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Atricle Dump - The Small Retailer's Survival Guide - Part 10 The Future
Sales Letter - How to Write A #1 Sales Letter can treat them even better and be even more polite. The same goes for hygiene: make your small store a beacon of cleanliness. You'll be amazed how many customers you will win over by having a spotlessly clean store. Also, consider extending customer service by having a home delivery service, perhaps teaming up with other local retailers. You may consider refitting your store, but before you dive in, make sure you employ good people to do the job. A refit can be a nightmare but, when it is done well and for the right reasons, it can do wonders for your sales and profits.Would you be surprised to know that direct mail gives you a better return on investment? It's true and that is for any product or any service you sell.Now most people sort their mail over the trash can because of all the junk mail we all receive on a daily basis. So with that said, you only have a split second to catch that person's attention. The envelope will be the first thing they will see. Make it look professional even if you choose a color other than white. Always use a First Class Stamp and not the bulk postage. Thats a sure sign that its junk mail. Did you also know that the Post Office states that about 30% of bulk mail gets trashed at the Post Office. Thats right, when the mail carriers are getting their trucks ready to deliver, they will trash some of the bulk mail if they feel they have to much mail to deliver.Now I personally don't like sticking mailing labels on envelopes because thats a sign for me that its junk but it can be cheaper than having having the names and addresses of your customer printed on the envelope.Now hopefully you have gotten their interest enough to open the envelope so they can see your sales letter. Your title and opening needs to be excellent otherwise they'll toss the letter in the trash along with everything el If you put into action some or all of the above ideas, then, if you were just ticking over before you will probably see an improvement. If you were seriously struggling before then you may at least survive. You may be thinking "just surviving doesn't sound like a whole lot of fun". I would agree with that. The point is, though, that things are bound to change for the better. This is not wishful thinking, this is based on an analysis of the retail market in most countries. The nature of retailing is varied across the globe, but there has been a general power shift towards the large retailers at the expense of others in their supply This Is Your Year To Be BOLD! In this tenth and final part of a series of articles about how to survive as a small retailer, I will summarize the main points from the articles and have a look at what the future holds.WOW!! Can you believe it is 2006?Doesn't it seem like yesterday that we were drinking champagne bringing in the new century??6 years have gone by since then. What have YOU filled them with?This Is Going To Be Your Felt-Marker Year!You've seen them - those fabulous huge felt markers that little kids love coloring with. They leave a BOLD mark!One thing this Sales Diva knows - that unless you plan something BOLD every year- life has a way of tip-toeing past you.And all you are left with is bills, excuses and the odd gray hair (Ok - a heck of a lot of gray hair!)This decade is almost 60% over - wouldn't you like to KICK IT UP A NOTCH?Why Is Selling About Being Bold?Listen - being "vanilla" in this world gets you absolutely nowhere.Your customer - and potential customers - want to buy from people/companies they trust, admire, respect and overall LOVE!If you are blending in with the crowd, copying what others are doing and basically COASTING - I have some tough news for you.You are going to keep STRUGGLING.However, if you make a BOLD impact with your customers on what you deliver, how you HELP THEM GROW, how BOLDLY easy it is to work with you - they will start lining up at the doors. Retailing is one of the toughest businesses there is. The reason is that, although trade may be steady, it is a low margin business. This means you work long and hard for little reward. You are in a market where the customers are very knowledgeable about the products they are buying and the have a preset idea of what range of price they are prepared to pay. You are in a business where "the big order" never comes. All you can do is grow your business steadily and hope that a superstore doesn't open over the road and steal your customers. If you seriously struggling as a small retailer, the first thing to ask yourself is "am I ready for the fight?". If you have doubts, it may be time to quit right now. On the other hand if you are up for it, by working to your strengths as a small retailer and by hanging in there, the rewards may be better than you imagined. Some people bemoan the demise of small stores and blame the large chains for their downfall. Superficially this is true, but this is like Yahoo! blaming Google for its downfall (should it ever happen) or radio stations blaming television for losing audience and advertising revenue. I suspect that few of the people who want small stores kept as museums would be prepared to support them by buying goods from them if they are given the choice of better value for money in a chain store over the road. So get real. Forget blaming the opposition. You need to do this for yourself. You never know, you may one day expand your business into a large chain yourself - and then the little guys may all blame you! If you are struggling as a small retailer then the most obvious thing you need to do is to change what you do. Some changes may be low cost and easy, others may require you to invest in the business and will mean a lot of effort and commitment. The key thing is to compete with other stores by working to your strengths. The greatest strength a small local retailer has is that it is small and local. Large chains cannot be small and, although an individual branch is local, it's primary focus is to the company and not the community it serves. Large chains will never be good at buying local products. Fragmenting buying power from localities is a contradiction of the way