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Marketing Checklist (Retail)

 This Guide is a checklist for the owner-manager of a retail business. The questions cover areas that undergird retail marketing as well as deal with obvious aspects like customer analysis, buying, pricing, and promotion. You can use it to evaluate your current status and, perhaps, to rethink certain decisions.

If your retail firm is to be successful over the long run, it must satisfy the needs and desires of its present and potential Customers. Sound Buying means knowing where to buy, what to buy, how much to buy, and how to place an order. This requires familiarity with old and new products, adequate and working with suppliers in ways that benefit the store. In Pricing, you need to understand the market forces affecting your business, plan the price policies that you will follow, and know whether or not your pricing policies meet State and Federal regulations.

You need to be familiar with various types of Promotion and when, where, and how to use them. In addition, a credit program or other special customer services can be attractions.

Under the heading of Management goes the establishment of both long- and short-range goals. How you set up your organization and how you communicate with your employees are crucial factors in the accomplishment of your goals. Of equal importance to good management is the ability to keep and make use of accurate Financial Records. It also pays to examine your Insurance coverage in various areas.

In answering the following questions, you will be reminded of what you may still need to do to round out all marketing aspects of your business.

Customer Analysis

  • Who are your target customers and what are they seeking from you?
  • Have you estimated the total market you share with competition?
  • Should you try to appeal to this entire market rather than a segment(s)?
  • If you concentrate on a segment, is it large enough to be profitable?
  • Have you looked into possible changes taking place among your target customers which could significantly affect your business?
  • Can you forsee changes in the makeup of your store's neighborhood?
  • Are incomes in the community apt to be stable?
  • Is the community's population subject to fluctuation?
  • Do you stress a special area of appeal, such as lower prices, better quality, wider selection, convenient hours?
  • Do you ask your customers for suggestions on ways to improve your operation?
  • Do you use "want slips"?
  • Do you belong to a trade association?
  • Do you subscribe to important trade publications?
  • Have you considered using a consumer questionnaire to aid you in determining customer needs?
  • Do you visit market shows and conventions to help anticipate customer wants?
  • Do most of your customers buy on weekends?
  • Do sales increase in the evening?
  • Do the majority of your customers prefer buying on credit?

Buying

  • Have you a merchandise budget (planned purchases) for each season?
  • Does it take into consideration planned sales for the season?
  • Does it achieve a planned stock turnover?
  • Have you broken it down by departments or merchandise classifications?
  • Have you a formal plan for deciding what to buy and from whom?
  • Have you a system for reviewing new items coming onto the market?
  • Have you considered using a basic stock list or a model stock plan in your buying?
  • Are you using some sort of unit control system?
  • Do you keep track of the success of your buying decisions in previous years to aid you in next year's buying?
  • Do you attempt to consolidate your purchases with two or three principal suppliers?
  • Have you a useful supplier evaluation system for determining their performance?
  • Have you established a planned gross margin for your firm's operation and are you buying so as to achieve it?

Pricing

  • Have you established a set of pricing policies?
  • Have you determined whether to price below, at, or above the market?
  • Do you set specific markups for each product?
  • Do you set markups for each product categories?
  • Do you use a one-price policy rather than bargain with customers?
  • Do you offer discounts for quality purchases, or to special groups?
  • Do you set prices to cover full costs on every sale?
  • Have you developed policy on when to take markdowns and how large?
  • Do the prices you have established earn planned gross margin?
  • Do you clearly understand the market forces affecting your pricing methods?
  • Do you know which products are slow movers and which are fast?
  • Do you take into consideration when pricing?
  • Do you know which products are prices sensitive to your customers, that is, when a slight increase in price will lead to a big dropoff in demand?
  • Do you know the maximum price customers will pay for certain products?
  • If the prices on some products are dropped too low, do buyers hesitate?
  • Is there a specific time of year when your competitors have sales?
  • Do your customers expect sales at certain times?
  • Have you determined whether or not a series of sales is better than one clearance sale?
  • Do you know what role you want price to play in your overall retailing strategy?
  • Are you influenced by competitor's price changes?
  • Are there restrictions regarding prices you can charge?
  • Do any of your suppliers set a minimum standard at which it can be sold?
  • Does your State have fair trade practice acts which require you to mark up your merchandise by a minimum percentage?
  • Are there any State regulations on how long "close-out" sales can be advertised?
  • Are you sure you know all the regulations affecting your business, such as two-for-one sales and the like?
  • Do you issue "rainchecks" to customers when sale items are sold out so they can purchase later at sale price?

