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A General Store Evaluation

Tags: store
A friend of mine asked "Why can't I get the foot traffic to come into my store?".  

Well I said lets evaluate your store.  The one thing we want to do is compare your store to the competition.  Why do they go in their stores?  The Store in question is a small general merchandise store.  About one third is clothing.  He sells at competitive prices, but doesn't specialize in any one area.

His competition in the same shopping center:

  1.  Major Supermarket
  2. Dollar Tree
  3. Card and gift shop
  4. Food Shops 
  5. Post Office
Down the road (less than half mile)
  1. Staples
  2. CVS
  3. Rite Aid
  4. Another Supermarket
  5. Marshalls
  6. Toys R Us Express
  7. Varies clothing and other stores
So I said first rule of retail is Location, Location, Location

 What makes this the right location for your General Merchandise Retail Store?

Are people going to come into your store for a specific reason. Or, are you just hoping that they will just come in to see what you have?   In a city this store might do well.  Somewhere where people have to walk and carry every thing they need.  In that case the closest store gets the business.  But given a choice, people will drive down the block or around the corner for a specific item.  Because he doesn't specialize in any one thing.  The customer can get the same merchandise while in another store.  

Example 
I can buy cleaning supplies in the supermarket.  I can get cheap items in Dollar Tree.  Get greeting cards at CVS.  By the time I do my other shopping I already bought everything sold in the general store except clothing.  But, because there is a wide range of clothing stores nearby, I'm less likely to shop in a small general store.  

So my answer is this is not the right location for a small general merchandise store.  Either move the store or change what you sell.   If the rent is so good, the foot traffic is there.  Then Change what you sell to something that people aren't going to get nearby.

What items sell the best?

His answer was gadgets, small impulse items, toys, small electronics.  I said well that your answer.  Specialize on those items.  Sell off the rest of your stock and slowly turn your store into a gadget selling store.

Keep your price range better than a dollar but not too high.   You want items they cant buy in the supermarket and better quality than the Dollar store.   Now if people want a decent charger for their phone, either they come into your for it or have to drive down the block.   By changing what he sells he will cut down on the local competition.

People too often open a retail store selling what they want to buy. And then think its what everyone else will want.   Sam Walton the founder of Walmart said that if you want to compete with Walmart you have to specialize.  General merchandise stores sell a little of everything.  Your choices are limited.   If your want model cars, your only going to find a few choices in a general store.  Where as a hobby shop may have dozens of choices.

If your set on owning a general merchandise retail store, I suggest you find the right location.  Somewhere where people don't have a local store.  If People have to drive a half hour to get to your competitor than that's the right spot.










This post first appeared on The Retail Constultant, please read the originial post: here

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A General Store Evaluation

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