| Answer Upon |
Hubs | Hubbers | Topics | Request |
| #1 in Business | Subscribe Email Print |
|
You are here: Home > Business > Small Business > 5 Reason Why Retailers Struggle and Fail to Make a Decent Profit and What to Do About it |
|
Answer Upon - 5 Reason Why Retailers Struggle and Fail to Make a Decent Profit and What to Do About it
Using Dissonance To Increase Sales careful measuring from history to decide on the future.Procedures, customs, and traditions are often specifically established for the purposes of creating psychological commitment. Consider fraternity initiations, military boot camps, political rallies, protest marches, and demonstrations. When we make our vows, beliefs, statements, or endeavors public, we feel bound to them. We can back out on commitments and claims we've made public, but we will pay a psychological and emotional price. What's more, the more public we made those commitments, the greater the emotional price tag will be.Three Steps to Using the Law of DissonanceStep One: Get a CommitmentYou can create or reveal commitments in your prospects by ensuring that the commitments are public, affirmative, voluntary, and effortful (PAVE).PublicMake your prospect's This is where additional marketing can be extremely profitable, yet few retailers do it effectively. If you design and run a newspaper ad, make sure you have an offer on it so it makes it easier to track responses, sales and profits from sales to know if your ad worked or not. This is crucial! Don't assume your ad works as I have found 98% of all newspaper ads do not make even $1 profit enough to pay for the ad from the profit from the sales, which to me is the only measure of a successful ad. It takes great expertise to make good profits from newspaper ads. When you have a turn-key system to generate sales, it makes it so much easier to plan staffing needs. In regards to rent to turnover I have met business owners who are paying 32% of their turnover as rent and wondering why they can't make enough profit to even pay themselves. So get hold of some benchmark numbers for your industry, look on the web or ask your accountant and see how your rent compares to your turnover for your industry. One final tip... have each of your staff measure their own conversion rates, from walk in to paying customer as a percentage. This will automatically increase, just by m Identifying And Selecting A Six Sigma Consultant Let's look at what makes a retailer profits.When tested quality programs such as Six Sigma are implemented the right way, process improvement in a company can result in tangible gains within 3 to 6 months. Employees feel satisfied and ultimately, the shareholders also benefit from the overall results. While it is possible for business owners to study quality initiatives and effect changes within their organization on their own, sometimes an external consultant with expertise in Six Sigma might be the best person to help lead the change. Consultants are immune to a company's internal politics and have the advantage of exposure to information and best practices from other companies where they have implemented the procedure.Choosing The Appropriate ConsultantSelecting the right Six Sigma Consultant is a vital decision that can have a tremendous effect o It's just a few main things... 1. Number of stock turns in a year 2. Gross Margin or pricing strategy 3. How many staff you have working relative to turnover 4. Rent proportional to turnover or revenue 5. Conversion rate of walk in traffic to purchases Let's investigate all 5. Stock turns per year, from years of working with retailers, is something a lot of the shop keepers don't know. Work it out if you don't know by looking at how many times the cost price of your stock divides into your turnover in 12 months. e.g. If your stock was valued at $50,000 and you turned over $150,000 your number of stock turns would be 3. If your gross margin was 50% you would make $150,000 gross profit as well. Stock turns gives you profit, so therefore the more stock turns you do the greater the profit, this is important for you to remember. In retail you want as many stock turns as possible. But what affects stock turns is what we need to look at. Stock turns is affected by price and conversion rate (or selling skills). If your prices are much higher than your competitors this may (but not necessarily) affect your sales and hence stock turns. Conversion rates play a massive role in making profit. If you get 20 people a day walk into your shop but only 2 buy you won't be making much profit. How you approach customers is extremely critical as you can lose any chance of a sale by uttering just 4 words. I hope you don't take offence, but I am going to tell you the worst 4 words you can say... Can I help you? Every person has hear this a 1000 times so their reflex reply is virtually always ... no thanks, just looking! Sale lost! So I suggest you say to people - Hi, have you been into our store before - or something similar. If you have a lot of repeat business with people coming back very regularly I would recommend