Deciding on
a Store or Shop Buisness Location - Small Buisness Retail
How to
Decide on a Store Location
A
retail consultant was asked, "What are the three factors most likely to
ensure retailing success?" The reply was, "(1) Locations, (2) Location,
and (3) location."
In other words, the impact of site selection on the success of your
retail operation can't be overstressed! This guide is aimed at just one
aspect of how to determine the proper site, namely, research into the
traffic in that area - both vehicular and pedestrian - that will bring
business into your store. Methods of taking a traffic count are discussed
along with how to evaluate and interpret the collected data.
Importance of a Good Location
Often an owner-manager, for whatever reason, is faced with renewing the
lease or choosing a new or perhaps an additional site for business. At
this crucial time the owner should consider the value of a traffic count
to be sure the new location can draw customers into the store.
In the central business district, land values and rents are often based
on traffic counts. The site in the central business district that produces
the highest traffic count with regard to the type of traffic desired by a
particular store is considered its 100 percent location. However, a 100
percent location for one type of store may not be 100 percent for other
types. For example, a site which rates 100 percent for a drugstore may be
only 80 percent for a men's clothing shop or 60 percent for an appliance
store.
In recent years, for most lines of trade, the average store size has
increased. This, of course, means greater financial outlay for a good
location plus greater investment in inventory, fixtures, and personnel.
Did you know that firms which conduct location research generally
eliminate about four out of every five locations studied?
Factors to be Considered
Three factors confront you as an owner-manager in choosing a location:
selection of a city; choice of an area or type of location within a city;
and identification of a specific site.
If you are going to relocate in another city, naturally you consider
the following factors:
- Size of the city's trading area.
- Population and population trends in the trading area.
- Total purchasing power and the distribution of the purchasing power.
- Total retail trade potential for different lines of trade.
- Number, size, and quality of competition.
- Progressiveness of competition.
In choosing an area or type of location within a city you evaluate
factors such as:
- Customer attraction power of the particular store and the shopping
district.
- Quantitative and qualitative nature of competitive stores.
- Availability of access routes to the stores.
- Nature of zoning regulations.
- Direction of the area expansion.
- General appearance of the area.
Pinpointing the specific site is particularly important. In central and
secondary business districts, small stores depend upon the traffic created
by large stores. Large stores in turn depend on attracting customers from
the existing flow of traffic. (However, where sales depend on nearby
residents, selecting the trading area is more important than picking the
specific site.) Obviously, you want to know about the following factors
when choosing a specific site:
- Adequacy and potential passing the site.
- Ability of the site to intercept traffic en route from one place to
another.
- Complementary nature of the adjacent stores.
- Adequacy of parking.
- Vulnerability of the site to unfriendly competition.
- Cost of the site.
How to Make a Traffic Count
First of all, be sure you need a traffic count. Although knowledge of
the volume and character of passing traffic is always useful, in certain
cases a traffic survey may not really make an difference. Other selection
factors involved may be so significant that the outcome of a traffic study
will have relatively little bearing on your decision. When the other
selection factors, such as parking, operating costs, or location of
competitors, become less important and data on traffic flow becomes
dominant, then a counts is indicated. Once you have determined that you
really need a traffic count, the general objective is to count the passing
traffic - both pedestrian and vehicular - that would constitute potential
customers who would probably be attracted into your type of store. To
evaluate the traffic available to competitors, you may desire to conduct
traffic counts at their sites, too.
Data from a traffic count should not only show how many people pass by
but generally indicate what kinds of people they are. Analysis of the
characteristics of the passing traffic often reveals patterns and
variations not readily apparent from casual observation.
For counting purposes, the passing traffic is divided into different
classifications according to the characteristics of the customers who
would patronize your type of business. Whereas a drugstore is interested
in the total volume of passing traffic, a men's clothing store is
obviously more concerned with the amount of male traffic, especially men
between the ages of sixteen and sixty-five.
