Are you curious, observant
and persistent in your shopping habits? If you
are, chances are you are adding to your Retail IQ on every shopping trip.
Do you like to explore new stores
or wander down different aisles in stores you know well? These are signs of a healthy Retail IQ. Do you pick a checkout lane at a grocery
store based on the length of the line, the skill of the bagger or the number of
items in the carts of those ahead of you?
Do you even think of ANY of those factors? People with higher Retail IQs observe the
subtle differences. And great retailers
manage those factors.
What type of stores do you
frequent? Barbershops or beauty
salons? Hardware stores or Hallmark
shops? Claire’s or Costco? Quick-service restaurants or self-service gas
stations? Wherever you go, be aware
of the messages and methods employed to influence your decisions. What happens in those stores doesn’t stay in
those stores – some of it goes home in your trunk!
There’s no magic formula to
calculating a Retail IQ and it varies from store to store, format to format and
shopper to shopper. It also varies
widely between producers of point-of-purchase equipment. If you buy or sell displays or fixtures,
consider the Retail IQ of those with whom you work, too. They can make the difference between a smart
investment and one that pays poor dividends.
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