Gift cards are still the preferred gift to receive. In fact, gift cards sales are set to generate $160 billion in 2018 alone. You can take advantage of this number by using your gift card program to advertise your business. Gift cards grab your customer’s attention and keep it, the perfect combination in advertising.
You can use gift cards to advertise to more than just your current customers, too. Let’s discuss a couple great ways you can use your gift card to boost sales and awareness of your business.
Source: How to Use Gift Cards to Advertise Your Business | Plastic Resource
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Attention #retailers: The rumors of your demise have been greatly exaggerated.https://t.co/dtiiq3hThG#SMB #Retail #Stores #shopping #fashion pic.twitter.com/tF1uGDQsc1
— CompleteDataSystems (@CDSpos) August 16, 2018
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Help build customer loyalty with an improved customer experience. #Retail #Stores #POS https://t.co/7HZomI7nJQ
— CompleteDataSystems (@CDSpos) October 17, 2017
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How to Master the Omnichannel Experience for Gen Z #retail #stores https://t.co/WElscVtuMz
— CompleteDataSystems (@CDSpos) September 13, 2017
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according to the Small Business Association, and that figure could likely rise.
Why? Technology has much to do with the small retailer’s ability to level the selling field, but other surfacing forces, including those influenced by age, are providing the velocity.
With July being Independent Retailer Month, the time is ripe to explore how small independents are reclaiming their status as a major competitive force, and as crucial components of a thriving community. Following are four ways the little local guy is emerging as a giant in retail.
1: Hyper-Local Power
Social media has yielded a nation of sharers, and they’re accustomed to immediate gratification. They also have high expectations of being heard and understood — but not just online. Increasingly, they want the support of their digital community to extend to the physical community, and this includes commerce.
Small shops, particularly those operated by long-time residents, serve as living-and-knowing communities. They connect with the local population on trends and nearby happenings — a relevant feature among younger shoppers who know the owner and feel invested in his success. None of this is new, except that today the shopper likely follows the merchant on Facebook and promotes him socially.
However, to manage an edge over giants like Amazon, corner shops have to answer to the need of immediacy, meaning fast delivery. More than 40% of consumers (41%) want “hyper-local” delivery, with control over how, when and where their products ship, according to the report “State of Shipping in Commerce” by the fulfillment software firm Temando. Of those shoppers, 38% said they’ll pay for it — but just 24% of retailers offer it.
Fortunately, investors are responding to the demand for hyper-local delivery. Venture capitalists have upped their funding in supply chain and logistics startups more than tenfold in three years, to $2.8 billion from $266 million in 2013, reports “The New Delivery Reality: Achieving High Performance in the Post and Parcel Industry,” by Accenture.
2: Internet Democracy
One way to accommodate the demand for hyper-local delivery is by selling one’s products via Amazon (Amazon shipments for independent merchants doubled in 2016 to 2 billion). Similarly, Etsy, Bonanza, eBay and other platforms, combined with easier and more affordable transaction-processing technologies, enable small merchants to sell their goods as part of the long-tail economy.
The loyalty research firm COLLOQUY coined a term for the emergence of small retailers via digital marketplaces: MomPopolies. These are mom-and-pop shops that have the engagement power to compete with major competitors, yet maintain a local edge. Mix in the element of social media and we are seeing more mom-and-pop social shopping communities — digital marketplaces that combine independent wares from around the world with shopper feedback.
The power of social communities can build empires. A jeweler in New Mexico can compete with Nordstrom in Seattle (assuming delivery is overnight). Or a maker of Bohemian headbands and accessories can make $80,000 a month on Etsy, as was the case for the shop Three Birds Nestbefore its owner, a mother of three, spun it off on its own.
3. Digital Natives
They may have cut their teeth on smartphones, but most of the members of Generation Z prefer the taste of physicality when shopping, research shows.
Nearly seven in 10 members of Gen Z (67%) shop in brick-and-mortar stores most of the time, with another 31% shopping in-store sometimes, according to a survey by IBM and the National Retail Federation. Defined as those born from the mid-1990s to the mid-2000s, Gen Zers could have significant influence on which of those physical merchants survive. The population counts nearly 70 million spenders in the United States — 2.5 billion worldwide.
What they want in a retailer may be easier for little local guys to capture: authenticity. Being digital natives with lifetimes of online exposure, members of this generation are highly sensitive to sharing personal information, and they are more demanding of transparency and trust. Quality also is critical; 66% of the IBM/National Retail Federation respondents said quality and availability are the most important factors when choosing a store.
4. Digital Money
Independent currencies, the offspring of Bitcoin, are launching with specific markets and missions in mind, notably to support local vendors. Enter Colu, which specializes in generating localized digital currencies earmarked for spending with (and empowering) local merchants.
A recent story out of London details how Colu launched a regional currency in the U.K., specifically to support a local community: “Colu’s digital wallet application supports buying local, offering an easy and convenient way to pay instantly from a smartphone while empowering local businesses,” the story states.