Promotion

  • Are you familiar with the strengths and weaknesses of various promotional methods?
  • Have you considered how each type might be used for your firm?
  • Do you know which of your items can be successfully advertised?
  • Do you know which can be sold best by demonstrations?
  • Do you know when it is profitable to use institutional advertising?
  • Do you know when product advertising is better?
  • Do you know which of the media (radio, television, newspapers, yellow pages, handbills) can most effectively reach your target group?
  • Do you know what can and cannot be said in your ads (Truth in Advertising requirements)?
  • Can you make use of direct mail?
  • Is a good mailing list available?
  • Are your promotional efforts fairly regular?
  • Do you concentrate them on certain seasons?
  • Are certain periods of the week better than others?
  • Is there available financial or technical assistance which you can use to enhance your promotional efforts?
  • Can you get help from local newspapers, radio, or television?
  • Are cooperative advertising funds available from suppliers?
  • Do you tie your local efforts to your supplier's national program?
  • Do you join with other merchants in area-wide programs?
  • Have you looked for ratios to estimate what comparable firms are spending on promotion?
  • Do you study the advertising of other successful retail firms, as well as of your competitors?
  • Have you some ways of measuring the success of the various promotional programs you are using?
  • Are your products displayed to maximize their appeal within the store?
  • Do you know which of your items have unusual eye appeal and can be effective in displays?
  • Have you figured out the best locations in the store for displays?
  • Are you making use of window displays to attract customers?
  • If you use multitiered display stands or gondolas, do you know which shelves are the best sellers?
  • Have you a schedule for changing various displays?
  • Do you know which items are bought on "impulse" and therefore should be placed in high traffic areas?
  • Where price is important, do you make sure the price cards are easy to read?
  • Do your suppliers offer financing of accounts receivable, floor planning, and so forth?
  • Do you know what type of credit program (if any) you should offer?
  • Does the nature of your operation require some type of credit for your customers?
  • Have you discussed credit operations with your local credit bureau?
  • Would a credit program be a good sales tool?
  • Is a credit program of your own desirable?
  • Have you looked into other programs of credit cards?
  • If you set up your own credit program, do you know what standards you should use in determining which customers can receive credit, for what time periods, and in what amounts?
  • Do you know all of the costs involved?
  • Will the interest you charge pay for these costs?
  • Do you know about the Fair Credit Reporting Act?
  • Are you familiar with the Truth-in-Lending legislation?
  • Have you determined a safe percentage off your business to have on credit program with your accountant and attorney?
  • Do you offer some special customer services?
  • If you offer delivery service, do you own your vehicles?
  • Have you considered leasing them instead?
  • Have you thought about using commercial delivery service?
  • Do you charge for delivery?
  • If not, do you know how to work the delivery expenses into the selling price of your products?
  • Have you a policy for handling merchandise returned by customers?
  • Have you considered certain obligations to your community, in terms of charitable contributions, donations for school functions, ads in school yearbooks?
  • Do you participate in activities of your chamber of commerce, merchants' association, better business bureau, or other civic organizations?

