Shopfitting & Merchandising Opinion South Africa

Messaging should come last

Shoppers are bombarded with thousands of messages in store, with brands aggressively vying to grab attention by shouting the loudest. Unfortunately, most of what is said is falling on deaf ears. In arguably the most valuable communication space in the Consumer Packaged Goods (CPG) marketing mix, the bulk of communication in-store is never noted because most don't speak "shopper".
Messaging should come last
© Bikeworldtravel – 123RF.com

Too often brands and retailers use consumer vernacular and visuals to speak to a completely different tribe... the shopper. The consumer-messaging proposition usually leads the in-store design. This is a contributor to what Dr Hugh Phillips put forward, that most in-store communication is achieving less than 10% effectiveness.

The three most critical steps to ultimately convert a sale through shopper design and messaging are:

  1. Catch
  2. In-store communication, whether it be posters, banners, packaging, leaflets, display, shelf strips, wobblers or digital, must first focus on psychological and scientific design to increase sales. This starts with an exposure (noting). Brands only have half a second to get an exposure. It is estimated that less than a fifth of in-store design manages to do this effectively. Without exposures one can't engage and ultimately close the sale.

    Recognising this limited 0.5 second window period to achieve an exposure has fundamentally changed our approach to in-store design, messaging and engagement. It means that above all else, we first design for an exposure. There are multiple criteria that come into play based on contextual, in situ and environmental influences and key to this is to understand that the shopper rapidly processes mainly visuals and elemental shapes. These significantly impact effectiveness and increase ROI when designing from exposure to proposition, compared to vice versa.

  3. Connect and close
  4. So, once you've cornered the most difficult part in the shopper design process, you now have less than three seconds to get the message across... limited time for a shopper to read and decode. Shoppers take in a fraction of the detail that brands hope to relay. It is important to note that criteria such as the visual literacy, semiotics and merchandising (or a combination of these) can be processed in milliseconds. Thus the adage "A picture speaks a thousand words." This is the second most important part in the shopper design process - "will the shopper get it without reading a single word?" This should be the bankable cue to purchase.

  5. Convert More
  6. Lastly, if you've addressed the first two stages consummately, you have time to further increase chances to close the sale with what we term 'elemental scripting'; a combination of copy using tense, case, font, spacing and other mechanisms that rapidly aid lightning cognitive processing. This further accelerates conversions.

Conclusion

Designing for the shopper means designing for more sales. Start with the exposure and leave messaging for last to finish first.

*These views and opinions are our own and not those of our employers or customers. Angle Orange is the first Shopper Marketing Company in the Western Cape with Shopper Design Science Accreditation.

About Pierre Le Grange & Jason (Frich) Frichol

Jason Frichol's passions are shopper marketing, consumer packaging, visual merchandising, ideation, bankable innovation, integrated marketing, tangible ROI, and execution efficacy.
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