mobile wallets take advantage of technologies that provide more secure transactions. Individuals today are more security conscious than ever – the massive campaigns behind the EMV shift are evidence of this trend. Businesses that support technologies such as Apple Pay and Android Pay are on the forefront of card-payment security, or namely, tokenization. When your customers pay for a product or service using their phones, their financial information travels in an encrypted packet – a “token” – that is later decrypted by your software when you receive it. If a thief or fraudster were to somehow get their hands on your customer’s payment data, they will only have access to these tokens, which are useless without a decryption mechanism. Secure encryption features are just one reason consumers are switching to this new technology, and retailers who offer a mobile payment platform find that it frequently serves as an incentive for some customers to keep coming back their store. Shorter Customer Wait Times. Mobile payments are fast, especially when compared to a more conventional payment method. The scene in any rush hour New York Starbucks shop should be enough to convince anyone of the importance of cutting wait time. While those customers who pay for their morning cup of Joe with a card must hand their card to the attendant who then swipes the card through a reader, the customers utilizing mobile wallets just hold them up to the NFC reader and they’re done – fast and quick. Decreasing the time it takes to process each customer should be an attractive feature to any business with heavy foot traffic. Not only will businesses be available to service a larger volume of customers, but those customers will be generally happier due to lower wait times. In this way, mobile wallets can serve to increase customer satisfaction and retention. Mobile payment fraud. On the flip side of things, accepting mobile wallet payments may pose a risk for some merchants. With the surge in mobile wallet popularity, fraudsters are focusing their sights on exploiting this technology to attempt to trick business owners into accepting fraudulent transactions. Staying vigilant and monitoring the transactions that come through your store’s account will help deter fraud. Employee Training and Systems Management. As with the implementation of any new technology to your business, it is impossible to ignore the time devoted to employee training. Because mobile wallets are an emerging technology, few employees will be ready and trained in how to service customers who pay with this method. As a business owner, you will need to set aside time to fully train your staff and to ensure that you know the ins and outs of the system yourself. By adding to the complexity of your system and adding new card readers you are also increasing the number of possible points in your business that may need troubleshooting. Be certain you understand the hardware and software system components and make sure your tech support person is available for the system rollout. Costs of Upgrading. In order to accept mobile wallet payments, your business must have a contactless payment-capable point of sale terminal. Retailers who have recently upgraded their POS may recognize that EMV comes in two major varieties for in-store payments: “contact” transactions, in which a chip card is inserted, or “dipped,” into a POS terminal, and contactless payments, where an EMV card or smart phone is waved near to an EMV terminal. Many of the new POS terminals offer both features, and range in price from between $100 and $1,000 per terminal – actual costs will vary widely based on your store’s needs. Generally, the more functionality a new contactless point of sale terminal has, the more expensive it will be. If your business already accepts credit cards, contacting your merchant services provider is the first step you should take. Your provider should be able to offer you cost-efficient ways to upgrade your reader to support contactless payment-capable readers, as well as provide you with any additional cost estimates and educational resources. Mobile Wallets Are the Future for Consumers and Businesses. A 2015 report from Forrester Research estimates that by 2018, up to 20% of US smartphone owners will be using mobile wallets. With such a large segment of the population utilizing this new technology, many customers will come to expect retail stores to support this payment method. As consumers begin to leave their wallets and cards at home, the only way for some merchants to accommodate sales will be by accepting mobile payments. Forrester Research’s report also points to an added advantage inherent in mobile wallets: marketing campaigns. Working together with app developers, business owners can help drive more traffic to their locations by pushing notifications to smartphone users through coupons, or other forms of advertising.Read original article
Source: How To Avoid Hearing A Customer’s “No, I’m Just Looking” Ever AgainWere you ever picked by a teacher to come up in front of class when you weren’t prepared to speak?
It felt like hell, I bet.
There’s an area of your retail store potential customers will avoid; it is the first eight feet after your doors. Some call it the decompression zone, some call it the threshold area—it should be called The Hell Zone.
The Hell Zone because shoppers don’t want to go there. They might remember a past experience where an aggressive employee pounced on them wanting to shake their hand. Or they might remember another employee asking them a question, when all they wanted to do was get their bearings. They had to blurt out a No just to get rid of the pesky employee.
It’s hell because employees don’t want to go there either. They’ve asked a stranger in their most helpful way, Can I help you? and those darn shoppers always answer No! or No, I’m just looking! After weeks of this rejection, your employee gives up trying, says nothing, and retreats to the counter to text a friend.
Because shoppers answer these greetings over and over with a negative, employees feel dehumanized. That negativity and lack of connection also opens the door to rudeness. Customers turn their back and walk away; they talk on the phone at the register; they haggle over prices or make unrealistic demands.