Management

  • Have you developed a set of plans for the year's operations?
  • Do your plans provide methods to deal with competition?
  • Do they contain creative approaches to solving problems?
  • Are they realistic?
  • Are they stated in such a way that you know when they have been achieved?
  • Have you a formal plan for setting aside money to meet any quarterly tax payments?
  • Are you organized effectively?
  • Are job descriptions and authority for responsibilities clearly stated?
  • Does your organizational structure minimize duplication of effort and maximize the use of each employee's skills?
  • Do employees understand how they will be rated for promotion and salary increases?
  • Does your wage schedule meet the local rate for similar work and retain competent employees?
  • Would you or some of your employees profit by taking business education courses offered at local schools?
  • Will training help your employees achieve better results?
  • Do your experienced employees help train new and part-time employees?
  • Have you good working conditions?
  • Do you use positive personal leadership techniques like being impartial, giving words of encouragement and congratulations, and listening to complaints?
  • Are you familiar with the Fair Labor Standards Act as it applies to minimum wages, overtime payments, and child labor?
  • Do you avoid all forms of discrimination in your employment practices?
  • Do you have a formal program for motivating employees?
  • Have you taken steps to minimize shoplifting and internal theft?
  • Have you an effective system for communicating with employees?
  • Are they informed on those plans and results that effect their work?
  • Do you hold regular meetings that include all personnel?
  • Do your employees have their own bulletin board for both material you need to post and items they with to post?
  • Have the "rules and regulations" been explained to each employee?
  • Does each employee have a written copy?
  • Is each employee familiar with other positions and departments?
  • Do you have an "open door" policy in your office?

Financial Analysis and Control

  • Have you established a useful accounting system?
  • Do you know the minimum amount of records you need for good control?
  • Do you know all the records you should keep to aid you in meeting your tax obligations on time?
  • Do your Sales records give you the key information you need to make sound decisions?
  • Can you separate cash sales from charge sales?
  • Can sales be broken down by department?
  • Can they be broken down by merchandise classification?
  • Do they provide a way to assess each salesperson's performance?
  • Do your Inventory records give you the key information you need to make sound decisions?
  • Do they show how much you have invested in merchandise without the necessity of a physical inventory?
  • Do you know the difference between inventory valuation at cost and at market?
  • can you tell which one shows a loss in the period earned?
  • Can you tell which one conserves cash?
  • Do you understand the pros and cons of the cost method of inventory accounting versus the retail method?
  • Have you found an accounting method that shows the amount of inventory shortages in a year?
  • Do your Expense records give you the key information you need to make sound decisions?
  • Do you know which expense items you have the greatest control over?
  • Are the records sufficiently detailed to identify where the money goes?
  • Can you detect those expenses not necessary to the successful operation of your business?
  • Do you effectively use the information on your profit and loss statement and balance sheet?
  • Do you analyze monthly financial statements?
  • can you interpret your financial statements in terms of how you did last year and whether you met this year's goals?
  • Do your financial statements compare favorably with other similar businesses in terms of sales, cost of sales, and expenses?
  • Are you undercapitalized?
  • Have you borrowed more than you can easily pay back out of profits?
  • Can you see ways to improve your profit position by improving your gross margin?
  • Do you use the information contained in your financial statements to prepare a cash budget?

Insurance

  • Have you adequate insurance coverage?
  • Do you have up-to-date fire coverage on both your building equipment and inventory?
  • Does your liability insurance cover bodily injuries as well as such problems as libel and slander suits?
  • Are you familiar with your obligations to employees under both common law and worker's compensation?
  • Do you spread your insurance coverage among a number of agents and take the risk of overlapping coverage or gaps which may raise questions as to which firm is responsible?
  • Has your insurance agent shown you how you can cut premiums in areas like fleet automobile coverage, proper classification of employees under worker's compensation, cutting back on seasonal inventory insurance?
  • Have you looked into other insurance coverage, such as business interruption insurance or criminal insurance?
  • Do you have some fringe benefit insurance for your employees (group life, group health, or retirement insurance)?

