The Retail Doctor Blog

9 Best Practices To Encourage Inspired Purchases

Written by Bob Phibbs | November 25, 2020

Updated November 8, 2024

The holidays are a great time to delight shoppers and encourage add-on items as thoughtful purchases that enhance the shopping experience.

Brick-and-mortar retailers can adopt several best practices better than anyone. To encourage spontaneous purchases, improve your merchandising, signage, training, and holiday preparations so your shoppers uncover items they may not have considered but could find valuable or enjoyable.

When you do this, you help thwart online retailers' advantage of scooping up what the shopper in your store might have missed.

Nine Best Practices on How to Encourage Impulse Buying

1. Free up their hands—provide a basket. When hands are full, impulse items stay on the shelves. Don’t just have a basket at the doors; instruct your employees to walk up to the shopper with a basket and say—not ask—Here’s a basket for you. Don't ignore this easy way to grow sales. Studies have shown a 21% increase in the average ticket from shoppers who use baskets.

2. Catch their attention – have a display that moves. Add a train, a miniature Ferris wheel, or something else that goes around in a circle. Guys, in particular, will stop and watch it, which will get them to consider the other items you’ve displayed around it. The best place for this action is in your front windows or at the front of your store layout. Then, the store layout should be structured to foster an easy exploration of additional products.

3. Stop them in their tracks with a knockout item. Have one model with all the bells and whistles spotlit within eight feet of your entrance. Consider adding a red carpet leading up to it and a floor sign that includes the benefits the customer gets from such a model. Impulse spending occurs when the shopper can visualize the merchandise with all the bells and whistles in their home.

4. Decide for them by pointing out the perfect recipient for specific purchases. Put up signs Perfect for the guy who has everything because it’s not functional or Perfect for a college dorm because it is so small. You get the idea. Buying decisions are triggered when you help them see who the gift would be for.

5. Tickle their impulsive spending nature with an item at the counter. Retail displays that show a pre-wrapped item under $20 on the counter that anyone and everyone can use can help boost sales. Have the same item unwrapped so they can see it for themselves.

6. Make it tactile by getting shoppers to touch it. Yes, even during the pandemic, the #1 reason people go to stores is to feel, touch, and hold the merchandise. Don't forget that holding is a way for customers to envision themselves owning. Signage can help you here. Please encourage them to realize how much easier it is to lift a carbon fiber bike with a sign saying to feel how much lighter it is. Encourage them to feel how soft a premium cashmere sweater is with a sign: Our cashmere is like baby kisses; Please Touch.

7. Cozy up your store with holiday decorations to make shoppers linger. Your store has to look different from any other month; a cheap string of lights with a few hanging cardboard ornaments won't do. Change a shopper's surroundings, and you change their analytical state to a childlike wonder. Use chicken wire to construct a sturdy but lightweight foundation just above and inside your front doors, where you can lay lights and greenery so shoppers feel transported to another place as they enter. Then, use your social media savvy to attract customers on the couch to drive to your retail store.

8. Make sure your hours and pictures are correct on Google. Google now aggregates data from users to show your popular times and wait times; your shoppers check that before they leave their houses. Use Google My Business to ensure your hours are up-to-date with current photos and add videos. 

9. Provide an exceptional shopping experience so shoppers feel special when entering your doors. Training is the key if you want more than Can I help you? said to every shopper. Ensure every employee can greet shoppers the way you want them to, that they know the difference between an upsell and an add-on, and how to thank shoppers after they have paid. The key is to focus on keeping customer service in mind over tasks, so make sure you start every shift and every meeting, talking with your crew about creating an exceptional experience.

Another point is not to think all impulse purchases are based on deals, discounts, or other promotions.

You can make up margin when you deliver to your target audience the right product that adds value and doesn't strip your margins.

See also, How To Visually Merchandise Your Holiday Store Windows

In Sum

Mastering how to get shoppers to buy more should be a priority for any retailer looking to boost sales. But getting shoppers to buy your impulse items has to be more carefully considered than simply throwing a promotional price on an end cap. The best way to build average ticket is the old saw suggestive selling.

Having well-trained employees who say, "Did you see this? It goes great with what you already picked out," can go a long way to encouraging that extra purchase from your retail store rather than an online store.

Use these tips to stand out from your brick-and-mortar competitors and regain sales lost to online bandits.