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How to Design and Develop a Retail Space

Design and Develop

Designing a new retail space can be daunting. Many decisions made early on guide what is ultimately created in stores in the form of graphics and fixtures. Be aware of these early on in the process, or better yet, enlist professional support with a designer, architect or fabricator as you’re going through the process to ensure your final execution will hit your in-store experience and sales goals.

In this article, we’ll explore high level key elements in creating a retail space starting from scratch, describe the role of retail fixtures, and provide actionable take backs you can use immediately, regardless of where you are in the process.

 

Clear Brand Identity

Visual communication. This industry term describes the use of visual elements (graphics, fixtures, etc.) to convey a message. To be able to clearly communicate that message, you have to be crystal clear on what the message is. If you’re not clear on the what, the how (through design, graphics and fixtures) is going to be even less clear.

Avoid potential confusion or cognitive dissonance by starting with the brand. What’s at the heart of why the company does what it does? How is it communicated (core values, mission statement, colors, environmentally sustainable) in other channels (website, press releases)? What price point are you selling to (value, middle of the road, or upscale)?

Action items:

  • Know company core values
  • If you could pick only one thing – what should the brand be known for?
  • What price point are you selling to (good, better, or best)?

 

Know your customer

Clearly define who your customer is. Think about your best customer – what do they look like, what values are important to them personally, how frequently do they shop, how do they like to be interacted with (or not!) while they engage in your space? You’re their guide, and they’re the hero in the story of their shopping experience. What are their barriers, potential pitfalls, or if they don’t choose the right product to buy?

Next, hone in your messaging to speak to this customer. Be specific, give them a name, a life, a social structure, and be direct. Have fun with the process, sprinkle in items that are unique to the brand to build a lasting relationship with them that make your products and services irresistible. 

Action items:

  • Clearly define your customer
  • Refine your messaging to connect brand to customer
  • Understand the customer journey while in your space

 

Know your competition

Identify other brands or retailers that compete in your space. Use tools like LinkedIn’s Sales Navigator to select for geography, industry, size, etc. Then, go out and visit their stores. Take pictures, assemble a list of must haves and nice to haves that fit your company.

Take your partner with you, go separately and share notes after. Ask yourselves if things make sense, and point out changes you’d make for your store. Are there better ways you can connect your company and customers together than the competition? Identify those areas and make them clear messaging points for the future.

Action items:

  • Identify competitors
  • Visit / audit competitors
  • Question and revise your brand and messaging

 

Know the space

Interesting that this is the fourth step in the process, isn’t it? To us, starting with the target and working backwards gives us the best chance of hitting it. If you start with the space first without knowing your brand, it’s a less direct path to success, a time and cost killer.

The space itself is also crucially important – of course. Who are your neighbors, what do they sell and to who? Where are you located relative to the traffic flow? Do you have a design committee or landlord that also needs to sign off on your store? Generally, how does your ideal customer interact and move through the space most effectively?

Now might also be a good time to engage professional support. Architects like WDA specialize in retail build outs and can help shorten your learning curve in navigating this process. Rather than going it alone, enlist the help of someone that knows the ropes – they can save you time and money.

Action items:

  • Locate your space
  • Discover all decision makers in the store setup process
  • Know your potential neighbors, their products, price points, and customers
  • Consider professional support

 

Create a floorplan

It’s time to put pen to paper for your space. From a bird’s eye view, place the critical points of the transaction (fitting room for apparel companies, checkout counter for all). I like to use graph paper and cut out little pieces of paper representing product groups – at scale. Have fun with it, don’t hold back on ideas, and take pictures as you go. Don’t overthink it, once you have something that seems like a good starting point, it’s time to move on.

Like anything else, store development is a process. If you limit that process, you end up taking more time and energy along the way. Take the direct route, use the 80/20 rule, and keep the line moving.

Action items:

  • Create a scale bird’s eye view floor plan
  • Place products in the space
  • Identify and place the critical transaction points

 

Create a planogram

Now it’s time to grow your store – vertically. Take each wall and map out how the fixtures, products, and focal points layout in an elevation. Go back to trusty graph paper, enlist the aforementioned architect, or learn SketchUp – there’s no hard and fast rule on how to do this best.

Once completed for each wall, take careful consideration of how visually “busy” it is and match it back to your brand so it’s still communicating the same message. Where might people want to commonly navigate (bathroom), how can they find it (signage), and what’s required by law (ADA)? We’re still creating empty containers at this point for fixtures mind you – so don’t get too specific on what it looks like, only where it goes, and what products are where.

Action items:

  • Create a planogram
  • Understand legal requirements for access, spacing and signage
  • Revise, revise, revise

 

Match design and materials

Taking in the brand, customer, competition, space, messaging, and market fit, identify materials that do the communicating for you. For example, a spa is a calming space. Complement it with neutral colors, subtle textures, and simple design elements. Referring back to your planogram, what would make the products sell best? Light or dark? Wood, metal, acrylic, graphics, or something else?

Once you have the general look, research how it can be best produced in the space with cost effective materials and fabrication methods. Now is also a great time to engage with your fixture manufacturer(s). Your fixture will be limited to each’s supply chain, equipment, techniques, and know how. Or engage with a company like ours that owns minority shares in fabrication companies throughout the country to do the heavy lifting for you. Get an idea of how they’re positioned in the market (cost, timeline, clients) to see if they’re a good fit.

Action items: 

  • Pick colors and materials that bridge brand, products, and customer
  • Engage with multiple fixture fabricators
  • Review supply chain output and timelines

 

Samples and prototypes

Pick one or a few materials, get samples, decide on a fabricator, and go and make the thing! Rely back on your architect or the fixture fabricator for shop drawings to ensure everyone is on the same page. Identify how these transport to stores and install – who and how. Ensure it’s part of the design.

If you’re looking to be cost effective, treat the level of quality as a first article instead. Take extra time to hone in the fixture, get pictures from the shop before they ship, revise in the plant as needed, then set up and try it out in the store. Put it through the paces – simulate customer and store employee interaction with bumps, hits, and moisture. After all, these are supposed to last five years, if there’s a design flaw, better to uncover it now vs. later.

Action items:

  • Get samples
  • Create a prototype
  • Test it out

 

Revise and rollout

The work is done! Repeat the fabrication process until it’s ready for production. Include instruction sheets and required tools, ensure they match what you’re able to provide at the store level, and get pictures after setup for final approval.

Like art, developing a store can be something that is never finished. Understand the iterative process related to this, take in information from trends and at the store level, for constant improvement. 

Action items:

  • Approve cost and production timeline
  • Setup in stores
  • Keep records of shop drawings for reference

 

 

Jeff Lo is owner and president of TGS Elevate, a certified Minority Owned Company (MBE) that does the work of seven separate vendors – encompassing 2D and 3D design, printing, fabrication, project management, logistics and sourcing – to save clients time and money. TGSE’s minority ownership in printers and fabricators across the country allows control of lead time and pricing. This lower overhead cost gives us the flexibility to find the right production facility and supply chain for your project and gives you one point of contact, from design to installation. 

 

Jeff Lo is owner of TGS Elevate, a visual marketing / merchandising company that provides printing, point of purchase displays, and store fixture manufacturing, and in-store build outs for companies that have 50-500 locations nationwide.

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