These questions are meant to help you analyze your retail operation from the marketing viewpoint. You should know the strengths of your business and products. You must also know the real problems you are up against. Your business depends on your good sense and management foresight. You must adapt to new markets, product changes, and be innovative to keep your business growing.

Food For Thought
Imagine for a moment that time is an illusion, and you have touched eternity.
Time is an extremely useful tool that we have devised in order to explain and to organize the world around us. But it is only a tool. It does not define us. Our essence transcends the limiting concept of time.

If we allow ourselves to be defined by time, then we get bogged down by anger or resentment about the past, anxiety and worry about the future, and the limitations imposed by how "old" or "young" we are.

Now is the only thing we have. In that sense, there really is no such thing as time. The past and the future, while useful concepts, do not currently exist. When we become too dependent upon the past or the future, we deny ourselves the joy of the now. When we ignore the now, it escapes and does not return.

Life must be lived now. You simply cannot be successful by doing things in the future. Plan for the future, yes, but live in the present. And no matter how great your accomplishments have been in the past, it is only by continuing to grow and seek new challenges that you remain full of life.

Treasure the past, welcome the future, and live your life in the precious moment that is now.
The words you are reading were written just a few hours ago in a home on a quiet street in Austin, Texas, and then transmitted to a computer in Florida for distribution around the world. As you read this message, it is also being read by people throughout North America, in Australia, South Africa, Norway, Germany, Malaysia, Russia and other places around the world.
The amazing thing is not so much the technology with which this is accomplished -- the technology itself has been around for decades. The amazing thing is that this technology, the ability to communicate instantaneously with thousands of people who share an interest in personal development (or any subject), is available to just about anyone. It doesn't take specialized equipment, a large investment, or highly technical skills -- any person of reasonable means and average intelligence can do it.

The implications of this are enormous. We are witnessing the emergence of a global conciousness of sorts. Information, ideas and concepts can evolve in a way that has never before been possible, at an unprecedented pace. Collaboration and discussion on a very intimate and detailed level can occur outside the limitations of time and space.

What does this mean for us as individual human beings? To a large extent, it frees us to become the people we were meant to be. It allows us to easily connect with others who value what we have to offer, be it an expertise in hockey, an understanding of sub-atomic physics, a skill in architectural photography or a consuming interest in Wagnerian opera.

Success in life used to depend largely upon "fitting in" to the physical and societal environment that you found yourself in. If you lived in a tiny West Texas town, or in the Australian Outback, you were relatively limited in the diversity of social interactions that you could pursue. The global information network has changed all that.

In the old paradigm of the Industrial Age, society rewarded those who designed and produced products for the masses, products which were targeted for the "lowest common denominator" in order to have the greatest mass appeal. This inevitably led to compromise on the part of creators and producers.

Now, as individuals become more interconnected, society is beginning to reward true creativity, innovation and passion.

How do you thrive in the Information Age, when traditional industry is downsizing your job out of existance? By following your heart, by doing what you love, and by becoming the best at it. Never has the time been more right for becoming the person you were meant to be.

Life is a continual learning experience. Make the commitment to never stop learning, and you'll live a vibrant, fulfilling life.
During our formal education we get the mistaken impression that we need someone else -- a teacher -- in order to learn. And there are many excellent teachers who have devoted their lives to educating others.

However, your best teacher is YOU. Life is always presenting you with learning experiences. You can choose to learn from them or not. It's all in your attitude. Everything that happens to you, both "good" and "bad" -- especially "bad" -- is an opportunity to learn.

When you encounter a setback, you have basically two choices. You can choose to be angry and resentful and depressed about it, or you can choose to learn from it. The way you react is completely up to you. If you're angry and resentful, what will that get you? How will it add value and accomplishment to your life?

When you choose to learn from every experience, you focus your attention on constant self-improvement and positive enrichment. Life presents lessons to you every day. It's up to you to do the learning.

 

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