you say - Hi there, how long since you've been into our store? Either question has to elicit a yes or no answer. Either one is great as you can follow it up with - Really. Let me show you around! This is so simple, yet so powerful. I worked with one retailer who used this first line and with a bit more help and fine tuning he achieved a 100% success rate for a whole week! Yes, every person who walked in bought something. Prior to this sales system he was getting about 62% of walk in people buying. So try it out for yourself, let me know how you go with it. So let's look at how to increase stock turns, apart from the most powerful one, which is always sales training by using a different greeting... To increase stock turns you must find out what's selling and what isn't. You must measure to find out. Whatever stock has been in your store too long (which could be 3 months) you need to get rid of. In other words sale it off. I never recommend discounting by a percentage. This can be fatal! I suggest you mark down the price with a tag that says - Was $X, now $Y, save $Z. This works great. Or, just cross out one price and put the new lower price. Or you can put all stock you want to sell in a special place and tell customers if they buy something else in the shop for ($X) they can have anything in the special place for half price. The reason you MUST sale off old stock is due to opportunity cost. In retail you need to divide the whole floor up into squares then look at what is selling in each square. It's all about return on investment from rent paid. You must make a profit from every square in your business, so whatever occupies a square must be selling every 3 months or so. Whatever isn't selling in a square is costing you money, lost money from having something in the square that could be selling. This is called retail knowledge and comes with years of experience in your industry. Finding out what sells best with good margins is what retail profits are all about. Most retailers I have met say it's too much work to measure stock levels every 3 months, so they do it once a year because they are too busy. Busy-ness has nothing to do with profits. Busy people go bankrupt from business ownership every day. Let's look at the next point. Your pricing strategy or margins. I meet retailers all the time who don't know their gross margin or profit. When I ask them what their gross margin is they typically tell me 150% to which I reply you can't have over 100% profit. Unfortunately retailers mark up by a percentage, they don't often work on gross margin. Gross margin gives you gross profit and gross profit is what pays the rent and overheads, not mark up. That's why it's more important to know margin. So ask your accountant to work it out if you don't know how. I don't have much space here to explain it. Here's out last point to cover, how many staff you have working relative to turnover. This isn't a simple cut and dried answer. This takes careful measuring from history to decide on the future. This is where additional marketing can be extremely profitable, yet few retailers do it effectively. If you design and run a newspaper ad, make sure you have an offer on it so it makes it easier to track responses, sales and profits from sales to know if your ad worked or not. This is crucial! Don't assume your ad works as I have found 98% of all newspaper ads do not make even $1 profit enough to pay for the ad from the profit from the sales, which to me is the only measure of a successful ad. It takes great expertise to make good profits from newspaper ads. When you have a turn-key system to generate sales, it makes it so much easier to plan staffing needs. In regards to rent to turnover I have met business owners who are paying 32% of their turnover as rent and wondering why they can't make enough profit to even pay themselves. So get hold of some benchmark numbers for your industry, look on the web or ask your accountant and see how your rent compares to your turnover for your industry. One final tip... have each of your staff measure their own conversion rates, from walk in to paying customer as a percentage. This will automatically increase, just by me Tips for Junk Franchises ion rates play a massive role in making profit. If you get 20 people a day walk into your shop but only 2 buy you won't be making much profit. How you approach customers is extremely critical as you can lose any chance of a sale by uttering just 4 words.Junk hauling is a fun, profitable way to make some money. It also looks deceptively simple. Just pull up to somebody's house, toss their stuff in the back of your truck, get paid, and haul it off, right? Surely that's all there is to it.Like many things, if it really were that simple, everybody would be doing it. Granted, junk hauling isn't rocket science, but figuring out what works best by trial and error will be a long and bumpy road. Here are a few tips to get your junk-hauling business running smoothly.1) Use box trucks, not dump trucks. Yes, you can fit a lot of junk into a dump truck, but if you need a dump