Updated June 25, 2024
Online retailers and discounters have taken their toll on many brick-and-mortar stores. You might be worried that you are next, especially if you are seeing fewer customers walking into your store.
The fatal mistake you can make in a retail store isn’t that you don’t have an app or a Big Data strategy.
It isn’t that you don’t have an endless aisle of online products, magic mirror kiosks, or robots that talk.
The fatal and most common mistake retailers make is staying beige, and that big mistake is losing customers. When your store is beige, customers leave without any impression of your brand.
Shoppers are fickle and busy. They have too many places to buy too much of the same thing.
If you don’t make a remarkable impression, all traces of the visit to your store will have evaporated from your shoppers’ memory before they get in their car.
The always-on consumer isn’t always on the search for stuff. But when they are looking for products you carry, they have to be able to remember you so they can come back to your store or website.
I was in Des Moines recently and came across a store with “The Greatest Store In The Universe” emblazoned on the side of the building. I had to go in.
Once inside, I discovered all kinds of cheeky, urban Made in Iowa merchandise such as greeting cards, notepads, and sweatshirts. You get it. The store had about a dozen shoppers, and you know what? While I was there, the crew talked behind the counter, never venturing out to engage the shoppers with their great merchandise. Too many left after just looking.
These days, there are some pretty cool shops out there. Interesting and unique handmade or limited-production items you can’t find in a search online because there are no right words to put in the search box.
How do you make an impression on jaded shoppers these days? You must have fully present employees who understand they are there to get the customers to engage with themselves first and then with the merchandise.
You don't get partial credit for having great merchandise.
I was in a store that carried Sticks' hand-made furniture and art. Sticks’ expensive, whimsical, and colorful products are one-of-a-kind. I entered the empty store and saw a woman clutching her iPhone behind the counter. After she said, “Let me know if I can help you,” I never heard from her again even though I walked around the store for ten minutes.
Compare that to when I was in Portland and entered a crowded gift and stationery store. After a minute or so, a smiling young woman came up to me and bid me welcome. She then pointed to a chicken flower pot display. “Have you ever seen anything like that anywhere?” she asked.
I answered, “No.” She said, “That’s just some of the great merchandise we have here, so take a look. I'm Miranda. I’ll check back with you. Enjoy.”
If you’ve been in your store a while, you might think it is best to try not to stand out, to let shoppers look and not bug them. That’s the worst thing you can do.
You might please an introvert in the moment, but you won’t have left a positive mark on your customer’s psyche. You won’t get the customer to let their guard down and consider something they hadn’t been searching for, and you most certainly won’t give them a different impression from the hundreds of other stores they’ve visited.
If we’ve learned anything in recent years, it’s that people are looking for boldness, for something that stands out, for something that disrupts the status quo.
You can get that from hiring employees who are individuals, who have viewpoints, and who aren’t all just like you.
Hard Rock Cafe prides itself that its employees are like the land of misfit toys. They are all unique and different.
To break out of being beige is hard for many retailers because they’ve been working retail for so long. The only place they think they can compete is price.
I’ve got news for you...there’s always someone cheaper.
I like to use this analogy: In the old days, customers would come into a store looking for the cheapest cow. The retailer would say it’s over there, and the customer would buy it.
Nowadays, the retailer has to have the cow, butcher it, put the steak on the BBQ until it is charred on the outside and pink in the middle, cut it, put it on a fork, and put it in the customer’s mouth.
Then they’ll think about purchasing it.
The more steps you can excel at in selling that figurative cow, the more you’ll stand out.
1. Exceptional Customer Service. In a doctor’s office, we’d call it bedside manner. The training you provide to your employees on how to engage a stranger, hold their attention, dialogue with them, and display gratitude for their business, the more memorable you will be.
2. Knowledgeable Service. Note the difference from the one above. While it’s great to have employees trained on your products, shoppers relish salespeople who use them and can share the wisdom they’ve gained from trial and error.
3. Displays. You can do so much to surprise and delight customers with creative displays. Long Tall Sally, a fashion retailer for tall women, created custom mannequins based on the precise proportions of a customer who stood 6’ tall. That spoke leagues to their niche market.
4. Store Design. Own your shoppers' lifestyles by creating a store that feels like a club. Nike’s store in SOHO New York is like Legoland for people who love sports.
5. Pricing. This goes beyond how you price your goods; it includes free shipping, gift wrapping, and events. The more you charge for such items, the more you’re like everyone else and the more beige you are.
See also, How Your Retail Employees Can
Create Exceptional Customer Experiences
In Sum
From experience, we've learned that being different and zigging when the rest are zagging pays off. Use these tips to push yourself from beige to colorful and from losing customers to attracting them.