Although some people enter your store knowing exactly what they want, an increasing number of shoppers arrive expecting you to guide them toward products of potential interest. They've actually been trained from their online experiences ("other customers bought this item") to expect similar help in retail. And although some people are really good at visualizing how various items should or could work together, a surprising number of people need your help with this.
This boosts customer satisfaction and loyalty in addition to sales because – did you know this? – shoppers don’t buy products, they buy solutions. Who doesn’t appreciate a little help simplifying their life?
It’s easy to think of effective cross merchandising examples:
You get the idea. To be truly effective, though, the items you pair must relate obviously to one another. If it’s a puzzler for shoppers, they won’t waste time on it.
Demos work well, too. That new panini grill? Toast up some sandwiches, hand out bite-size samples, and watch customers snap up the artisan bread and cheese stocked in the display. (The wonderful aroma will draw shoppers to your display, too.)
Adding a “how to” component helps customers understand what to do with new products they may not be familiar with, too. That encourages them to try additional products.
You can also pair shopper favorites with new or trendy products in the same vertical. This introduces new items and gives them “credence” at the same time.
You go to the store to buy lettuce but forget the salad dressing – unless, there it is, right next to the veggies. Or you buy all the items you need to create a killer new outfit, including that perfect necklace you didn’t intend to buy, thanks to the suggestive grouping on the mannequin.
The key – as with all things retail – is careful advance planning. Random groupings, irrelevant placement, or over-filled displays with too many options will be counter-productive because they will be confusing or look cluttered instead of enticing.
On the plus side, you can use product groupings to boost sales throughout your store. Use your planogram to determine where to place these groupings. (Hint: endcaps or similar display types are big eye-catchers.)
We see cross merchandising every day, but are your customers seeing enough of it in your store?