truck, you need to be hauling construction debris. The best way to make a junk-hauling business profitable is to not only get paid to haul the stuff off, but to sell it as well. By us I hope you don't take offence, but I am going to tell you the worst 4 words you can say... Can I help you? Every person has hear this a 1000 times so their reflex reply is virtually always ... no thanks, just looking! Sale lost! So I suggest you say to people - Hi, have you been into our store before - or something similar. If you have a lot of repeat business with people coming back very regularly I would recommend you say - Hi there, how long since you've been into our store? Either question has to elicit a yes or no answer. Either one is great as you can follow it up with - Really. Let me show you around! This is so simple, yet so powerful. I worked with one retailer who used this first line and with a bit more help and fine tuning he achieved a 100% success rate for a whole week! Yes, every person who walked in bought something. Prior to this sales system he was getting about 62% of walk in people buying. So try it out for yourself, let me know how you go with it. So let's look at how to increase stock turns, apart from the most powerful one, which is always sales training by using a different greeting... To increase stock turns you must find out what's selling and what isn't. You must measure to find out. Whatever stock has been in your store too long (which could be 3 months) you need to get rid of. In other words sale it off. I never recommend discounting by a percentage. This can be fatal! I suggest you mark down the price with a tag that says - Was $X, now $Y, save $Z. This works great. Or, just cross out one price and put the new lower price. Or you can put all stock you want to sell in a special place and tell customers if they buy something else in the shop for ($X) they can have anything in the special place for half price. The reason you MUST sale off old stock is due to opportunity cost. In retail you need to divide the whole floor up into squares then look at what is selling in each square. It's all about return on investment from rent paid. You must make a profit from every square in your business, so whatever occupies a square must be selling every 3 months or so. Whatever isn't selling in a square is costing you money, lost money from having something in the square that could be selling. This is called retail knowledge and comes with years of experience in your industry. Finding out what sells best with good margins is what retail profits are all about. Most retailers I have met say it's too much work to measure stock levels every 3 months, so they do it once a year because they are too busy. Busy-ness has nothing to do with profits. Busy people go bankrupt from business ownership every day. Let's look at the next point. Your pricing strategy or margins. I meet retailers all the time who don't know their gross margin or profit. When I ask them what their gross margin is they typically tell me 150% to which I reply you can't have over 100% profit. Unfortunately retailers mark up by a percentage, they don't often work on gross margin. Gross margin gives you gross profit and gross profit is what pays the rent and overheads, not mark up. That's why it's more important to know margin. So ask your accountant to work it out if you don't know how. I don't have much space here to explain it. Here's out last point to cover, how many staff you have working relative to turnover. This isn't a simple cut and dried answer. This takes careful measuring from history to decide on the future. This is where additional marketing can be extremely profitable, yet few retailers do it effectively. If you design and run a newspaper ad, make sure you have an offer on it so it makes it easier to track responses, sales and profits from sales to know if your ad worked or not. This is crucial! Don't assume your ad works as I have found 98% of all newspaper ads do not make even $1 profit enough to pay for the ad from the profit from the sales, which to me is the only measure of a successful ad. It takes great expertise to make good profits from newspaper ads. When you have a turn-key system to generate sales, it makes it so much easier to plan staffing needs. In regards to rent to turnover I have met business owners who are paying 32% of their turnover as rent and wondering why they can't make enough profit to even pay themselves. So get hold of some benchmark numbers for your industry, look on the web or ask your accountant and see how your rent compares to your turnover for your industry. One final tip... have each of your staff measure their own conversion rates, from walk in to paying customer as a percentage. This will automatically increase, just by m Industrial Weight Scales know how you go with it.Industrial Weight scales have a large number of applications. Scales can be used for shipping, warehouse, general weighing, analytical and parts counting scale and digital industrial cranes can be used for super heavy loads.A weighing scale is used industrially