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Visual merchandising is what one

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Visual merchandising is what one sees when walking into a retail space. It is the
presentation and organization of products in both the store and on display to
arouse customer interest and convince them to buy and return to the store.
It is a well-defined strategy that aims to influence customer decisions inside a
store; thus, it is crucial for retail marketing.
But what exactly is visual merchandising, why is it important, and how it
works? Here’s a guide explaining everything.
can both become more successful in their own right and also serve as business
attraction models to enhance each community’s local economy.
What Is Visual Merchandising?
Visual merchandising is a practice of optimising retail store presentation and
displaying goods to highlight their features and benefits better and encourage
customer interest.
To make this visual merchandising definition simpler, divide it into three parts –
It’s a practice of optimising retail store presentation: Visual
merchandising is an intentional practice to optimise the space and
layout of the store to present the inventory in the best possible way.
 It focuses on highlighting product’s features and
benefits: Marketers plan, design, and display products with an aim
to highlight their features and benefits.
 It aims to encourage customer interest: Visual merchandising
aims to influence customers and encourage them to purchase goods
and return to the store in the future.
Visual merchandising is an important aspect of retail marketing. It does not only
include displays for merchandise on display but also includes store layout,
greeter design, floor plan, signage, fixtures, and lighting.
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It includes shaping customer experience inside a retail space through
presentation and advertising. Therefore, it is an important tool that retail
marketers use to influence consumer behaviour and thus fulfil their marketing
goals – sales and repeat visits.
Importance Of Visual Merchandising
A good looking and well strategised retail space is essential to meeting a
business’s sales and marketing goals. Visual merchandising helps retailers –
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Improve customer experience: Customer experience is vital to
running a successful business and visual merchandising is a very
important part of it. It helps to organise the retail space and help
customers find what they’re looking for easily – thus improving
their experience while shopping in your store. Moreover, it helps to
attract, engage, and inform customers better with carefully designed
displays.
Sell targeted items: Some items bring in more profits than others,
and sellers want to sell more of these. Visual merchandising helps
highlight these targeted items and thus help sell them more.
Influence Buyer decisions: Visual merchandising also involves
using neuromarketing techniques to influence buyers’ decisions by
appealing to their unconscious minds. This involves strategic
product placement (profitable items are kept at the eye level), store
paint (to set the mood), fragrance (to make you want more), and
music (to influence you subconsciously).
Meet sales goals: Visual merchandising is the salesperson that
persuades the customer to purchase intended products
subconsciously. Marketers do this by strategically placing
profitable items, making them noticeable and tempting people to
buy them.
Market retail stores: A memorable store is what stands out in the
crowd of boring retail stores. Visual merchandising aims to make
the store stand out and find a place in the customers’ minds. This is
done by using visual cues, positioning, and aesthetics, making them
stop and look and, sometimes, even take photos or spread the word
organically.
Objectives Of Visual Merchandising
Customers enter a store by seeing two things – the brand and the store design.
Visual merchandising aims to influence customers by directing their attention
towards the store and then to certain areas inside the store, creating a positive
first impression.
Besides bringing in more customers, the process of visual merchandising aims
to –
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Creating a good customer experience,
Make the retail space visitor engage with space with all the senses
(hearing, sight, touch, smell, and taste)
Increase sales
Develop store design to target the right audience
Use store resources to get the most out of marketing ROI
Give a reason to customers to come back
Make the most out of promotional space.
Elements Of Visual Merchandising
Visual merchandising involves six distinct elements that work in conjunction to
help retailers create a unique experience for shoppers. They are –
Store Layout
It is the organised arrangement of retail space that helps customers find what
they’re looking for quickly. It includes store greeter, entry point, focal point,
shopping flow, signage, and display fixtures.
1. Store design: It is the physical look of the store that can be seen by
anybody walking into it. It includes vinyl graphics, store fixtures,
paint colour themes, lighting sources, and display fixtures.
2. Interior design: The interior layout of the retail store that
customers cannot see from the outside – it involves showroom floor
covers, countertops colours, merchandising fixtures.
3. Merchandise presentation: Product categories that are displayed
together (by size or type), linear vs non-linear displays
(merchandise arranged in a way that they have a path). It also
includes decisions about which type of merchandise is suitable for
the location and how to use the space effectively.
4. Focal Point: A display is incomplete without a focal point where
the attention is directed. This can be displays like mannequins, art
pieces, themed decorations (like Christmas), lighting fixtures, etc.
5. Empty Space: There is always a certain amount of empty space in
the store to improve the visual appearance, the flow of foot traffic,
and breathing room. It is used as an additional display area for
merchandise.
6. Display fixtures: A store fixture is anything installed within the
retail space to display items, such as rotating racks, shelves, or
tables.
7. Signage: Store signage helps customers navigate to the right area,
locate a product, special offers, and wayfinding. It can be in-store
signs at entrances and exits, backroom information boards, shelf
edge panels, window decals/signage.