large chains are structured. They buy in bulk for a large customer base spread over large areas - that is why their prices are competitive. On the other hand, a small retailer can forge links with local producers. There may be a factory down the road that makes toy cars (OK then, a factory down the road that imports and packs toy cars that are nowadays made in China). You may also have a local dairy that sends their milk to a large store chain but may be happy to sell you a few pints each day. Explore your locality - you may be surprised at what you discover, and the bargains that you can negotiate by going straight to the source rather than through a wholesaler. Offering your customers local products is a good way of demonstrating one of your greatest strengths and having your own unique selling point (USP). You may even be first in the queue for new product trials. This will give your store a very specific and potent USP. A small retailer can't offer the lowest prices. This is usually impossible in the face of the buying power of large chains. What a small retailer can offer is intelligent pricing. You may reduce prices at certain times of year or even on certain days of the week. You could offer a buy-one-get-another-product-free deal by combining healthy sellers with less healthy ones. What you need to do is avoid giving customers the impression you are always more expensive than the large chain down the road. By majoring on price reductions for limited time periods you will give a quite different impression: your store will be a place where customers can often pick up a bargain and where most days there is a bargain price being offered somewhere in the store. Be just as nimble with your product range - it should never be set in stone. Be prepared to strike out poor sellers and try out new lines. Change the range when there is a major festival such as Christmas in order to accommodate different buying patterns. Remember, though, to keep changes limited and as gradual as possible so that customers can still find what they want and don't feel excluded. Get to know your customers' buying habits and anticipate demand patterns. Keep a close eye on possible out of stocks and react quickly when out of stocks occur. Customer service is one area where you have the ability to beat larger store chains. No matter how well they treat their customers and how polite they are, you can treat them even better and be even more polite. The same goes for hygiene: make your small store a beacon of cleanliness. You'll be amazed how many customers you will win over by having a spotlessly clean store. Also, consider extending customer service by having a home delivery service, perhaps teaming up with other local retailers. You may consider refitting your store, but before you dive in, make sure you employ good people to do the job. A refit can be a nightmare but, when it is done well and for the right reasons, it can do wonders for your sales and profits. If you put into action some or all of the above ideas, then, if you were just ticking over before you will probably see an improvement. If you were seriously struggling before then you may at least survive. You may be thinking "just surviving doesn't sound like a whole lot of fun". I would agree with that. The point is, though, that things are bound to change for the better. This is not wishful thinking, this is based on an analysis of the retail market in most countries. The nature of retailing is varied across the globe, but there has been a general power shift towards the large retailers at the expense of others in their supply c Looking for Sky In All The Wrong Places for its downfall (should it ever happen) or radio stations blaming television for losing audience and advertising revenue. I suspect that few of the people who want small stores kept as museums would be prepared to support them by buying goods from them if they are given the choice of better value for money in a chain store over the road. So get real. Forget blaming the opposition. You need to do this for yourself. You never know, you
may one day expand your business into a large chain yourself - and then the little guys may all blame you!Ever sit with a single puzzle piece of clouds and wonder how you will ever put the entire sky together? Life as an entrepreneur is often just like that-- lots of the little pieces, creating products, taking care of clients, wrestling with computers, finances, taxes, etc.-- and a whole lot of sky. The big open space where you create a successful and enjoyable business. There were many pieces of 'puzzle sky', I was drowning in an ocean of sky blue. After over a decade of struggling with my own company to fit all the 'pieces' together, I have finally put together the big business puzzle-- and it's not what I thought it would look like.As a sponge for knowledge, I would constantly search for information to help me grow. Emblazoned in my mind was a quote that I stumbled upon by accident while researching William Shakespeare in the old, smelly, humid junior high library (thank goodness for the Internet). "Information is power" insightfully said by Sir Frances Bacon. At thirteen years old, I didn't exactly know what power was but I knew I didn't want to be a 'dork' or a 'druggie', like so many of my friends. So, I wanted power. So... I needed knowledge. I lived for it.I became a "knowledge" junkie and didn't 'know' it. How ironic is that? I graduated If you are struggling as a small retailer then the most obvious thing you need to do is to change what you do. Some changes may be low cost and easy, others may require you to invest in the business and will mean a lot of effort and commitment. The key thing is to compete with other stores by working to your strengths. The greatest strength a small local retailer has is that it is small and local. Large chains cannot be small and, although an individual branch is local, it's primary focus is to the company and not the community it serves. Large chains will never be good at buying local products. Fragmenting buying power from localities is a contradiction of the way large chains are structured. They buy in bulk for a large customer base spread over large areas - that is why their prices are competitive. On the other hand, a small