Blockchain currencies such as Colu’s are digital equivalents of cash, making it simpler for shoppers and merchants to transact. Colu specifically provides participating merchants with digital toolboxes, including dashboards, to help them better compete against major chains. And true, while this service is in the U.K., not the United States, the concept is adaptable anywhere.
The rise of small retailers won’t be so great as to upend the power of major merchants, but they are likely causing bigger players to pay attention and recognize why shoppers are spending their money with smaller David, not the Department Store Goliath. In the meantime, technology and consumer preferences are making Independent Retailer Month a more important part of our calendars.
Source: 4 Indisputable Signs Little Local Retail Is Becoming A Goliath
The biggest competitor on the retail horizon is more likely to be called David than Big Department Store, and he’s got a slingshot full of technology to help him stand his ground.
As major brands from Macy’s to Foot Locker wrestle with competition from Amazon, small independent merchants are gaining a foothold on the retail landscape. More than half (54%) of U.S. sales are generated by small businesses, "Among the top 10 [US #retailers], all but Target generated sales growth in 2017." #Retail #stores https://t.co/yNE8IxalVX
— CompleteDataSystems (@CDSpos) July 14, 2017
Source by CompleteDataSystems
Which #tags do #retailers use to search for business tools for their #stores? #Retail ? #PointOfSale ? We want to know your opinion!
— CompleteDataSystems (@CDSpos) June 28, 2017
Source by CompleteDataSystems
On the very surface, branding is thought of as marking your products with an icon or signature. However, creating an effective brand identity goes well beyond a logo. It’s about crafting how consumers view your company and what messages you are sending to them. Branding is especially important for helping small businesses create an identity in the local marketplace. Branding creates familiarity and recognition with consumers and helps set expectations. Follow these steps to create an effective strategy for your business:
1. Define a mission statement
Defining your mission statement is important because it will be the driving motivator behind each action you and your staff take. The mission statement is like a promise to your customers. It spells out what you will be providing them and what your ultimate goal is. Here are some examples of effective mission statements to give you an idea of what to aim for:
“Spreading the Power of Optimism,” Life is Good®
“To be the World’s Greatest Kids’ Brand,” Toys “R” Us®
“We help you take care of you,” Massage Envy®
Your mission statement is your company’s purpose. Why did you start your company? How are you helping, changing, or impacting those around you? Use these questions as guidelines to create a succinct statement that provides a clear goal for you, and a clear promise to your customers.
2. Live out your mission
Now that you have your mission statement, think of how you will live out that purpose through your business. What specific actions can you take to demonstrate follow through and commitment to your customers and your staff? For example, if your mission involves customer service, a money-back guarantee and a fully-staffed store would help enforce your mission. If you are offering the most up-to-date product selection, offer a weekly newsletter and frequent social media updates showcasing new inventory.
As a business owner or manager, it’s easy to get caught up in specific situations and day to day interactions. Keep your mission in mind when making business decisions, whether daily customer interactions or long-term planning.
3. Involve your staff
Involving employees in the company mission statement is crucial. Make sure everyone knows, understands, and agrees with your company’s purpose. It’s often helpful to create a set of core values to support your mission. These values are what will shape your company’s culture. Stick to no more than five values. Ask your employees to regularly reflect on how they do or do not embody those values through their work. As the business manager, also look for these core values when hiring to determine whether someone will be a good fit for your business.
4. Make it Visual
Now that you have your mission and your core values, and your entire staff is on board, it’s time to share this purpose with your customers. The visual aspects of branding such as logo, color schemes, and typography are what most people think of when the word branding comes to mind. However, starting with the mission, values, and purpose first helps create a more unified outcome.
The first step in visual branding is creating your logo. Or, if you already have one, making sure it is in line with our newly defined mission. Think about your core audience and how your can best convey your mission to them. The idea should be simple and clean so it can be just as easily applied on a billboard, business card, t-shirt, and on your website. Likewise, try to limit colors to no more than two or three. This will save on printing costs and will be easier to replicate on many surfaces.
When choosing colors, make sure to select once that reflect your core values. For example, Life is Good® has a mission of spreading optimism. Their main logo color is yellow, which psychologically is the happiest color. If you’re looking to convey trust or honesty, you might want to use blue. Green helps convey nature and harmony. Just because a color happens to be your favorite, doesn’t mean it is the best fit for telling your mission.
Once you have your logo, select a few complimentary colors to use as your dedicated color scheme for interior and exterior design, advertisements, decorating, packaging, etc. Also, select a few designated fonts so that you stay consistent. Consistency will help you become more instantly recognizable to shoppers and help ingrain your brand purpose and personality.
Branding doesn’t have to be overcomplicated. At the end of the day, it’s about consistency. Pick a company promise you can live up to and a logo that can last. Good intentions and follow through will go a long way in connecting with your customers and building repeat business.
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