Retailers facing a challenging environment in which there are too
few customers spending too little money may find some ways to
improve business by reading the latest book from consumer insights
expert Pam Danziger, Shopping: Why We Love It and How Retailers
Can Create the Ultimate Customer Experience. The book offers
practical ideas and business-building solutions that retailers can
implement immediately to attract more shoppers and increase basket
ring.
"Next year, more than ever, retailers need to be at the top of
their game," noted Danziger, who is president of Stevens, Pa.-based
Unity Marketing. "With shoppers super-cautious about their
spending, retailers need to give them a reason to come shopping --
but shopping alone can't be the reason. They need to draw them into
the store by offering an experience that makes shopping there fun,
engaging and entertaining. That is the key for retailers to survive
in this recession and what my book Shopping is all
about."
Shopper behavior research has found two factors for getting people
to spend more money on shopping trips: Increase the amount of
shopper time spent in the store, and increase shoppers' interaction
with merchandise and staff.
Danziger discusses seven factors, dubbed the "Pop Equation," that
successful stores make use of to transform the shopping experience
in their stores. Employing clear, practical examples, her book
illustrates how different retailers have used each of these seven
factors in the Pop Equation to "make their shop pop."
Those stores that succeed do the following: encourage high levels
of customer involvement and interaction; evoke shopper curiosity;
have a contagious, electric quality; present a convergence between
atmosphere, store design and merchandise; express an authentic
concept; are priced right for the value; and offer an environment
that is accessible, nonexclusive and free from pretensions.
"A shop that pops becomes a destination for loyal customers to
visit again and again, not because they need to buy anything, but
because they want the thrill of shopping there once more," notes
Danziger. "A shop that pops thrives because all the while shoppers
are getting their experiential thrill, they are also shopping and
spending money."
Fueled by in-depth research about what people want when they shop,
Shopping profiles nearly 20 retailers who have overcome
obstacles to succeed, including Charlottesville, Va.-based upscale
food retailer Feast!, where customers are offered generous samples
of rare artisanal cheeses and locally grown produce. The store's
mission is to "get it in their mouth and make a sale."
According to Danziger: "[The retailers featured in the book] have
learned the secret of successful retailing and that is: It is less
about what you sell and more about how you sell it. In other words,
it is all about creating a shopping experience for the customer.
Further, the lessons in Shopping apply to both large
national retailers as well as small independent mom-and-pop stores,
and anyone else involved in retail."
As well as reading the book, retailers can find out how well their
stores are creating an experience for customers, and how they can
enhance the shopping experience in their stores, by taking the
"Shops that Pop" quiz at http://www.whypeoplebuy.com/cms/Home_Page/Pams_Books.php.