It is also important to classify passing traffic by its reasons for
passing. A woman on the way to a beauty salon is probably poor prospect
for a drugstore. The hours at which individuals go by are often an
indication of their purpose. In the early morning hours people are
generally on their way to work. In the late afternoon these same people
are usually going home from work. When one chain organization estimates
the number of potential women customers passing a site between 10 a.m and
5 p.m. to be the serious shoppers.
Evaluation of the financial bracket of passersby is also significant.
Out of 100 women passing a prospective location for an exclusive dress
shop, only ten may appear to have the income to patronize the shop. Of
course, the greater your experience in a particular retail trade, the more
accurately you can estimate the number of your potential customers. To
determine what proportion of the passing traffic represents your potential
shoppers, some of the pedestrians should be interviewed about the origin
of their trip, their destination, and the stores in which they plan to
shop. This sort of information can provide you with a better estimate of
the number of potential customers.
In summary, the qualitative information gathered about the passing
traffic should include counting the individuals who seem to possess the
characteristics appropriate to the desired clientele, judging their
reasons for using that route, and calculating their ability to buy.
Pedestrian Traffic Count
In making a pedestrian count you must decide: who is to be counted;
where the count should take place; and when the count should be made. In
considering who is to be counted, determine what types of people should be
included. For example, the study might count all men presumed to be
between sixteen and sixty-five. The directions should be completely clear
as to the individuals to be counted so the counters will be consistent and
the total figure will reflect the traffic flow.
As previously indicated, it is frequently desirable to divide the
pedestrian traffic into classes. Quite often separate counts of men and
women and certain age categories are wanted. A trial run will indicate if
there are any difficulties in identifying those to be counted or in
placing them into various groupings.
You next determine the specific place where the count is to be taken.
You decide whether all the traffic near the site should be counted or only
the traffic passing directly in front of the site. Remember that if all
the pedestrians passing through an area are counted, there is the
possibility of double counting. Since a person must both enter and leave
an area, it is important that each person be counted only once - either
when entering or when leaving. Therefore, it is essential that the counter
consistently counts at the same location.
When the count should be taken is influenced by the season, month,
week, day, and hour. For example, during the summer season there is
generally an increased flow of traffic on the shady side of the street.
During a holiday period such as the month before Christmas or the week
before Easter, traffic is denser than it is regularly. The patronage of a
store varies by day of the week, too. Store traffic usually increased
during the latter part of a week. In some communities, on factory paydays
and days when social security checks are received, certain locations
experience heavier than normal traffic.
The day of the week and the time of day should represent a normal
period for traffic flow. Pedestrian flow accelerates around noon as office
workers go out for lunch. Generally more customers enter a downtown store
between 10 a.m. and noon and between 1 p.m. and 3 p.m. than at any other
time. Local custom or other factors, however, may cause a variation in
these expected traffic patterns.
After you choose the day that has normal traffic flow, the day should
be divided into half-hour and hourly intervals. Traffic should be counted
and recorded for each half-hour period of a store's customary operating
hours. If it is not feasible to count the traffic for each half-hour
interval, the traffic flow can be sampled. Traffic in representative
half-hours periods in the morning, noon, afternoon, and evening can be
counted.
Estimate of Store Sales
Data from a pedestrian traffic survey can give you information on
whether or not the site would generate a profitable volume for your store.
A retailer with some past experience in the same merchandise line for
which a store is planned can make a reasonable estimate of sales volume if
the following information is available (in lieu of past personal
experience, the trade association for your type of business may be of
help):
- Characteristics of individuals who are most likely to be store
customers (from pedestrian interviews).
- Number of such individuals passing the site during store hours (from
traffic counts).
- Proportion of passersby who will enter the store (from pedestrian
interviews).
- Proportion of those entering who will become purchasers (from
pedestrian interviews).
- Amount of the average transaction (from past experience, trade
associations, and trade publication).
