The Secrets Of Visual Merchandising
Visual Merchandising 101
by Steven “Fish” Fisher
Yes, the way you display your tee shirts matters!
How your store looks is sometimes more important that what you are
selling. Is your store entrance inviting? Are your tables and wall
standards easy to get to? Are you telling a good visual “story” with
your windows? We’ll explore the basics on merchandising your store from
a visual perspective and also discuss how to build a formula to keep
your store fresh and exciting to your frequent shoppers as well as your
new guests.
Let’s start off with a quick definition from ddi
magazine – “Visual merchandising takes your consumer from the retail
display to the cash register. Encouraging sales through creative color
and commercial retail design is a key element to keeping a customer
interested.” Nicely put. So what does this mean?
Here are a few goals to keep in mind with VM (visual merchandising)
• Create excitement to draw your customer into your world
• Stimulate all 5 senses
– attract not only with sight but smells (aroma therapy but not too
strong), touch, sound (watch the music in your stores as it may scare
the moms and the dollars they are attached to away) and taste too (salt
water taffy bits for tasting – you will sell more boxes this way).
• Plan! What is your traffic flow? Do I have the merchandise to set a promotional display? Set a clear image to your end result
• Demographics – the who and what. Who are you attracting and what are you selling them
• Be inspired! Visit other retailers and capture the environment around you
Let’s also think in terms of KAOS in your merchandising
• Kinetic – depict motion, not just static imagery
• Assortment – show depth in your presentation of multiple product offerings
• Over Communicate – Carry a sales theme through the department or entire store and make sure your associates are in the loop
• Sale!
– Again, your end result is to attract sales by leading the customer
through the entire store. Make sure discount merchandise is in the back
planogram
Plan on what you are merchandising; what tools, fixtures or props will
be needed. Do you have a shipment of product meant for display? If so
do you have enough? Again, keep the end result in mind and share your
presentations if you have multiple locations.

Your planogram should also include a “blueprint” of the entire store.
Take time to study the traffic flow. Are there any dead spots or
un-shoppable corners? What areas of the store will a display have the
most impact? Your main goal here is to focus your guest’s attention as
you want them to shop the entire store. The planogram is the roadmap to
your merchandising success.

traffic flow
As you study the traffic flow put yourself in your guest’s shoes and absorb what they see. Let’s take a walk…
• Your windows facing the parking lot or walkway outside your entrance
set the theme for the visit. Make sure graphics are clean or the story
you are telling with a display has clarity.
• Enter your store into
the “Transition Zone” – about the first 5 feet or so past the door.
Here your customer is taking the store in, removing sunglasses,
adjusting to the sights, sounds and smells. Not much retail is done
here, so no need to worry about merchandising.
• Past here is the
“Strike Zone” -- or your first impression “speed bump”. Place a table
presentation here with a good average price point. Not “sale” items,
but not high-end either. Continue the theme from your windows here.
• Next stop is likely the inside wall to the right of the entrance. In
western cultures we tend to move to the right of an obstacle. Continue
with the medium-priced product and possibly carry on with like-product
or similar branded items from the front focal presentation.
• The
back of the store should be reserved for high-demand and higher-priced
items. This makes your quest walk the entire store to get to the good
stuff – whether it is a sale zone or your high-ticket merchandise. Make
sure this area is visible from the front. Display add-on and impulse
items here as well to help with your multiple sales.

• Keep your aisles wide. Make sure you are ADA (Americans with
Disabilities Act) compliant (36” wide or face the possibility of up to
a $5,000 fine) and it helps your customers roam a bit more freely
through all your merchandise. Allows for better visibility from your
associates as well.
• Your cash wrap is an important security post! You need great
visibility of the sales floor here – especially if you are asking a
minimal sales force to protect your merchandise. Avoid clutter and keep
an open counter top for your guests to place their purchases. If there
is a bunch of junk on the counter the guest will be confused and might
limit additional shopping. You should place add-on and impulse items
here for that last grab for their cash but place items above, near or
behind the associate – neatly. Be aware of the size of your cash wrap –
too big and you are taking up valuable floor space! The best placement
for the cash wrap is to the left of the entrance (to the right facing
out).