retailer can forge links with local producers. There may be a factory down the road that makes toy cars (OK then, a factory down the road that imports and packs toy cars that are nowadays made in China). You may also have a local dairy that sends their milk to a large store chain but may be happy to sell you a few pints each day. Explore your locality - you may be surprised at what you discover, and the bargains that you can negotiate by going straight to the source rather than through a wholesaler. Offering your customers local products is a good way of demonstrating one of your greatest strengths and having your own unique selling point (USP). You may even be first in the queue for new product trials. This will give your store a very specific and potent USP. A small retailer can't offer the lowest prices. This is usually impossible in the face of the buying power of large chains. What a small retailer can offer is intelligent pricing. You may reduce prices at certain times of year or even on certain days of the week. You could offer a buy-one-get-another-product-free deal by combining healthy sellers with less healthy ones. What you need to do is avoid giving customers the impression you are always more expensive than the large chain down the road. By majoring on price reductions for limited time periods you will give a quite different impression: your store will be a place where customers can often pick up a bargain and where most days there is a bargain price being offered somewhere in the store. Be just as nimble with your product range - it should never be set in stone. Be prepared to strike out poor sellers and try out new lines. Change the range when there is a major festival such as Christmas in order to accommodate different buying patterns. Remember, though, to keep changes limited and as gradual as possible so that customers can still find what they want and don't feel excluded. Get to know your customers' buying habits and anticipate demand patterns. Keep a close eye on possible out of stocks and react quickly when out of stocks occur. Customer service is one area where you have the ability to beat larger store chains. No matter how well they treat their customers and how polite they are, you can treat them even better and be even more polite. The same goes for hygiene: make your small store a beacon of cleanliness. You'll be amazed how many customers you will win over by having a spotlessly clean store. Also, consider extending customer service by having a home delivery service, perhaps teaming up with other local retailers. You may consider refitting your store, but before you dive in, make sure you employ good people to do the job. A refit can be a nightmare but, when it is done well and for the right reasons, it can do wonders for your sales and profits. If you put into action some or all of the above ideas, then, if you were just ticking over before you will probably see an improvement. If you were seriously struggling before then you may at least survive. You may be thinking "just surviving doesn't sound like a whole lot of fun". I would agree with that. The point is, though, that things are bound to change for the better. This is not wishful thinking, this is based on an analysis of the retail market in most countries. The nature of retailing is varied across the globe, but there has been a general power shift towards the large retailers at the expense of others in their supply Today's Marketing: The Art of Hustling Air, And Then Some! ay large chains are structured. They buy in bulk for a large customer base spread over large areas - that is why their prices are competitive. On the other hand, a small retailer can forge links with local producers. There may be a factory down the road that makes toy cars (OK then, a factory down the road that imports and packs toy cars that are nowadays made in China). You may also have a local dairy that sends their milk to a large store chain but may be happy to sell you a few pints each day. Explore your locality - you may be surprised at what you discover, and the bargains that you can negotiate by going straight to the source rather than through a wholesaler. Offering your customers local products is a good way of demonstrating one of your greatest strengths and having your own unique selling point (USP). You may even be first in the queue for new product trials. This will give your store a very specific and potent USP.If you could go back in time, to say 1985, and tell a venture capitalist that you had a great idea, taking water and putting it into plastic bottles and selling it for a buck or more a shot, what do you think he’d say?Perhaps, “You’re crazy! No one will pay for something that they can get, free!”And what if, in the next breath you said, “Better yet, I’m going to sell bottled air that people will inhale through nostril tubes, and I’ll call the places where they get their snorts, oxygen bars.”Or, what if you said you had the contrarian idea of placing the label of a shirt on the outside of the collar, for advertising purposes, instead of the inside; or that you could get $300 and up for used looking jeans with holes cut in them?How would these brainstorms go over?The auto club just came out with a platinum card. It isn’t for charging goods and services.It’s just an “elite” card that gives you a longer, tow, when your car breaks down. Maybe, there is some other bell or whistle attached—I don’t remember.But there’s no question, this card is a moneymaker, and will probably become successful, because a certain number of people want the best, no matter what it seems to be.I expect someone will package premium, 100% organic, gold label A small retailer can't offer the lowest prices. This is usually impossible in the face of the buying power of large chains. What a small retailer can offer is intelligent pricing. You may reduce prices at certain times of year or even on certain days of the week. You could offer a buy-one-get-another-product-free deal by combining healthy sellers with less healthy ones. What you need to do is avoid giving customers the impression you are always more expensive than the large chain down the road. By majoring on price reductions for limited time periods you will give a quite different impression: your store will