Our senses play no small part in our
decision to purchase. Think about how the smell of freshly baked
bread, the feel of a soft leather couch, even the colour of a car can
influence your choice of purchase. Yet sound is rarely used by
retailers to stimulate sales. There is of course a science about how
we use music in stores to slow customers down or speed them up, and
how the choice of music itself can change the customer’s mood but
there is a stage beyond that that is rarely exploited.
The gardening and lifestyle sector can
employ sound to sell product better than most other retailers. Themed
displays, impulse orientated product and the creative atmosphere
within the store all lend themselves to the introduction of sound.
With advances in technology we certainly have the ability to bring
sounds to any part of the garden centre. Weatherproof speakers and
affordable media players mean it’s easy to install a discreet,
secure system within any display.
Simple examples as to how this would
work could be something as obvious as playing birdsong at the wild
bird product display, the sound of happy banter and clinking glasses
in the furniture and barbecue area, or the sound of running water
near the pond section. But there are even more imaginative things to
try.
Many garden centres now merchandise
plants by end use, so for example there should be a coastal plant
section with all of the plants suitable for such a location. Wouldn’t
it add an extra dimension to have coastal sounds there too?
Imagine the sound of waves, sand and seagulls… surely this would at
the very least make customers stop and smile and perhaps even make
them purchase? It would also be a conversation point and a way of
differentiating your garden centre from the hundreds of others out
there. It doesn’t stop there of course, as that birdsong playing
instore could be mimicked by the same sounds playing from the Plants
for Wildlife display. Or how about farm sounds emanating from the
ubiquitous farm animal ornament display that most garden centres now
have? The really is no limit as to how sounds can be used.
So next time you’re planning your
merchandising why not look at investing in a few speakers and
players, and encourage everyone to come up with some ideas as to how
they can add an extra dimension to their displays. With a bit of
planning and thought it might get those tills ringing, a noise
everyone likes to hear!
Sound like a good idea?
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