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1 Chapter 5 Visual Merchandising & Displays Faiza
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2 Retail Image? Significance of Retail Image Positioning and Retail Image Retail Image
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3 The Elements of a Retail Image
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4 In 3 Seconds… A shopper should be able to determine a store’s – –Name – –Line of trade – –Claim to fame – –Price position – –Personality
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5 Atmosphere The psychological feeling a customer gets when visiting a retailer – –Store retailer (brick and mortar format): atmosphere refers to store’s physical characteristics that project an image and draw customers – –Nonstore retailer: atmosphere refers to the physical characteristics of catalogs, vending machines, Web sites, social media etc.
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6 Visual Merchandising Proactive, integrated atmospherics approach to create a certain look, properly display products, stimulate shopping behavior, and enhance physical behavior
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7 What VM does? Enhances the Shopping experience Is a Communication Tool Supplements creation of right environment Helps customer make buying decisions
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8 The Elements of Atmosphere
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9 Exterior Planning Storefront (structural alternatives) Signage Marquee Store entrances Display windows Exterior building height Surrounding stores and area Parking facilities
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10 Store Entrances How many entrances are needed? What type of entrance is best? How should the walkway be designed? Does it create shoppers’ interest?
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11 General Interior Flooring Colors Lighting Scents Sounds Store fixtures Wall textures Temperature Aisle space Dressing facilities In-store transportation (elevator, escalator, stairs) Dead areas Personnel Merchandise Price levels Displays Technology Store cleanliness
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12 Allocation of Floor Space Selling space Merchandise space Personnel space Customer space
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13 Approaches for Determining Space Needs Model Stock Approach – –Determines floor space necessary to carry and display a proper merchandise assortment Sales-Productivity Ratio –Assigns floor space on the basis of sales or profit per foot
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14 Interior (Point-of-Purchase) Displays - Basis Assortment display Theme-setting display Ensemble display (cross merchandising) Rack / Case display Off – Shelf display – –Cut case / Dump bin – –Self supporting stacks / pallets
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15 Shop Displays Window displays (Exclusive windows, Open windows) Live Displays Marquee Displays Freestanding / Island Displays (Gondola setting) Counter displays Brand Corners End Cap / Power Aisle Displays Cascade / Waterfall Displays
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16 Making the Shopping Experience More Pleasant
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17 The Shopping Cart’s Role in an Enhanced Shopping Experience
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Direct Marketing replaced by online and social mediums 18
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19 Challenges Clicks vs. footfalls generated Transformation into buying from among the clicks Online Presence and Issues Online Store and Issues
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20 Online Store Considerations Advantages Unlimited space to present product assortments, displays, and information Can be customized to the individual customer Can be modified frequently Can promote cross- merchandising and impulse purchasing Enables a shopper to enter and exit an online store in a matter of minutes Disadvantages Can be irrelevant to masses Can be slow for less internet savvy shoppers Can be too complex Cannot display three- dimensional aspects of products well Requires constant updating Authenticity and Credibility issues More likely to be exited without purchase
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21 Advantages Cyber space No boundaries Wider spectrum of customers Easy Market penetration Strong Feedback system
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22 Characteristics Online Store Front Visual Density Online Merchandising Online Pricing
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23 Pitfalls of e-tailing No ambiance No emotional experience Intangible merchandise Security issues Impersonal Customer Service
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24 Retail MIS Point of Sale Technology Supply Chain Management Customer Relationship Management HRIS MIS (Exception reports, Interactive Reports, Ad-hoc Reports) Electronic Data Interchange facility (EDI) Concept of ERP systems
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Technology reformed / rejuvenated Retailing Processes 25
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