be a place where customers can often pick up a bargain and where most days there is a bargain price being offered somewhere in the store. Be just as nimble with your product range - it should never be set in stone. Be prepared to strike out poor sellers and try out new lines. Change the range when there is a major festival such as Christmas in order to accommodate different buying patterns. Remember, though, to keep changes limited and as gradual as possible so that customers can still find what they want and don't feel excluded. Get to know your customers' buying habits and anticipate demand patterns. Keep a close eye on possible out of stocks and react quickly when out of stocks occur. Customer service is one area where you have the ability to beat larger store chains. No matter how well they treat their customers and how polite they are, you can treat them even better and be even more polite. The same goes for hygiene: make your small store a beacon of cleanliness. You'll be amazed how many customers you will win over by having a spotlessly clean store. Also, consider extending customer service by having a home delivery service, perhaps teaming up with other local retailers. You may consider refitting your store, but before you dive in, make sure you employ good people to do the job. A refit can be a nightmare but, when it is done well and for the right reasons, it can do wonders for your sales and profits. If you put into action some or all of the above ideas, then, if you were just ticking over before you will probably see an improvement. If you were seriously struggling before then you may at least survive. You may be thinking "just surviving doesn't sound like a whole lot of fun". I would agree with that. The point is, though, that things are bound to change for the better. This is not wishful thinking, this is based on an analysis of the retail market in most countries. The nature of retailing is varied across the globe, but there has been a general power shift towards the large retailers at the expense of others in their supply Imaging Isn't Everything could offer a buy-one-get-another-product-free deal by combining healthy sellers with less healthy ones. What you need to do is avoid giving customers the impression you are always more expensive than the large chain down the road. By majoring on price reductions for limited time periods you will give a quite different impression: your store will be a place where customers can often pick up a bargain and where most days there is a bargain price being offered somewhere in the store. Be just as nimble with your product range - it should never be set in stone. Be prepared to strike out poor sellers and try out new lines. Change the range when there is a major festival such as Christmas in order to accommodate different buying patterns. Remember, though, to keep changes limited and as gradual as possible so that customers can still find what they want and don't feel excluded. Get to know your customers' buying habits and anticipate demand patterns. Keep a close eye on possible out of stocks and react quickly when out of stocks occur.Many home improvement contractors attempt to use advertising to expand their client base and increase profits. Whether it be yellow pages, mailers, ads, or valpak; for many it's a total waste of time and money. Why do so many contractors achieve less than desired results from their advertising dollars? The answer: They're doing it the wrong way!There are two types of advertising. One is a complete waste of money. The other is highly effective, yet very few people know about it.Brand Marketing, or "image advertising" is a total waste of money. It's easy to recognize. This is the sort of "getting your name out there" advertising we all see everyday. It is the type of advertising that only works for companies that have millions of dollars in their budget.The advertiser tries to relay an image about how great the company is. They use large (expensive) ads with fancy logos, graphics, and colors to try to convince the prospect that the company is more professional, stronger, more trustworthy and competent than its competitors. It tries to make people feel that this is a company they should trust to do business with.The problem is, the focus of this advertising is all me, me, me. The advertiser is suggesting you buy from him without actually telling the prospect Customer service is one area where you have the ability to beat larger store chains. No matter how well they treat their customers and how polite they are, you can treat them even better and be even more polite. The same goes for hygiene: make your small store a beacon of cleanliness. You'll be amazed how many customers you will win over by having a spotlessly clean store. Also, consider extending customer service by having a home delivery service, perhaps teaming up with other local retailers. You may consider refitting your store, but before you dive in, make sure you employ good people to do the job. A refit can be a nightmare but, when it is done well and for the right reasons, it can do wonders for your sales and profits. If you put into action some or all of the above ideas, then, if you were just ticking over before you will probably see an improvement. If you were seriously struggling before then you may at least survive. You may be thinking "just surviving doesn't sound like a whole lot of fun". I would agree with that. The point is, though, that things are bound to change for the better. This is not wishful thinking, this is based on an analysis of the retail market in most countries. The nature of retailing is varied across the globe, but there has been a general power shift towards the large retailers at the expense of others in their supply Business Process Consulting - Consulting to the Small Business Owner can treat them even better and be even more polite. The same goes for hygiene: make your small store a beacon of cleanliness. You'll be amazed how many customers you will win over by having a spotlessly clean store. Also, consider extending customer service by having a home delivery service, perhaps teaming up with other local retailers. You may consider refitting your store, but before you dive in, make sure you employ good people to do the job. A refit