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Paco Underhill wrote the influential book that every mall store designer reads. highlights from this influential and illuminating book that was written in 1999: All of which means that whatever's in the zone they cross before making that transition is pretty much lost on them. If there's a display of merchandise, they're not going to take it in. If there's a sign, they'll probably be moving too fast to absorb what it says. If the sales staff hits them with a hearty "Can I help you?" the answer's going to be "No, thanks". I guarantee it. Put a pile of flyers or a stack of shopping baskets just inside the door: Shoppers will barely see them, and will almost never pick them up. Move them ten feet in and the flyers and baskets will disappear. It's a law of nature - shoppers need a landing strip." The amount of money spent in a store is positively correlated with the amount of time spent. Keep 'em in the store longer and they'll spend more dough. Some insights dealing with the mechanics of shopping that bear on this include: - the "butt brush" effect - if aisles are too narrow or crowded, and shoppers have to bend over to reach merchandise, they are exposed to being brushed or touched by other shoppers as they pass by - this is a definite turn-off to shoppers (especially women), and will reduce the amount of time spent in the store and thus the total amount of money spent - shoppers need the use of their hands to touch, feel, pick up and examine merchandise - if they are burdened down with a coat, several other items that they have picked up, a toddler, etc., they will spend less time in the store than if they had a shopping cart, access to a coat check, strollers, baskets (placed inside the sore interior where they could actually be useful to someone who has already accumulated a few items), etc. - very often, signs in retail environments contain too many words to be scanned quickly, and are placed in locations where they will never be noticed - "Putting a sign that requires twelve seconds to read in a place where customers spend four seconds is just slightly more effective than putting it in your garage." (p.63) - the typical movement and flow patterns of people are important to know in designing retail environments - for example, individuals tend to turn to the right when moving through a store - another tidbit: people tend to slow down when they approach reflective surfaces. - providing convenient and strategically located seating areas for customers will, again, keep them in the store longer and thus increase the amount sold - adjacencies can be very important in the placement of merchandise in order to maximize sales - for example, the salsa should be next to the chips, not in the condiments section - the pasta sauce should be in the pasta section, not next to the salsa Part 2: The demographics of shopping: how different types of customers vary in their attitudes and approaches to shopping. On men: - only 72% of men read price tags on items, as compared to 86% of women - for a man, ignoring the price tag is a measure of his virility - when a man accompanies a woman shopping, her time in the store is drastically cut down (women accompanying other women while shopping spend almost twice as much time in a store as a woman and a man) On women: - women generally take pleasure and pride in the shopping experience (as opposed to men, who generally just want to get in and get out, unless they are shopping for specific male-oriented items such as power tools, stereos or computers) - accordingly, the shopping environment for women should be relaxing, pleasant, featuring all of the positive layout factors previously discussed that will keep them in the store for a longer period of time - as women take on more of the responsibilities of shopping for all items (as a result of more single family households and a general breaking down of the traditional sex-oriented shopping roles in the family) the traditional male retail preserves (such as Joe's Hardware) will become more oriented towards women's shopping preferences (the demise of Joe's hardware in favour of places like Home Depot attest to this trend) On seniors: Underhill makes the sobering point that many of us will spend more time being old that the time we had being young. It follows then that store layouts and packaging design will have to change in order to accommodate us aging baby boomers. This will include larger print on packages (older eyes have difficultly reading anything less than 12 point type); better lighting in stores (older eyes at age 50 receive about 25% less light than eyes at age 20 due to discolouration of the cornea); and sharper colour distinction on signs and certain store areas (for example, on stairs, where it is critical that older patrons be able to easily distinguish the rise from the run part of the step, to avoid tripping). Store layout, too, will need to be redesigned with larger aisles and ramps to accommodate walkers and motorized wheelchairs. On kids: Most of this section is devoted to really young kids, and there are some fairly predictable suggestions and points raised. He says, for example, that merchandise oriented towards kids has got to be placed at eye level for those kids - that is, about three feet off the floor. He also makes the point that retailers have got to provide for parents who are shopping with kids in tow by providing safe distractions and diversions for those kids, leaving the parents free for a few minutes of uninterrupted shopping. Again, the principle that the longer the shopper spends in the store the more they will spend comes into play. Part 3: How shoppers psychologically react to shopping environments. - many stores do not provide opportunities for shoppers to touch and feel the merchandise, and yet this sensual experience can be very influential in making the sale in fact, - the 'sensual shopper', where he emphasizes the importance of engaging the senses in the shopping experience (a prime example he uses here is the smell of freshly baked bread that greets one upon entering some supermarkets, which he can correlate directly with increased spending) Permalink |
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