It’s hell too because owners and managers see this happening time and time again but don’t know what to do to change it. Until now…
Use these steps to avoid, “No, I’m just looking.”
First, wait at least ten seconds and no more than fifteen to greet a shopper. This gives them time to settle. 15 seconds may sound like a really short amount of time, but it isn’t. Use a timer and walk through your store. In most cases you can reach the back of your store within 15 seconds. I think you’ll find your sweet spot will be around ten seconds.
By greeting your shoppers within 10-15 seconds, you achieve several goals: It trains employees to always have their eyes up to see who’s coming in; it makes them wait and not pounce, and it helps provide a welcoming atmosphere. And as a bonus, it also helps prevent shoplifting.
During those 15 seconds, grab a prop. This has to be something large enough to be noticed by a customer like a book, a box, or a sample. This creates the appearance that the employee is interrupting something else to notice the shopper, rather than swooping down on them like a hawk on a mouse.
Then with prop in hand and with at least ten seconds gone, start walking toward the customer at a 45-degree angle. This will allow you to give your greeting and then move past them without blocking them.
Greet them as you go by with Good morning. Feel free to look around, and I’ll be right back or simply say Good morning.
By not asking a question such as How are you? or Can I help you find anything? the customer is not obliged to have to respond at all, though many will with a simple thank you.
Most shoppers will appreciate having the time and space to look around. If they really need something, they’ll feel comfortable enough to stop the employee and ask them.
This retail sales training technique of greeting-with-a prop-puts the customer at ease, gives the employee a reason not to linger, and dissolves The Hell Zone.
Also see, 10 Non-Negotiables Customers Expect When Visiting A Retail Store
For Example
Let’s say you are an employee at an electronics store. As a person walks in, you pick up a Bose headphones box and head towards them within 15 seconds. Approaching the customer at a 45° angle, you move past them with your prop, pausing to meet their eyes and say, “Good morning, feel free to look around, and I’ll be right back.” If you do this correctly and with the right intent, the customer always says “Thank you.”
Skeptical? Try it right now and you’ll be surprised. If they don’t thank you, consider that you may have approached at about a 90° angle which blocks their path, or you might have lingered too long when you said the comment, or you didn’t look them in the eyes.
Now you don’t need to do this when you are slammed on a busy Saturday afternoon or during the holidays, but for those times when no one else is in the store, it is perfect.
It lets the shopper off the hook and let’s them relax, gain their bearings, and look at all you have to offer.
Remove the The Hell Zone by making your greeting more human, more timely, more engaging, and ultimately… your selling will be more profitable.
It’s 80 days until Christmas — and those holiday displays are starting to edge out Halloween merchandise on the shelves. Wait, Halloween hasn’t even happened yet, right? Be that as it may — yes, we are still more than three weeks away from Halloween — the smart money is on the 2015 Christmas shopping season being brighter than last year’s. According to the 2015 Holiday Purchase Intentions Survey from The NPD Group, consumers have a more positive outlook, and are looking to open up their wallets to family, friends and the needy. The mean spend for holiday shopping this year, according to NPD, is $619 — a 5 percent increase compared with what consumers said in 2014. “Consumers are ready to spend for the holidays, more so than in recent years,” said Marshal Cohen, chief industry analyst, The NPD Group, in a statement. “However, manufacturers and retailers need to pay close attention to what is driving the consumer mindset, and deliver product that anticipates inevitable shifts in their thinking over the course of the season. Positive consumer perceptions combined with holiday promotions, could drive early impulse purchases, but the market has to deliver enticing product that consumers want and need in order to build on that momentum and keep them spending.” Cohen makes a salient point: Retailers must be careful to offer promotions at the start of the season while not cannibalizing sales that might have come later. Many people browse early in the season and then wait until the last hours before the holiday to complete their shopping. Marketers face pulling off a tough balancing act of luring customers into the store in early November with bargains, and maintaining that enthusiasm profitably through the end of the year. Coupled that with the popular notion that there will be even better buys closer to Dec. 25 and the marketing department is in a quagmire: Damned if you discount too early, but double damned if they don’t and miss out on the increase in shopper traffic. And don’t kid yourself, multi-channel competition is up. Brick and mortars are not only facing challenges from other traditional storefronts, but also from e-commerce retailers. And vice versa. That was true in the past but the pace is quickening. Don’t have a mobile app? You’re missing a sizable shopper segment. Have an app that offers little value and that’s possibly worse than not having one at all. The mobile connection is important more than ever because a majority of consumers — almost two-thirds — said they will do pre-purchase research. Online research and consumer reviews are critical links for customers looking to stretch that $619 as far as possible. Don’t neglect cultivating honest reviews and including them on your site and make it easy to review a product or purchase through a mobile app. Consumers want quick, easy-to-access information, as well as real-life feedback on products from honest-to-goodness users rather than the stores selling them. In the end, all the preparation will result in a solid brand presence log after the holidays. As Cohen noted: “Just as the consumer mindset is one component to holiday success, the holiday season is one leg of the larger retail marathon – it’s not the finish line…Consumers are more complex, and marketers have more opportunities to reach them than ever before. Truly connecting with consumers requires interaction and omnipresence, emphasizing a complete experience that extends beyond channels, beyond traditional methods, and beyond the holiday season.”
