Holding a sale is often a retailer’s biggest headache, but can also be the relief needed for a slump in sales. The logistics of a sale—hiring extra manpower, getting the word out about the sale and figuring out when to hold it and for how long—may seem overwhelming. But the rewards are worth it. A sale can be a boost for business by:
1. Enticing new customers and introducing them to your brand and products.
2. Driving sales in a slumping period.
3. Moving last season’s inventory out in order to make the way for new and exciting inventory for your loyal customer base.
4. Rewarding your customers for their loyalty.
5. Winning sales from your competitors during peak shopping seasons.
The best contacts and resources to help you get it done
Planning
By planning your sale strategy in advance, you’ll streamline the customer’s experience and have your employees equipped for any contingency. Make sure your merchandise is well-stocked—you’ll need a good supply of the sales necessities such as shopping bags, receipt tape, gift cards, wrapping paper and tape, and extra signage to encourage customers into the store. Hire and train extra stockers, merchandisers and support staff well in advance of the sale.
I recommend: Find a variety of shopping bags that can be custom imprinted or ordered plain at
retailshoppingbags.com or
uline.com. Download a PowerPoint “how-to” manual that includes all of the basics of planning a sale and retail sales management, from the
New York City Small Business Center.
When to hold a sale
The right time to hold a sale is relative to your business. New businesses can struggle with planning for sales because they don’t have a history to look back at customer trends. Most retailers expect to hold sales from October through December when the most customers are shopping. But if you are struggling to get people in the door, a sale—no matter what time of year—can boost your profits. You don’t have to plan your next sale around an event, because any sale, especially those customer appreciation days, will get loyal customers in the door for bargains.
I recommend: If you want to be creative with your sales, create a holiday sale any time of year. Check out the
current retail promotion calendar for traditional holidays and those not so well-known holidays that commemorate an event such as a Super Bowl sale (Sundays, usually the end of January or beginning of February) or if sales are slow in August, run a sale on National Best Friend’s Day and offer “buy one, get one free for your best friend.” You get the idea. Be creative and get the customer’s attention. Check out
multichannelmerchant.com to match your industry with peak sales events.
Pricing strategies
Whether the purpose of your sale is to get rid of old merchandise or to make a marked increase in sales, the bottom line is what matters. Good pricing strategies are the cornerstone of a profitable sale. Your task is to figure out if a straight percentage off will make your bottom line bigger or would a buy two, get one free sort of offer work better for you? Whichever you choose, it not only has to make a profit, but also has to make the customer feel that they’ve gotten a bargain.
I recommend: To figure out percentage markdowns, use the online retail markdown calculator at
csgnetwork.com. To figure out pricing relationships including profit, margin and selling price, download an Excel-based
product-pricing calculator. The formula lets you enter any two values and the program will automatically evaluate the other three.
Publicity
Find an ally at your local newspaper who will turn their readers on to your sale. Often readers will skip over advertisements and read editorial sections of the newspaper that feature shopping columns. Fashion pages usually have a columnist who covers “can’t miss” sales while sports columnists often tell their readers about closeouts on expensive golf equipment. There are also numerous Web sites across the country, which highlight bargain shopping, so research your specific market and send press releases to the media outlets.
I recommend: Contact your local newspaper and send a press release about your sale to the appropriate section editor. Find links to U.S. newspapers at
www.refdesk.com/paper.html.
Use your customer base
If you haven’t started a list or database of regular customers’ names, addresses and email, start today. This is an invaluable way to get customers to shop your sale. A week or two before the event, send an email or postcard to regular customers to notify them of the sale. Reward them by offering an additional percentage off coupon or a special invitation to get a sneak-peak at the sale, perhaps the day before the doors open to the general public. And to get the word out further, request that the customer bring a friend or pass along the email to others.
I recommend: Order low cost full color postcards from
overnightprints.com for fast turnaround and small minimum orders.
Signage
Let’s assume you’ve done everything you can to get customers in the door—advertising, publicity, and alerting loyal customers. Your best bet to increase foot traffic depends on on-site advertisement of your sale. The right signage, whether it says, “everything must go” or “20 percent off everything in the store,” needs to be clear, concise, and most importantly make the store stand out that something special is happening. If customers don’t know by the time they enter the front door that you are having a sale, you haven’t done your job well enough.
I recommend: Get the customers’ attention with banners, signage and proper pricing on items. Order generic sale signage from
storefix.com or get quick customized signage at
fastsigns.com. AZ Retail Systems carries price tags, pricing guns and barcode equipment to get your sale merchandise tagged and ready for sale.