can be a nightmare but, when it is done well and for the right reasons, it can do wonders for your sales and profits.Why are small businesses such a powerhouse in the economy?One of the ingredients is that successful small businesses are run by people with passion. Small business owners believe in what they are doing, and they love doing it. They are brimming with ideas.At heart, most small business people feel that they were born to make a difference in the world - to make the world a better place. The small business owner is obsessed with succeeding in making that difference and reaping the rewards that they deserve for both themselves and for the people around them.They do what it takes to make something happen - the long hours, the heartache, the joy, the desperation, the failure, the success and the elation. These people experience the full range of human emotion in the pursuit of their dream. They are the true believers.How then can the small business consultant contribute to the small business owner’s success?The answer is that the small business consultant must know how to help the small business owner learn to think strategically and thereby gain clarity, focus and direction. Such results are possible only when the consultant keeps three critical factors in mind:- While passion is often a key ingredient, a small business cannot run on passi If you put into action some or all of the above ideas, then, if you were just ticking over before you will probably see an improvement. If you were seriously struggling before then you may at least survive. You may be thinking "just surviving doesn't sound like a whole lot of fun". I would agree with that. The point is, though, that things are bound to change for the better. This is not wishful thinking, this is based on an analysis of the retail market in most countries. The nature of retailing is varied across the globe, but there has been a general power shift towards the large retailers at the expense of others in their supply chains, such as producers. This is set to change. In more mature economies, retailers have put a great deal of effort into cutting their costs. They have done this by shifting much of their work to third parties and this often means the producers. They have deskilled their staff away from the tradesmen that they once employed to a slick operation where no skill is required. Nowadays most goods come into the store ready to sell where no skilled preparation is required. The latest thing is for whole sections of pre-merchandised fixtures to be delivered to stores, to the point where store staff never actually handle the products. Distribution is usually carried out by a third party. Even the management of distribution can be farmed out. Often, head office functions such as regulation enforcement, including labelling and hygiene requirements, are farmed out to others. Even the buying function has been consolidated. Whereas buyers have historically dealt with a large producer base, many large stores have rationalized these producers into a handful of companies who will then go on to buy smaller lots from around the world. Buyers in large chains may rarely see the products being produced. Also, in to order release cash for expansion, many large chains sell their capital assets such as buildings and then lease them. Producers in particular are now starting to think: "what assets do the large retailers actually have?". They have virtually no plant and machinery, some own very little real estate or vehicles and they have very few skilled workers. Apart from some sophisticated ordering systems, the only real asset that they still have is goodwill - lots and lots of customers going into their stores. Retail customers are fickle, though. If better value for money can be found elsewhere then that goodwill would vanish very quickly. Without the assets and the skills required as a base to recapture customers, today's big retailers could become tomorrow's casualties. And what seismic shift would need to take place in order to lure customers away? Remember where you read this first. The people with the skills, the machinery and with the contacts with small producers worldwide are the producers themselves. Wholesalers - the middle men - had already been cut out of large and mature retail supply chains many years ago. This time, though, the time is coming when the end-men will be cut out - that is the large retailers. In any large supply chain, the largest profit is made by the most dominant member of the chain. Nowadays that tends to be the retailer. If producers set up their own distribution or use a third party distributor and they acquire their own stores (either by building them, or more likely buying up another retailer), they will not be adding greatly to their current workload, as they do a much of the work anyway. They will not need to take on many more skilled people as they already have them and they will not need to invest in production as they have it already. They will be able to undercut their old master by a substantial margin and still have plenty left over to make handsome profits. They will not need to withdraw their supply to the large retailers - why should they? What they will do is charge them higher prices for goods they produce. Today's large retailers have consolidated and deskilled so much that they will not be able to adjust fast enough and will suffer dramatically. Eventually they will be forced to sell their stores to the new kids on the block as the slaves turn on their masters - but this will only happen after a great prolonged upheaval. So what does this mean for the small retailer? The large retail chains will be shaken to bits. The small retailers will stay put and take on the business that will come along in the transition period while the old retailers decline and the producers take time building up. I would say that the future for large retailers is increasingly looking shaky. The small retailers can only benefit. Remember also that fuel prices are set to stay on a long term upward trend. Local and small may be just the thing to be in future times. If you survive these hard years you will be the winner in the end as small retailers rise up again. So keep going!
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