One retailer divides the people who pass a given site into three
categories: those who enter a store; those who after looking at the
windows, may become customers; and those who pass without entering or
looking. Owing to prior experience, this retailer is able to estimate from
the percentage falling into each classification not only the number who
will make purchases but also how much the average purchase will be. If,
out of 1,000 passerbys each day, five percent enter (fifty) and each
spends an average of $8 ($400), a store at that site which operates 300
days a year will have an annual sales volume of $120,000.
Types of Consumer Goods
Another factor that affects site selection is the customers' view of
the goods sold by a store. Consumers tend to group products into three
major categories: convenience, shopping, and specialty.
Convenience usually means low unit price, purchased frequently, little
selling effort, bought by habit, and sold in numerous outlets. Examples:
candy bars, cigarettes, and milk.
Shopping usually means high unit price, purchased infrequently, more
intensive selling effort usually required on the part of the store owner,
price and features compared, and sold in selectively franchised outlets.
Examples: men's suits, automobiles, and furniture.
Specialty usually means high unit price although price is not a
purchase consideration, bought infrequently, requires a special effort on
the part of the customer to make the purchase, no substitutes considered,
and sold in exclusively franchised outlets. Examples: precious jewelry,
expensive perfumes, fine furs, and so on, of specific brands or name
labels.
For store handling convenience goods, the quantity of pedestrian
traffic is most important, The corner of an intersection which offers two
distinct traffic streams and a large window display area is usually a
better site that the middle of a block. Downtown convenience goods stores,
such as low-priced, ready-to-wear stores and drugstores, have a limited
ability to generate their own traffic, Therefore they must be situated in
or near their 100 percent block. In merchandising convenience goods, it is
easier to build the store within the traffic than the traffic within the
store. Convenience goods are often purchased on impulse in easily
accessible stores.
For stores handling shopping goods, the quality of the traffic is more
important. While convenience goods are purchased by nearly everyone,
certain kinds of shopping goods are purchased by only certain segments of
shoppers. Moreover, it is sometimes the character of the retail
establishment rather than its type of goods that governs the selection of
a site. For example, a conventional men's wear store should be in a
downtown location close to a traffic generator like a department store. On
the other hand, a discount store handling menswear would prefer an
accessible highway location, Stores that generate their own traffic
through extensive promotional effort can locate away from the 100 percent
location.
In many cases, buyers of shopping goods like to compare the items in
several stores by traveling only a minimum distance. As a result stores
offering complementary items tend to locate close to one another. An
excellent site for a shopping goods store is next to a department store or
between two large department stores where traffic flows between them.
Another good site is one between a major parking area and a department
store.
Specialty goods are often sought by consumers who are already "sold" on
the product, brand, or both. Stores catering to this type of consumer may
use isolated locations because they generate their own consumer traffic.
Stores carrying specialty goods that are complementary to certain other
kinds of shopping goods may desire to locate close to the shopping goods
stores. In general, the specialty goods retailer should locate in the type
of neighborhood where the adjacent stores and other establishments are
compatible with his or her operation.
Automobile Traffic Count
A growing number of retail firms depend on drive-in traffic for their
sales. Both the quantity and quality of automotive traffic can be analyzed
in the same way as pedestrian traffic. For the major streets in urban
areas, either the city engineer, the planning commission, the State
highway department, or an outdoor advertising company may be able to
provide you with data on traffic flows. However, you may need to modify
this information to suit your special needs. For example, you should
supplement data relating to total count of vehicles passing the site with
actual observation in order to evaluate such influences on traffic as
commercial vehicles, changing of shifts at nearby factories, through
highway traffic, and increased flow caused by special events or
activities.
Type of Trips
Automobile traffic may be classified according to the reason for the
trip. There are the work trip, the shopping trip, and the pleasure
trip. Knowledge of the type of trip can assist you in making the correct
site decision, Careful observation of the character of the traffic and
even a few short interviews with drivers who are stopped for a traffic
signal will reveal the nature of their trips.
Different types of retailers seek different locations although they are
serving the same type of customer. For example, to serve a work trip
customer, a drycleaner and a convenience foodstore usually desire to be
located on different sides of the street. The drycleaner wants to locate
on the going-to-work side of the street while the convenience foodstore
wants to be on the going-home side.
