Showroom Rotation Is Just Like Writing a Blog
Most experts agree that you should rearrange your showroom every three weeks. That way, every time a customer returns, she might find things she didn't see last time.
Essentially, rearranging your showroom creates a relationship with your customer before they even become a customer.
This slideshow is our effort to do exactly the same thing with you.
Enjoy,
CrossCheck
2. The venerable Jerry Epperson, who has been
commenting on the furniture industry for
decades, suggests that you re-arrange your
showroom every three weeks.
3. That way, every time a customer returns, she
might find things she didn’t see last time.
Essentially, rearranging your show room
creates a relationship with your customer
before they even become a customer.
4. This slideshow is our effort to do exactly the
same thing with you.
5. We serve a lot of furniture stores.
In fact, we had a booth at the North American
Home Furnishings Association tradeshow.
Charles was there:
6.
7. Since you matter to us (yes, you personally) we
try to create blog articles and slideshows that
you’ll find useful.
Which is sort of like you rearranging your
showroom to impress your prospects.
8. So let’s look at your showroom as if it were
your blog.
What do you do first?
9. “Know thyself,” as Socrates taught us.
Who are you as a furniture store owner or
manager?
14. Or, being totally honest, are you like this:
15.
16. As you know, customers respond to sincerity
more readily than anything else.
It’s YOUR store, so it has to reflect who YOU
are.
So once you have a clear self-image that you
can believe in…
17. …you need to identify a few main types of
customers.
We call these “personas”
18. Since everyone is unique and since you learn a
lot of peculiarities about your customers, given
the highly personal nature of your sale, you’ll
probably come up with too many of them at
first.
Optimally, you want five or six.
19. For our purposes in this slideshow, we’ll look
at just two.
Men and women.
20. Thanks to technology, we’re the first
generation since Socrates that can accurately
describe the differences between men and
women.
26. Men first.
Few things make a furniture salesperson smile as
broadly as a mature man who finds himself on his
own for the first time in decades.
He wants your help, he makes decisions relatively
quickly, and he pays full price up front.
Furniture nirvana.
27. Unfortunately he can remember only one piece
of furniture from his old life:
28.
29. So you have to help him see other furniture.
Do you want him to see this:
30.
31. Not an easy question, is it?
An open space invites people to move around.
It also makes it easy for him to look at each
piece.
But will that sell furniture?
32. That’s the essence of defining a persona.
It’s not just about who he is.
It’s about what he wants, and helping him
figure that out.
35. The antlers will draw him across the room
And while he’ll probably ignore the couch (it
has tassels) he might want any one of the other
pieces on display.
Without a doubt, he’ll appreciate the effort that
went into the presentation.
36. If you have a restoration work room, be sure to
include that on the tour.
38. …but the tour is what matters.
If he knows you’ve thought about him, he’ll
feel like you want him to be your customer.
In Men Are from Mars, Women Are from Venus,
John Gray writes that “Men are motivated
when they feel needed…”
39. If you’ve set up your showroom to make him feel that way,
he’ll respond.
40. Only, he may not respond the first time he sees
your showroom.
Marketing like this takes a little time.
Ultimately you’ll end up with better
relationships and more sales….
41. …but each customer may need to see things
arranged differently a few times before they sit
down with you.
46. So now let’s think about women.
The emoticon joke makes a good point: women
will have a much broader range of reactions to
your showroom.
You’ve probably seen this before: one day your
prospect looks like this:
47.
48. And the next day, sitting on the same couch
and looking at the same price, they look like
this:
49.
50. The complexities only begin there.
Since women have a broad range of reactions,
try to create evocative presentations.
51. You never really know what’s going to appeal
to someone until you watch them respond to it.
How does this make you feel:
52.
53. Are you at a cool hipster party meeting
fascinating people late at night?
Or are you in someone’s cold, dank basement?
54. If you can create a space that raises questions
like those, try to create another at the opposite
end of the spectrum:
55.
56. Are you visiting with tasteful world travelers
who will regale you with fascinating stories?
Or are you at your in-laws tract home, bored
out of your mind?
Watch your customer, and their reactions will
tell you where your sale lies
57. John Gray tells us that “…women are
motivated when they feel cherished.”
When you go out of your way to give your
prospect a broad array of experiences, her main
take-away is that you care about her home.
58.
59.
60.
61. The term is “Relationship Marketing”
And you can test it right now…
62. Do you appreciate this slideshow?
Do you feel that we care about your business?
63. If we wanted to tell you how we can help you
close sales and increase profits…
Would you listen?
64. You wouldn’t be here unless the answer was
“Yes”
But before we tell you about a service we offer
that can literally increase your revenue, lets
take one last look at your showroom as your
blog.
65. Your showroom seems passive, like a blog
article on a webpage…
…but in reality it can work really hard for you.
66.
67. It can create a relationship with a prospect before
you even greet them.
68.
69. If a prospect feels like they know you, they will
trust you.
If a prospect feels like you care about them,
and you took the time to think about them and
please them…
73. And that’s where we can help.
Because once your customer has made a
decision, they want their furniture in their
house -- right now.
74.
75. Why make them wait?
You know that over the course of the recession
Americans closed 400 million credit card
accounts.
You know that one in five people increased
their use of checks
76. And you know the reason is fiscal
responsibility.
Everyone from Millennials to Boomers has
become more financially responsible.
They don’t want financing and they don’t want
a credit card.
77.
78. They want their furniture.
If they’re at your competitor and they don’t
have the funds for it, your competitor loses the
sale.
But you work with us…
79.
80. …because you know we care about you.
And we have a service that lets you give your
customer what we call “in-home layaway”
It’s not financing…
81. …but it lets your customer take their purchase
home today…
…While guaranteeing your revenue.
Let us tell you how it works.
Learn more here, and we’ll be in touch:
82. Commonly known as "hold check," this service is
designed to provide customers a flexible
payment schedule and increase sales for your
business. Consumers can write 2 - 4 checks for
the total purchase amount, up to 30 - 45 days,
and all funds are guaranteed by a check service
provider
Approval of out-of-town, out-of-state, even
checks from Canada and US territories
Checks are approved quickly and easily at the
POS via Internet, phone or terminal
83. CrossCheck, Inc.
1440 North McDowell Rd.
Petaluma, CA 94954
888-937-2249
sales@cross-check.com
www.Cross-Check.com