fixtures
So you know your store plan a bit better but how do you display all the
stuff you want to sell? On fixtures! Take a look at your needs – they
are different by store type and they can be different between
departments. Are you fixturing for ease and speed (likely in gift shops
catering to tourists) or are you creating ambiance (think surf, skate
or other board sports environments).
Make a checklist next as
you’ll be looking for sturdy fixtures that offer the most flexibility
to your store. Make sure the fixtures will relate to your needs – can
you attach shelves, hanging bars, a waterfall or face-out? Make sure
you get all the hardware too – screws, bolts and attachments. Look at
the return on your investment as well. Don’t buy a $10,000 fixture to
display low priced shells or surf wax. Keep round racks and straight
bars for sale merchandise and use four-ways for non-folded apparel and
gondolas for accessories.
Just like the cash wrap watch your
size here. Don’t bog down your sales floor with a huge shelving unit
but don’t waste space by placing a fixture with little impact that may
go unnoticed. Think outside the box with your fixture solutions – have
fun with an armoire you found at a yard sale! Furniture makes great
displays. Also take advantage of your vendor’s hospitality with any
fixtures they offer but don’t overdo it when placing them on the sales
floor. Too many different themes upset your floor balance and confuse
your customer. One final note – rotate your floor pattern often.
Especially if you have a repeat customer base – Moms and the bro’s that
hang out on Saturday mornings after a surf. You may have put a fresh
stack of tee shirts on the front table but if it’s the same table in
the same place your customer will not “see” the change.

lighting
How will your guest see the goods? Lighting of course! Lighting is key
component in emphasizing your product and promotional displays. Get to
know your lights…
• General lighting for the sales floor, usually fixed in place.
• Accent lighting for accentuating displays, flexible – cans, pendants or track.
• Task lighting is for cash wraps, display counters and work spaces
Familiarize yourself on the different types of light bulbs –
fluorescent, incandescent, halogen and CFL’s (compact florescent light
bulb). Identify the potential cost and weigh your options. CFL’s have a
heavier up-front cost but they last a long time (5,000 to 10,000
hours), use less electricity and most come with a guarantee. Think
green here – both the environment and your wallet!
signs
Merchandise is now placed on your fixtures and on the floor. Hooray!
Let’s communicate, educate and direct traffic with some signs. Up
front, remember the windows? Promo decals are a clean and colorful
approach to letting your guest know what’s behind door # 1. Take
advantage of your vendor’s generosity here as those promo decals hammer
the point home on what you carry… in a bright colorful lifestyle-laden
message. Just don’t mix and match with brands.
Inside the
store carry and reinforce the theme forward by matching the art, font,
colors and message to tie the sales floor together. Make sure to
develop a sign template to work from for consistency and to avoid
confusing your guest. Invest in a laminating machine too. As most
resort and surf shops are near the water there is added humidity that
will curl your signs quickly. Avoid handwritten signs at all costs!
It’s hard to have a consistent theme and even though you can read your
writing, not everybody else can. Trust me on this one – why do you
think I am typing this?!

promotional displays
You have your traffic pattern set and you know “where and what” to do
with your promotional displays. What’s your display going to show?
• Similar product – This will educate your guest the depth of product
you carry in a particular category. Could be souvenir shot glasses and
coffee mugs, could be a collection of “green” organic tees from a
variety of manufacturers
• Cross-Mix Product – Here you are mixing
categories to show a breadth of merchandise; perhaps to support the
“lifestyle” and boost multiple sales
• Branded – A promotion for a
particular vendor and usually offer a cross-mix to show your guest all
that the brand represents in your store
Gather up the
merchandise and also think of some props to help tell the story. Get
crazy here – witty, attention grabbing and eclectic. Set your theme to
support a local event like a parade or music festival. Theme it out for
a holiday sale. Use large items if you can – a bike for instance. Use
thought-provoking placements like a mannequin form “shredding” in the
top corner of a room or hang a Christmas tree upside down in the middle
from the ceiling! It’s fun and saves valuable floor space! It will
definitely catch your guest’s eye and they’ll tell their friends. Make
your own props too – buy some brightly-colored bowls, turn one upside
down and hot glue them together and fill the top for a nice touch.
When setting your promotion display tables or walls follow a theme with your items –
• light to dark
• left to right
• small to large
Tables should be set along an entrance or aisle with the lower items to
the inside of the corridor and the taller items to outside like the
image below.

