Home » Blog » Blog » Archives for Retail Sales Training
Bob Phibbs' Retail Sales Blog

Posts Tagged ‘Retail Sales Training’

Retail Tip: It’s Not About How Neatly Your Merch Is Stacked

I walked into a fully stocked and displayed upscale retailer.  There were four of us in the store but it seemed void of employees.

As I walked further into the store,  I saw an employee enter the cash wrap area; she had a clipboard.  As I looked at a display and its POP, I couldn’t find one of the items listed.

I got her attention, she came over over and I asked her my question.  She simply replied, “Out.” With that, she returned to walking by every display making notes on her clipboard.

As I started to leave, I spotter her at the front of the store talking on a walkie talkie to someone about what merch to bring out.  “Excuse me,” she said as she walked around me to another display that was missing one unit (on a display of about a dozen of the same thing.)

That’s when it it hit me that the big problem of not engaging with customers and gaining higher conversions stems from …

The people who are comfortable stacking merch have replaced the ones who are comfortable talking with customers.  

That’s good news if they are your competitor but bad news if you are the ones trying to drive sales in your store.  Continue reading Retail Tip: It’s Not About How Neatly Your Merch Is Stacked »

Are Independent Hardware Stores Ready For A Reboot?

hardware store makeoverDo you remember being at a bowling alley or supermarket and seeing the old claw game? The one where you navigate the joystick in hopes of manipulating the claw to grab an item you want?

There are a lot of retailers that do the same thing on their sales floor. Continue reading Are Independent Hardware Stores Ready For A Reboot? »

Retail Sales Training: Why Send Customers to Your Markdowns?

greeting a customer

Lately, major chains seem to be taking a page from the same tired, retail-sales training book.

Somewhere on a torn page, it must advise managers to station a person within four feet from the front door and use them as a designated greeter.

Think Wal-Mart but closer.

Except, instead of being cordial, these new greeters are to “greet” the customer with news about their sale merch. Hanging out just inside the entrance, they become soulless puppets muttering the same markdown mantras over and over. Continue reading Retail Sales Training: Why Send Customers to Your Markdowns? »

In Retail Sales Too Many Choices Equals Just Looking

I was intrigued by an article in the Los Angeles Times entitled, Too Many Choices Can Tax the Brain Research Shows.  It said in part, “Americans have come to expect a wide array of choices, and most companies, be they car companies, clothiers or coffee shops, have been more than willing to pony up.

But more choices do not always equate to happier consumers.  In fact, some studies show that having to make too many decisions can leave people tired, mentally drained and more dissatisfied with their purchases.”

This was detailed in Matt Haig’s 2003 book Brand Failures.  He noted that “Procter & Gamble’s brand strategy in the 1980s seemed to be: why launch one product, when 50 will do? However, increased choice equaled increased confusion.

As a result, Crest lost market share… as soon as there were 50 Crest toothpastes, its market share dipped to 25 per cent and fell behind Colgate.” When they had one product they captured above 50% of the market.

I would add because it was easy for the customer.

The LAT story said as much in their helpful tips, “Sometimes it’s good to rely on habit — ‘put the blinders on and get the same toothpaste you always get,’ says Barry Schwartz, a professor of psychology at Swarthmore College.”

How this impacts your retail business

What is so deadly about this for retailers is that we think giving our customers more choice is better. But if the customer can’t quickly get why one product is better than the other, they become overwhelmed and put blinders on.

That’s because it’s easier to settle.

If there is no one there to help whittle down their choices or find out what they are trying to do and then matching product to their use, you lose the sale.

And the higher the ticket, the higher your stakes.

That’s why you need salespeople, not clerks.

The evidence is overwhelming that customers are over-choiced, from the menus in restaurants, to the products on the sales floor.  We just don’t want to make the wrong choice. Salespeople, true salespeople can make the difference.

Yes, Paul Schottmiller and I recently discussed the customer survey by Cisco Systems that found 68% said online reviews were one of their top three influencers whereas only 13 percent indicated store associates.

But I believe that says more about the quality of the store associates in many stores than customers’ proclivity to seek solutions from store employees.

What to do to drive conversions

You want to get your store sales up? Do the hard part of hiring people who can sell, who can funnel down hundreds of choices of paint, of carpet, of furniture, of black dresses, of whatever, into what customers can easily decide on.  Salespeople are out there looking for work, whittle down your resumes to those who have proven they can sell the merch.

Your competitors are “putting blinders on” and hiring whoever will fog the mirror, work the hours and be grateful for a job.

To get your store moving, take the time now to whittle down your choices of who you allow on your sales floor, train them how to sell and you’ll be able to help customers choose, not settle – or worse, walk out the door empty-handed.

here-are-five-tips-to-grow-your-business

What stores do you put blinders on when shopping? Grocery? Hardware? Drugstore? Please share in comments below…

Will Retail Hasten the Arrival of the Cyborgs? Pt II

Second in a series of posts on technology and humanity in retail sales

retail sales trainingWho are the customers who walk through your door? Are they already cyborgs?

NO!

Every one is a person who has a mom who has Alzheimer’s, who has a kid who is in rehab or has a dad who lost their job, or whatever.  Their mom could just have just won the All-star game, their brother could have finished his first book of poetry or together they might have completed a 5 mile walk to help cure AIDS.

Our humanity is what connects us to each other, not a machine. Continue reading Will Retail Hasten the Arrival of the Cyborgs? Pt II »