and commercially to weigh objects from feathers to tractors. A weighing scale measures the weight or mass of an object. A balance for instance measures accurately the mass of an object. Gravitational force affecting the balance cancels out leaving the measure of mass. Mass is measured in grams, kilograms, pounds, ounces or slugs.The original form of a weight scale consisted of a beam with a fulcrum at its center. To determine the mass of an object, a combination of reference weights was hung at one end of the beam while the object was hung at the othe So let's look at how to increase stock turns, apart from the most powerful one, which is always sales training by using a different greeting... To increase stock turns you must find out what's selling and what isn't. You must measure to find out. Whatever stock has been in your store too long (which could be 3 months) you need to get rid of. In other words sale it off. I never recommend discounting by a percentage. This can be fatal! I suggest you mark down the price with a tag that says - Was $X, now $Y, save $Z. This works great. Or, just cross out one price and put the new lower price. Or you can put all stock you want to sell in a special place and tell customers if they buy something else in the shop for ($X) they can have anything in the special place for half price. The reason you MUST sale off old stock is due to opportunity cost. In retail you need to divide the whole floor up into squares then look at what is selling in each square. It's all about return on investment from rent paid. You must make a profit from every square in your business, so whatever occupies a square must be selling every 3 months or so. Whatever isn't selling in a square is costing you money, lost money from having something in the square that could be selling. This is called retail knowledge and comes with years of experience in your industry. Finding out what sells best with good margins is what retail profits are all about. Most retailers I have met say it's too much work to measure stock levels every 3 months, so they do it once a year because they are too busy. Busy-ness has nothing to do with profits. Busy people go bankrupt from business ownership every day. Let's look at the next point. Your pricing strategy or margins. I meet retailers all the time who don't know their gross margin or profit. When I ask them what their gross margin is they typically tell me 150% to which I reply you can't have over 100% profit. Unfortunately retailers mark up by a percentage, they don't often work on gross margin. Gross margin gives you gross profit and gross profit is what pays the rent and overheads, not mark up. That's why it's more important to know margin. So ask your accountant to work it out if you don't know how. I don't have much space here to explain it. Here's out last point to cover, how many staff you have working relative to turnover. This isn't a simple cut and dried answer. This takes careful measuring from history to decide on the future. This is where additional marketing can be extremely profitable, yet few retailers do it effectively. If you design and run a newspaper ad, make sure you have an offer on it so it makes it easier to track responses, sales and profits from sales to know if your ad worked or not. This is crucial! Don't assume your ad works as I have found 98% of all newspaper ads do not make even $1 profit enough to pay for the ad from the profit from the sales, which to me is the only measure of a successful ad. It takes great expertise to make good profits from newspaper ads. When you have a turn-key system to generate sales, it makes it so much easier to plan staffing needs. In regards to rent to turnover I have met business owners who are paying 32% of their turnover as rent and wondering why they can't make enough profit to even pay themselves. So get hold of some benchmark numbers for your industry, look on the web or ask your accountant and see how your rent compares to your turnover for your industry. One final tip... have each of your staff measure their own conversion rates, from walk in to paying customer as a percentage. This will automatically increase, just by m Downsizing is Akin to Amputation – It Creates Negative Side Effects oney from having something in the square that could be selling.Downsizing is like an amputation, which removes part of one’s body but creates side effects such as low staff morale and bad reputation. If it is badly executed, it can wrench out the innovative spirit and loyalty of the staff. Downsizing and layoffs are part of the price of becoming more competitive. The price for not doing it, however, is much higher later if the issue is not properly resolved. It is not the only remedy available to the managers to improve a company’s performance. Other remedies include increasing the sales revenues and other cost control measures. However, the effect of the downsizing is more immediate and impactful.In the US, when the company is in trouble, it often commits corporate genocide by turning the guns on its own people. Subsequently, after