Here are a few nice tables from my recent trip to the Mid-Atlantic.

The Billabong Store in Ocean City, MD

Quiet Storm in Rehoboth Beach, DE

Freedom Surf Shop in Vah Beach, VA
When placing tables make a positive impact with your walls. Don’t hide
the walls. Instead use your table displays to draw the eye and focus
the attention on the wall behind.

We can see your walls but is there a technique for placing product
here? Yep - light to dark, small to large, left to right. You can
achieve this horizontally or vertically

Just like table displays remember to keep your walls full. You don’t
want blank, negative space. If you have a small area that just can’t be
merchandised toss in a cool picture or frame a vendor’s logo. Use props
around your forms on shelves.
More pics from my trip.

RVCA wall at Coastal Edge in Vah Beach, VA

17th Street Surf Shop’s Red Mill location in Vah Beach, VA

Dewey Beach Surf Shop in DE
Let’s look at your windows again. As I mentioned earlier, the window is
really your first chance to grab your guest’s attention. Banners and
decals make a nice, clean statement and can help promote the lifestyle
with impact, or they can draw customers in for a holiday sale.
You can also use your windows for promotional displays; same chance for
impact here. Use props to tell the story. Take advantage of creating a
scene or celebrating a local festival or other local interest theme.
Again – big props are fun and whimsical. I love using a Weber grill for
summer displays. Crack the top open and use the grill for a shelf, the
warming rack for accessories like can cozies or ball caps and a cooler
underneath full of tee shirts rolled into a tube like a can of your
favorite beverage.
If you do go the “display route” with your
window, remember to check it regularly for maintenance. Change the
light bulbs, pick up the dead bugs, freshen a toppled prop and watch
for faded garments. A rule of thumb is not to use red, orange or purple
apparel that receives direct sunlight as it will fade in a matter of
days.

maintenance
Now that your store is set and your displays are done you need to
create a maintenance schedule. It is critical to keep your store
looking fresh at all times as everything your guests experience is a
reflection of you. General housekeeping aside, train your associates to
reload and recover your displays and floor stock. This will maximize
your selling as your customer can’t buy it if they don’t see it! Refold
and resize your promotional displays to avoid confusion – a clear
presentation helps your guest zoom into what they want and eases them
to the cash register. This is an ongoing and daily process. You never
know when a busload of tourists are going to come in and wipe your
displays out, which is a good thing! Just make sure to fill back in.
Here’s a great trick - Take a snapshot with a digital camera of your
wall sets, table displays and windows and post them, along with the
planogram, behind the stockroom door or in a folder behind the counter.
That way your staff can refresh from the visual and make it perfect
each time.

tools and supplies
Here’s a quick list of tools and supplies you’ll need for doing basic visual merchandising:
• planner for sale dates, holidays
• tool box, ladder
• hammer, nails
• phillips and flat screwdrivers, assorted screws
• utility knife, scissors
• straight pins, tacks
• fishing line, twine
• binder clips or clothes pins
• tape measurer
• pencil
• two faced tape, velcro
• zip ties
• hot glue gun and glue sticks
• folding board, folding table
• spare light bulbs
• glass cleaner, paper towels
• duster
• steamer

vm contacts
Some publications, magazines and website to sharpen your skills:
– why we buy
• by paco underhill, www.envirosell.com
– ddi magazine (display and design ideas)
• www.ddimagazine.com, 847.763.9050
– nadi (national association of display industries)
• www.nadi-global.com, 954.893.7225
– visual merchandising and store design magazine
• 513.421.2025
– institute of store planners
• 800.379.9912
– national association of store fixture manufacturers
• 954.893.7300
– big picture
• www.bigpicture.net
– screen web
• www.screenweb.net
– sign web
• www.signweb.com
– where it’s at retail
• www.where-it’s-at.com
– visual store