Retail Pro News: Learn the latest Retail Pro news and industry updates first.Source: Get Prepped: Consumers To Spend More This Holiday | Retail Pro Blog
One of the nightmares any retail store manager endures is keeping tabs on inventory. Knowing instantly whether a particular item is in stock can mean the difference between a happy customer who at the very least will have the item shipped to her doorstep in a few days, and a shopper who will find it at a competitor — and may never visit again. Many manufacturers are using Internet of Things technology to keep tabs on products in the supply chain, and IoT technology can work similarly inside retail stores to streamline the inventory process. With RFID, products, or pallets of products, are tagged at the warehouse. Upon distribution to the retailer, and the stock is “checked in,” and in-store inventory issues can be tackled via a combination of IoT connectivity, including sensors, beacons and in-store GPS. Sensors Hardware and software can make the store shelf “smarter.” A solution made up of store shelf sensors, smart displays, digital price tags and high resolution cameras allows retailers to know what is on store shelves as well as in stock rooms. Those sets of data are linked, providing visibility from the product’s arrival to ultimate sale. Further, should a customer buy the last of a particular item, a notification can be transmitted to the stockroom. The items are either restocked on the showroom, or the supplier is notified the next shipment is needed. That is particularly helpful for retailers with a history of being out of stock, perhaps due to carrying on-trend items that can suddenly move rapidly or to seasonal sales swings. The greater visibility IoT provides can greatly assist in managing the inventory process, which can lead to greater inventory turns and more sales. Beacons Beacon technology is another B2C application that can help drive shoppers to those “smart” shelves. One advantage online stores have is the tremendous amount of customer information they can mine and analyze to provide more tailored and streamlined shopping experiences. Brick and mortars, through the use of beacons and other devices, are starting to leverage such data as well. Beacons can, for example, offer more targeted content onto smart displays within the stores (even at the shelf) or onto customers’ mobile devices. Coupons and exclusive events can be pushed to the consumers, and via such targeted content, retailers hope to increase retail sales. Inside a smartphone app, shoppers can define personal shopping preferences—for example, food preferences and allergies. Next time they enter a store, their phones will connect via Bluetooth to smart displays located underneath products on store shelves. In addition, cameras that upload digital content to a data center or to the “cloud” for later viewing, combined with beacons, offer a potent weapon to prevent internal theft (“shrinkage”) as well as shoplifting. But that one-two combo of cameras and beacons can also help retailers plan the flow of their stores in order to accommodate their guests and help move goods that otherwise could linger, resulting in lost revenue. In-store GPS This type of functionality typically is part of a smartphone app for a large retailer or a mall. Using a combination of Wi-Fi and GPS, the retailer knows shoppers’ locations, and can offer deals and promotions based on that data. By offering real-time product suggestions through a shopper’s personal mobile device, the technology lets brick and mortar retailers compete effectively against online merchants. The Macy’s flagship store in New York City has in-store GPS, as does American Eagle Outfitter. In-store GPS is able to target consumers and glean insights about how they choose to shop, providing answers to a tricky puzzle for retailers. Other technologies can also be used to establish direct communication with customers, such as QR codes and gamification. For example, a customer walks into a high-end boutique and sees a QR code that’s offering a 10% discount for participating in a game about fashion. She answers the questions and then receives a discount on her next purchase, or an invite to an exclusive event. Not only is it a way to incentivize sales, but it also fosters customer loyalty. IoT technology may sometimes seem like the fodder for science fiction novels. In reality, machine to machine learning is here and can provide valuable assistance to retailers in maintaining efficient business processes. In addition, the data gathered can help retailers provide more customized experiences for shoppers, encouraging them to return. And creating a happy, loyal customer base is a dream come true for retail store managers.
Retail Pro News: Learn the latest Retail Pro news and industry updates first.Source: Sensors, Beacons and GPS: The IoT Is Here | Retail Pro Blog