BUSINESS - RETAIL DECORATOR

Profit from Understanding Your Customers' Purchasing Process

Successfully serving your customers requires more than you think. You must recognize where they are in the purchasing process to adequately meet their needs.
July 21, 2008

By Doug Fleener

To be a successful retail salesperson, you must understand how and why customers buy. Purchasing is a financial decision resulting in the exchange of money for goods. The process itself is very linear. The time it takes to move through this process varies according to each individual and the product or service purchased.

The decision-making process of buying a soda is the same as buying a new car, but the amount of time it takes to move through that process will obviously vary. The better you can pinpoint where customers are in the decision-making process, the better you'll be able to deliver a positive store experience and sell more products.

Four Steps of Decision Making

1. Recognize a need or want. After recognizing a need or want, a person will either act on it immediately or file the thought in the back of his mind. Many customers enter your store without a recognized need or want, but they always come in with an interest. That's why there is no such thing as a "looker."

Success Tips
• Engaging customers with your products can move them from a piqued interest to the first stage of the decision-making process.
• Listening closely to what customers say is an easy way for you to identify if they have recognized their need or want.

2. Gather information. The customer is now discovering what he needs to know and begins to gather information to make an informed decision. For a simple purchase such as a soda, that information would include what drinks are available and how much they cost. For apparel, a customer needs to look at different fabrics, colors, cuts and sizes.

Success Tips
• Many retail sales associates mistake where in the information gathering stage the customer is. Rather than ask specific questions about what the customer wants, associates often assume the customer is only beginning to gather information.
• You'll be viewed as an expert and are more likely to make the sale if you help the customer understand what information is necessary to make an informed decision.

3. Evaluate choices and alternatives. This is when the customer tries on clothes, tastes samples, tests different golf clubs, compares choices side by side, etc.

Success Tips
• Reduce the number of choices customers have to choose from. Instead of showing them every one of their choices, recommend one or two products that you believe — based on the questions you've asked — best meet your customer's needs.
• Get the product in customers' hands, on their body, etc. It's amazing how many sales people will talk about what a product does, but never actually show customers what it does.

4. Make a (purchase) decision. The customer has decided to make a purchase. That doesn't mean he will make a purchase at that moment or even that he has chosen from whom he will purchase, but he has made a decision.

Success Tips
• Deliver a great experience and you'll be the clear choice when customers decide where to buy.
• Often customers have made a decision to buy, but since the sales associate doesn't assume the sale, the purchase is not made. Always assume customers will buy today unless you are told otherwise.

I encourage you to identify what stage each of your customers is in. Once you do that, try to help them come to a decision that will make both of you happy.

Doug Fleener is president and managing partner of Dynamic Experiences Group, a Lexington, Mass., retail consulting firm dedicated to helping retailers boost their sales and profits. A veteran retailer with more than 25 years of hands-on retail experience with world-class retailers including Bose Corp. and The Sharper Image, he also has owned and operated his own specialty stores. Fleener is the author of the book "The Profitable Retailer: 56 Surprisingly Simple and Effective Lessons to Boost Your Sales and Profits." Contact him at (781) 861-7803 or visit dynamicexperiencesgroup.com.



RECENT RETAIL DECORATOR HEADLINES

Profit from Understanding Your Customers' Purchasing Process
Successfully serving your customers requires more than you think. You must recognize where they are in the purchasing process to adequately meet their needs.
To be a successful retail salesperson, you must understand how and why customers buy. Purchasing is a financial decision resulting in the exchange of money for goods. The process itself is very linear. The time it takes to move through this process varies according to each individual and the product or service purchased.
July 21, 2008

If You Build It, Will They Come? Part 5
To make the most of your investment, you need to drive traffic to your Web site. Here are some proven ways to do just that.
Driving visitors to your Web site once you've spent so much time and money is the final step you must focus on to improve the rate of return on your investment. After launching the Web site, if you magically expect new customers to appear on your doorstep, you'll be disappointed. The Web site must be promoted — to all of your existing customers as well as any prospects in your database.
July 07, 2008

Is an E-commerce Web Site Right for Your Business? Part 4
An e-commerce site may be just what your decorated apparel business needs and your customers want, but as in any business decision, it pays to look before you leap.
E-commerce sites typically fall into two groups: the custom-designed site that serves your own business and the company store that serves a business you represent. In this article, the fourth in our five-part series, we discuss the differences between these two approaches.
June 19, 2008

How to Choose the Right Web Site for Your Business
When it comes to Web sites, there is no one-size-fits-all solution. The type of site you choose should be based on the needs and budget of your business.
The who, what and when of building a Web site are all interrelated issues that must be considered as you plan for the launch of your site. The complexity of the site you choose will determine who builds it and your timeline from commitment to launch. Your business model, which includes company size, investment funds, customer needs and future plans, also needs to figure into this critical upfront decision-making.
June 09, 2008

7 Keys to Web Site Success
Creating a Web site involves a number of key strategic considerations that can't be ignored if you want your site to be effective.
Once you come to terms with why it's so important to have a Web site and what you want it to accomplish, you can focus on how you will achieve success with your Web site project.
May 22, 2008

Embroidery Business NewsletterImpressions SourcebookScreen Printing Product CatalogImpressions Digital EditionINFO-ACTION
Plan now to attend ISS Long Beach!
The Long Beach Convention Center
Workshops: January 22, 2009
Exposition and Conference: January 23-25, 2009
Click here to register.

Visit Imprinted Sportswear Shows

Produced by: Nielsen Business Media, a part of the Nielsen Company
Nielsen Business Media Hospitality Design | Kitchen & Bath Business | Display & Design Ideas | Multi-Housing News | Commercial Property News | Impressions
Impressions is the one-stop source for authoritative information and education on the decorated apparel business, including embellishing on wholesale apparel and promotional products. This
resource is crucial to apparel decorating professionals seeking to establish and grow a profitable decorated apparel business. Every issue of our decorated apparel magazine, both print and
online, is geared toward providing how-to instructions needed to perform the four major processes that comprise the decorating apparel industry marketplace — screen printing, embroidery,
heat-applied graphics and digital printing. Impressions also provides business and trend information unique to the decorated apparel and promotional products industry.


Impressions Home | Embroidery Business News | Decorated Apparel News | Screen Printing Apparel News | Embroidery Apparel News 
| Digital Apparel News | Promotional Products News | Apparel Trade Show Events | Apparel Performance Analysis 
| Apparel Business Publications | Imprinted Corporate Gifts | Promotional Product Advertising | Apparel Buyers Newsletter 
| About Impressions | Contact Impressions | Sitemap | RSS