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After the Blizzard: 9 Tips For Retailers To Get Back To Business

Any time weather affects business, it is hard to deal with but snow is especially bad.  Deliveries are delayed, employees may have to deal with children needing care, your utilities may not be working reliably.  You need to communicate to everyone; hope for help but plan to take care of all of it yourself.

Here are 9 tips for retailers affected by blizzard or Nor’easter:

1) Call all employees and confirm they are OK, if they have transportation to and if they can schedule work.

2) Get to your store with a snow shovel, assess any damage. Yes, you might have to shovel your way there from your car. Continue reading After the Blizzard: 9 Tips For Retailers To Get Back To Business »

Rebuttal to Mary Hunt and Woman’s Day: Retailers Don’t Trick Customers

Be forewarned, this post could become a rant. I have no personal malice towards the writer of the article I’m ripping apart today – just the ideas, how they tap into certain personalities and what she says about retailers – my buds. I share my thoughts as a way of illuminating the Analytical personality.

I was at the checkout counter of my local market and saw the August issue of Woman’s Day magazine with a cover story, “Shop Smart: Tricks Stores Use and How To Avoid Them.”

The premise and tone peaked my curiosity so I purchased it. (You can read the full story on their website which they have taken down a notch to become, “12 Spending Schemes We Fall For.”)

The first thing that got me was how the article tapped into the lack mentality that there was some “they” retailer out to do poor “you” the customer wrong. Continue reading Rebuttal to Mary Hunt and Woman’s Day: Retailers Don’t Trick Customers »

Retailers: Welcome Technology & The iPhone Apps

I overheard a story the other day about a retailer banishing a customer for scanning their item with their iPhone. The shop employee figured they were price checking on the Internet and wouldn’t allow them.  That is ridiculous.

People often fear what they don’t understand.  Maybe that’s why so many mom & pop retailers STILL don’t have a website.

One of the apps I use on my iPhone is RedLaser RedLaser Video which lets you scan any bar code.  Many times there is no one around when I have a question about a purchase. I can bring up the application, scan it and find the information online instantly.

Ban the iPhones and Blackberries and you could upset those most able to purchase your products. Can the newest applications (apps for short) price compare? Certainly but the sale is still yours to lose.

amazon appAmazon has an app that allows you take a photo, send to Amazon with optical recognition software and within a few minutes it messages the user that it found the item and it can be purchased immediately.

Is that scary? Maybe.

But what opened the door to all of these shopping apps? Businesses that cut labor, didn’t train employees what features and benefits the products have, hiring employees who don’t use the technology or products the retailer carries and customers not willing to “try to find someone.”

The sale is yours to lose.

How to deal with the app user?

1) Welcome and engage them. “I see you’re using one of the new shopping apps.  How do you like it?”

2) Ask to see what the net shows about your product.

3) Fill in the details that the net doesn’t have about your product. Anything to beware of? Something that makes it better? Have you used it personally and found a trick? Now’s your chance.

4) Create a compelling reason for them to buy it from you now.No waiting, no shipping fees, no surprises.

5) DON’T PRICE MATCH.

6) Thank them for educating you about their mobil device.

My advice for those of you who fear this technology? Buy one yourself so you know what you are talking, fearing and worrying about. And stop calling your buddies with the loser’s limp, “They get all the information from me and then buy it online.”  Look in the mirror, the reason they didn’t buy is because of you. Drop the anger and fear and embrace the technology.

Retail isn’t going to get any easier, you might as well seize the day so you can capture all of the business that walks in your door; not just what you are used to.

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