A good location for a retailer seeking the customer on a planned
shopping trip is along the right-hand side of the main street leading into
a shopping district and adjacent to other streets carrying traffic into,
out of, or across town. The beginning or end of a row of stores rather
than across the street from the stores is preferable, Noting on which side
the older, established stores are located provides a clue to the best side
of the street. But check it out to be sure that the sales in these stores
are rising rather than declining.
In smaller communities, where the major streets lead to and from the
downtown area, the traffic pattern can be readily identified. In larger
cities, where there are suburban shopping center location, the traffic
moves in many different directions. Because shopping centers tend to
generate traffic, an analysis of the traffic flow to centers and between
centers may show that a particular store location is outstanding.
The person on a pleasure of recreational trip is in the market for
services such as those offered by motels, restaurants, and service
stations. The probability of attracting this type of customer increases if
the facility is located alongside a well-traveled highway and adjacent to
a major entrance to the community.
Types of Consumer Goods
Understanding the motives of people passing your site in cars also
depends on the same analysis of consumer behavior used in classifying
pedestrians. There are the same three categories of goods or products to
consider: convenience, shopping and specialty.
In general, the greater the automobile traffic, the greater the sales
of convenience goods for catering to the drive-in traffic. For the
drive-in store selling low-priced convenience goods, the volume of traffic
passing the site is a most important factor in making a site decision. The
consumer purchases these goods frequently and desires them to be readily
available. Consumers are reminded when passing a convenience goods store
that he or she needs a particular item.
If the consumer must make a special trip to purchase such convenience
staple goods as food and drug items, they want the store to be close to
home. One study of foodstore purchases in the central city area revealed
that nearly 70 percent of the woman patronized stores within one to five
blocks of their homes. Another study of foodstores indicated that for
suburban locations the majority of customers lived within three miles of
the stores, while the maximum trading area was five miles. For rural
locations, the majority of consumers lived within a ten minute drive to
the store, with the maximum trading area within a twenty minute drive. A
West Coast supermarket chain wants a minimum of 3,500 homes within a
mile-and-a-half radius of a shopping center before considering it for
location. Research indicated that 80 percent of the customers of pizza
carryouts lived within a mile of the establishments.
On the other hand, a retailer dealing in shopping goods can have a much
wider trading area, Without a heavily trafficked location - but with the
help of adequate promotion - this more expensive type of store can
generate its own traffic density but easy accessibility from a residential
area is a satisfactory site. The consumer buys these goods infrequently
and deliberately plans these purchases. Consumers are willing to travel
some distance to make shopping comparisons.
If you offer shopping goods, however, you should not locate too far
away from your potential customers. One study of a discount department
store showed that 79.6 percent of the shoppers lived within five miles of
the store and another 16.1 percent lived within a ten-mile radius. The
magnitude of the trading area for a shopping goods store can be determined
by a customer survey, automobile license checks, sales slips, charge
account records, store deliveries, and the extent of local newspaper
circulation.
The same principles of location which are applicable to the walk-in
specialty goods stores are appropriate for the drive-in facility. Because
this type of retailer generates its own traffic, you can locate away from
the major traffic arteries.
Planned Shopping Centers
Many merchants seek a location in a planned shopping center. Retailers
in cities where downtown business has suffered extensive loss to shopping
centers should perhaps consider locating in or near a center. The downtown
area that suffers the most from the development of a shopping center is in
a city of about 100,000 population, which is just large enough to support
a center. Shopping centers have been classified into three different
types: the neighborhood center, the community center, and the regional
center.
The neighborhood center generally serves 7,500 to 20,500 people living
within a six to ten minute drive from the center. The major store - and
the prime traffic generator - in the center is a supermarket. The other
stores in the center, which may include a drugstore, hardware store,
bakery, and beauty shop, offer convenience goods and services, The best
location for a specialty food store in the center is adjacent to the
supermarket. Other stores should be grouped by the compatibility of their
merchandise.
