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How to define technology goals that increase your bottom line.

There are many independent garden centers that currently do not use technology tools to manage inventory, transactions, and customers for their businesses—I know this because I have probably spoken with 10 green retailers in the past six months that are not even using cash registers to ring up their transactions. While I have a personal mission to help those businesses realize that technology can substantially improve their bottom lines, I am focusing this article toward the IGCs that currently utilize a technology platform such as a point-of-sale system or inventory management system.

It would be fairly typical to hear that a business brought technology into their operation because of one or more “pressing needs” (I label them “technology drivers”).

For many stores, a technology driver might be improved inventory tracking or a quicker, more streamlined check-out process for customers. Other stores are looking to expand selling channels (for example, adding an eCommerce website). Regardless of the technology driver(s) that brought you to your current store system, you selected and implemented a system that addresses your primary technology drivers. And if you are like many of the IGCs I work with, your system becomes part of your day-to-day routine.

When I speak to store owners, I often hear, “I know my system can do a lot more” or, “We aren’t using many of the features that our system offers.” You are not alone. For the last 25 years, I’ve used Microsoft Office almost every workday and I know that I am still only using about 40% of the functionality that is available in the tool. Regardless of what system you are using, my challenge today is: How can I help you tap into your unutilized technology potential to lower costs, increase sales and improve margins?

The golden nugget of wisdom here is simple: each quarter, set a goal to utilize your available technical capability in at least one new way that directly translates to cost savings, higher sales and/or better margins. Start with a brainstorm session with your management team. Throw ideas on a blank page, flip chart or white board. For each idea about how to use your available technical tools, identify the costs, challenges or pains associated with this new use of your technology and identify the value benefit that would result from the use of that tool. Look at the chart above for examples.

All three of these examples use existing technical capabilities of many POS systems, are not overly difficult to implement, and provide tangible benefits that are measurable. Of course, your team will think of 20 clever ideas using this method. Pick the ones that are most compelling for you and make a concerted team effort to implement that approach. Measure the results and used those results when considering the goal(s) for the subsequent quarter.

You will quickly see that utilizing a few more capabilities in your existing system can yield significant economic results.

NEW
TECHNOLOGY
USE
COST/
CHALLENGE/
OBSTACLES
VALUE/PAYOFF
Use available
inventory
reporting to define
and measure your
buyers’
effectiveness (e.g.,
track turns, GMROI or weeks on hand
metrics)
Needs a shift in employee
culture (they may not
like being measured),
learning how to generate
reports that track these metrics, possibly a need
to create specialized
reports, the need to learn how to interpret these
metrics in an effective
way (What is a good
GMROI?)
Lower inventory
costs, lower waste,
increased
sensitivity
to overstocks and
opportunities to
improve margins
Use your POS
system to track and promote “value
attributes” for your items. For example: disease resistant,
drought tolerant,
pollinator, organic
Creating attributes on
your item records in your inventory system to track and promote these
attributes that
increase the perceived
value of a product.
Promoting value
attributes increases a customer’s
perception of value
and justifies higher
prices and margins
Use technologies to
encourage
your sales staff
“up-sell” 5 things in
your inventory. For
example, when you
sell a shrub, have
your system
prompt the
customer service
clerk to offer an
organic fertilizer
that improves root
development.
Changing store clerk
behaviors, creating
system links to prompt
the clerk to ask if a
customer would like to
add “x” to their order
when they purchase “Y.”
In Rapid Garden POS,
these are called
“tag-a-long” items.
Even if 2 out of 10
customers respond
positively to the
upsell, that is still
20% of those
customers adding a higher margin item to their purchase. This
practice can also
create a repeatable
pattern for that
customer (e.g., I
always buy this
fertilizer when I
purchase a plant to
be planted). The
ultimate benefit is
increased gross sales,
increased average
ticket sales and
increased net
margins.

Read the original article here.

Bliss Martin

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Bliss Martin

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