Floors and walls slow you down:
Watch out your steps for they are maneuvered. Department stores make use of the difference between carpet and linoleum to subtly steer customers around and hold them in certain places....
The concept of slowing down customers is to increase the time spent at the isle because more you spend time the more you tend to buy...
Sense of smell:
Retailers use something called as Olfactory marketing where scents are used to set a mood, promote products or position a brand. Most commonly used is the citrus smell in supermarkets that fools customers...
The effect of music:
You don’t need a scientist to tell you that music is hardwired to human emotions as it triggers the release of dopamine that influences your mood. As shoppers walk with the tempo of the music...
What best can be used to entice you than your own eye sight. Same as music, colours also tend to evoke feelings and retailers use it for their advantage. Like colour red is always associated with sale or offers because red stimulates a sense of alert...
Apple, the brand itself stands at creating an image as ‘state-of-the-art’ lifestyle. And Apple stores make best use of sensory marketing by intensifying communication...
Eye level, buy level:
Retail space planning is called planogram. It is a diagram indicating the positioning of specific product on shelves...
Trolley may seem like a boon while you shuffle around supermarket. But did you know they are helpers with a payment! The size of trolley or basket is larger than required so with the concept of ‘there is plenty of space left’, you tend to buy more....
Anchoring method:
Price Anchoring is a method where in the customer chooses the exact product...
The concept of something being free is more tantalizing than paying half the actual price, even though the amount of money which is paid for both the sales is identical. This being one of the reason, the other reason that buy 1 get 1 is more used is that..
Odd-even pricing; the magic of number 9:
Ever thought, why prices end with 99/- instead of just saying 100/-? Well it’s all to do with human psychology...