The community center usually serves 20,000 to 100,000 people living
within a ten to twenty minute drive. The dominant store is generally a
junior department store or a large variety store. The majority of the
stores carry shopping goods such as wearing apparel and appliances.
However, a number of the stores also offer convenience items. The apparel
and furnishings stores should locate as close to the dominant store as
possible. A supermarket in this type of center is best located at one end.
This is so that the adjacent parking is less apt to be used for long
periods by the shoppers in the other stores. An end site or a location
near a major entry is also desirable for a drugstore. Because drugstores
tend to maintain longer hours than the other stores, they should be in an
easily accessible location and not surrounded by a number of dark stores
at night. A service establishment, such as a drycleaner or a barbershop,
which depends on a rapid turnover of traffic in the center, should locate
where there is always available parking.
The regional center serves 100,000 to 200,000 people within a twenty to
forty minute drive from the center. One or more department stores are its
major tenants. Frequently, the center is an enclosed mall with department
stores at both ends. This type of center emphasized shopping goods. These
numerous shopping goods stores usually locate between the two major stores
in order to take advantage of the traffic flow, Stores handling
convenience goods generally locate at the edge of the center or near an
entry to the mall where there is easily accessible parking. Service and
repair shops are also usually located in these areas of the regional
center.
Food For Thought
We've all heard, and probably said, things
like "I'm going to go on a diet as soon as summer vacation is over" or
"I'm planning to start my own business as soon as I get some money
saved."
Planning is important, but it is action that gets things done. If you
just PLAN to lose weight, or just PLAN to start a business, it never
happens. If you wait until the time is right, or all the circumstances
are in your favor, it never happens.
The way to make things happen, the way to follow your dreams, is to
take action. Today and every day. Find something you can do right now,
today, that will bring you closer to your goal. Don't put it off until
the time is right. No matter how insignificant your action may seem,
it gets you started in the right direction. Continue taking action
every day and you start to gain momentum. Before you know it, you're
in so far that nothing can stop you.
What have you been putting off? Life is too precious to spend it
waiting. Take action today. Do your dream now.
Did you know that your mind "thinks" about 60,000 thoughts every day?
Just by the sheer volume of them, your thoughts have a huge impact on
your life.
Whether you think you can or you think you can't, you're right.
Everything you do begins in your mind. Success is an inside job. You
can choose to think empowering thoughts or you can settle for limiting
thoughts. You can think the same old thoughts over and over again, or
you can expose yourself to new experiences, concepts and
possibilities. It's completely up to you and the way you choose to
think.
Look for the opportunities in every situation. Constantly think to
yourself, "I can do it." Use those 60,000 thoughts to program yourself
for success. When you believe in what you're doing, and believe that
you can do it, you'll find a way to make it happen.
The things that regularly occupy your thinking, have the power to
drive your life. Your mind is too powerful to ignore. Take control of
your thoughts and you will have control of your destiny.
Small things, repeated over and over again, are vastly more powerful
and influential than big things done just once.
One of my primary reasons for developing The Daily Motivator was the
realization that success is most reliably achieved through consistent
effort. You can go to workshops and seminars, and hear powerful,
motivating speakers. These experiences can be very influential. Even
more powerful, however, are the things you do on a daily basis to stay
focused on excellence, accomplishment, possibilities and
opportunities.
Truly successful people realize that meaningful, lasting success does
not, can not come overnight. Great accomplishments are not one-time
efforts, but rather the culmination of a long line of repeated
efforts.
The gold-medal Olympic swimmer does not just show up at the
competition and win the race. For years beforehand, she practices her
start, her stroke, her turn, her breathing, fine-tuning each aspect to
the nth degree. Often the race is won by mere hundredths of a second.
Yet the effort needed to win that race is measured in years.
Success in any endeavor comes from consistent, determined, focused
effort. The way to guarantee that you'll be at the right place at the
right time, is to be at the right place ALL the time. Stay focused
every day on the habits of success.
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