a round of corporate genocid This is called retail knowledge and comes with years of experience in your industry. Finding out what sells best with good margins is what retail profits are all about. Most retailers I have met say it's too much work to measure stock levels every 3 months, so they do it once a year because they are too busy. Busy-ness has nothing to do with profits. Busy people go bankrupt from business ownership every day. Let's look at the next point. Your pricing strategy or margins. I meet retailers all the time who don't know their gross margin or profit. When I ask them what their gross margin is they typically tell me 150% to which I reply you can't have over 100% profit. Unfortunately retailers mark up by a percentage, they don't often work on gross margin. Gross margin gives you gross profit and gross profit is what pays the rent and overheads, not mark up. That's why it's more important to know margin. So ask your accountant to work it out if you don't know how. I don't have much space here to explain it. Here's out last point to cover, how many staff you have working relative to turnover. This isn't a simple cut and dried answer. This takes careful measuring from history to decide on the future. This is where additional marketing can be extremely profitable, yet few retailers do it effectively. If you design and run a newspaper ad, make sure you have an offer on it so it makes it easier to track responses, sales and profits from sales to know if your ad worked or not. This is crucial! Don't assume your ad works as I have found 98% of all newspaper ads do not make even $1 profit enough to pay for the ad from the profit from the sales, which to me is the only measure of a successful ad. It takes great expertise to make good profits from newspaper ads. When you have a turn-key system to generate sales, it makes it so much easier to plan staffing needs. In regards to rent to turnover I have met business owners who are paying 32% of their turnover as rent and wondering why they can't make enough profit to even pay themselves. So get hold of some benchmark numbers for your industry, look on the web or ask your accountant and see how your rent compares to your turnover for your industry. One final tip... have each of your staff measure their own conversion rates, from walk in to paying customer as a percentage. This will automatically increase, just by m A Sustainable Business Network Model for Southern Africa careful measuring from history to decide on the future.IntroductionThe relevance of the Southern African Development Community (SADC) regional integration process emanates in part from the view that there is a trade-off between regional integration and integration with the global economic system. Whilst integration with the global economy could provide the impetus for economic growth, regional integration could provide the required protection from the ills of globalization. This argument is based upon the belief system that regionalism could be used as an instrument to create a new equilibrium that balances the protection of the vulnerable and the interests of the particular population living in that environment against the integrative, technological dynamics associated with globalization.In this regard the SADC can typically be classified as a vulnerable regi This is where additional marketing can be extremely profitable, yet few retailers do it effectively. If you design and run a newspaper ad, make sure you have an offer on it so it makes it easier to track responses, sales and profits from sales to know if your ad worked or not. This is crucial! Don't assume your ad works as I have found 98% of all newspaper ads do not make even $1 profit enough to pay for the ad from the profit from the sales, which to me is the only measure of a successful ad. It takes great expertise to make good profits from newspaper ads. When you have a turn-key system to generate sales, it makes it so much easier to plan staffing needs. In regards to rent to turnover I have met business owners who are paying 32% of their turnover as rent and wondering why they can't make enough profit to even pay themselves. So get hold of some benchmark numbers for your industry, look on the web or ask your accountant and see how your rent compares to your turnover for your industry. One final tip... have each of your staff measure their own conversion rates, from walk in to paying customer as a percentage. This will automatically increase, just by measuring it! A very powerful thing to do. Put all these tips together, including changing how you greet customers, measure what sells and what doesn't, monitoring marketing returns, watching staff numbers and selling off items that haven't sold in a needed time frame, all will add up to BIG profit increase. And that's what you're in business to achieve isn't it?
HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
Related Articles:Leadership Matters Work Habits That Sustain Competitive Advantage Nurture Sales Leads with Direct Mail Marketing What You Can Learn From The Movie Business
|