8. Marketing collaterals/POP displays: Store brochures, price tags,
product cards, table-top visuals, floor decals and aisle signs are
used to spread the store’s message.
9. Promotional space: It includes backdrops for events and samples,
popcorn machines etc. They can be used to entice customers into
the store or encourage them to try something new.
10.
Mannequins: Mannequins are full-scale, detailed figures that
are used as life-sized models to display clothing. Besides clothing,
they can also be used to display props like jewellery and scarves.
11.
Brand elements: It includes any unique aspect that
customers identify with a brand. This can be packaging, logos, or
mascot figure that promote the brand and its visual identity.
Store Ambience
Store ambience creates a sensory experience by using lighting, music, colours or
scents, which are all designed to enhance the overall customer experience. The
store ambience directly affects other items in visual merchandising – it can
change the perception of merchandise based on how customers perceive it. It
includes:
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Colour: It is used to draw attention to certain items, create a mood
or theme. Colour is also an important element in retail marketing
because it will increase sales if marketers choose a colour that
matches their target audience’s colour preferences.
Lighting: The right lighting setting changes the ambience of any
space. It creates shadows with no visible distractions, gives the
merchandise a spotlight, and makes all colours brighter.
Music: It can be used to create a positive atmosphere that increases
sales because of the moods it arouses. Music also affects shoppers’
emotions – happy music will make shoppers cheerful, so they spend
more freely. Sad music makes people feel less energetic, so they
don’t spend as much.
Scent: It can be used to create a certain mood – it increases the
perceived value of products and makes customers more
comfortable, relaxed, and willing to make purchases.
Store Narrative
The narrative is the story that the retail space tells. It can be based on the
brand’s history and personality, the brand’s theme, the products sold there, or
any other popular story that communicates an interesting message. The narrative
creates a memorable experience for customers based on how it is presented –
every element of visual merchandising has to be reflected in it. It includes:
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Store Theme: The store’s theme aims to create the mood marketers
want their customers to associate with their products. The theme
may be displayed through interior design, brand elements, or
product selection. For example, a chocolate store may use warm
colours, creamy pastel hues, and soft music to promote the
‘chocolate experience’. The store theme may be based on a certain
season, event, holiday or trend. The theme will change with the
seasons to match the latest fashion trends.
Store Atmosphere: It combines store ambience with visual
merchandising elements that are used to convey a certain message
about the brand or product. For example, lighting can be used to
create a calm atmosphere for relaxation, while colours and music
can help customers feel energised. Buyers will associate these
feelings with the brand or product and come back for more in future
purchases.
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Storytelling: The retail space can be designed to tell a story about
the brand’s history, products, theme, or any other idea that matches
its business objectives. The narrative is displayed through all visual
elements in the store – interior design, product selection, and
merchandising methods have to complement it.
Benefits
Of
A
Good
Merchandising Strategy
Visual
A good visual merchandising strategy may prove to be a game-changer for your
business. Here are a few benefits you can get from implementing it –
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Increases store traffic: Through strategic placement of products
and displays, retail marketers attract potential buyers. Once the
customer is inside the store, retailers make them wander around and
lose themselves in a maze of merchandising displays, all intended
to direct their attention towards certain areas. Ikea is a perfect
example of a store that makes people travel around the space to find
products, creating an exciting and memorable shopping experience.
Increases sales: Right placements with complementary visual
elements draw buyers’ attention to a certain area. Retailers make
sure that the attention is not only drawn to a single product, but also
to related products or complementary items. The process of making
people wander around in a store also encourages them to discover
new things and be open for impulse buying – whether it is an extra
item they had not planned on purchasing or bought because it was
on sale. All this leads to more sales.
Leads to more repeat customers: A good store narrative is a great
way to retain customers because the experience they get from it will
be memorable and unique. They will associate that experience with
your brand or product and become more likely to choose them
again in future purchases.
Aids retail store marketing: Sometimes, good visual
merchandising leads to word of mouth marketing – customers will
recommend your store to their friends because of the shopping
experience they had. The narrative you’ve created for them has
become unforgettable, making it easier to market to past and future
customers. The store can also get organic Instagram and Pinterest
exposure for free, which is essential in the age of social media.
Visual Merchandising Examples
Visual merchandising can be seen at every retail store. The idea is to grab the
attention of potential customers through strategic placement of products and
visual elements, so they are drawn to certain areas in the store. Here are a few
examples of visually merchandised stores –
IKEA
IKEA is a great example of a company that uses visual merchandising to create
a memorable shopping experience. The products are displayed in a way that
makes people wander around the store, discover new things and be open to
buying an extra product or two – all this leads to more impulse purchases. Ikea
also does storytelling through its interior design, choosing colours and furniture
styles that reflect the brand’s theme or idea.
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