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Store Design, Visual Merchandising and Shopper Marketing

via iversity

This course may be unavailable.

Overview

Have you ever wondered how the retail environment influences your shopping behavior? In this course you will learn the secrets of how marketers can use factors like colors, scents, store layouts and merchandise presentations to influence consumers.

In an age of self-service stores, saturated markets, and ever more demanding customers, the creative and science-driven design of the point of sale has become a crucial success factor for both retailers and service businesses. In this MOOC, you will be introduced to shopper marketing. You will learn to understand shopping behavior and how to optimize the design of retail stores and service environments to increase customer satisfaction and sales. While the focus is on the practical applicability of the concepts discussed, the MOOC is also firmly grounded in consumer and psychological research. In the lessons, I will draw on both the recent research literature and my own experience in marketing consulting and consumer research.

The topics covered in the MOOC are:

• Store layout: Influencing how shoppers navigate the store
• Helping shopper orientation in the store
• Store design factors
• Visual merchandising techniques
• Influencing the store atmosphere
• Experiential store design: Making shopping fun
• Specific applications of store design principles

What will I learn?

By the end this MOOC, you will have developed an understanding of consumer behavior at the point of sale and be able to apply this knowledge to the (re)design of retail spaces and service environments.

Specifically, you will:
• appreciate the relevance of shopper marketing and store design
• understand the goals of store and servicescape design
• be able to apply environmental psychology principles to the design of retail and service spaces
• understand the effect of sensory clues such as music, scents and colors on shopping behavior
• understand how emotions influence shopping decisions and be able to trigger emotions in shoppers
• understand the importance of experiential marketing and store design
• be able to influence consumer behavior with specific store design and visual merchandising techniques
• be able to apply the knowledge gained in this MOOC to evaluate retail spaces and servicescapes

Also, you should have fun in this MOOC :-)

What do I need to know?

No prior marketing, business or psychology knowledge is required.

Syllabus

Week 1: Shopper movement and behavior in the store
Find out how shoppers navigate the store, how they search for products, and how you can make them find the products you want them to see and buy. 


1.0 Welcome to the course
1.1 Overview of the module
1.2 Shopper shadowing: Tracking shoppers in the store
1.3 Four principles of how shoppers move in the store
1.4 Grid and free form: Creating a store layout that suits the store
1.5 Follow the yellow brick road: Influencing shopper movement through a loop
1.6 How I ended up buying potato chips: Where to place products so that shoppers buy them
1.7 Eye level is buy level: The principles of shelf placement
1.8 Horizontal, not vertical: Shoppers’ search patterns
1.9 Follow the eye: Eyetracking at the Point of Sale
From my bookshelf

Week 2: Shopper orientation and disorientation
Learn why shopper confusion kills every sale and how you can help shoppers find their way—all the way to the cash register.


2.1 Overview of the module
2.2 I’m so lost… and I hate this place: The effects of shopper disorientation
2.3 It’s all stored in the head: Improving shopper orientation through cognitive maps
2.4 Beware of the magic number 7: Improving shopper orientation through signs
2.5 Words and pictures: Applying dual coding theory
2.6 You are here: Improving orientation through store maps
2.7 The store as a forbidden place: Consumer disinformation
From my bookshelf

Week 3: Influencing shoppers through the store atmosphere
Learn how to appeal to shopper emotions through use of colors, scents, light, and music.

3.1 Overview of the module
3.2 Communicating through the senses: How the store atmosphere influences emotions
3.3 How the environment influences shoppers: The Mehrabian-Russell-Model
3.4 Arousal and pleasure: The key drivers of in-store behavior
3.5 Better slow than fast: Using background music in the store
3.6 The smell of happy memories: Using ambient scents
3.7 Let the sunshine in: Store lighting
3.8 Red or blue? Colors in the store
3.9 Everything must fit: The importance of congruence
From my bookshelf

Week 4: Visual merchandising – the art and science of product presentation
Let me show you what the most attention-grabbing and profitable ways to present your merchandise are.

4.1 Overview of the module
4.2 The art and science of seducing shoppers with the merchandise: What is visual merchandising?
4.3 Shoppers buy only what they see: The 3 key principles of visual merchandising
4.4 Less is more: Avoiding the choice overload effect
4.5 Choosing the right company for your products: The bundled presentation merchandising technique
4.6 Creating visual magnets: Directing the shoppers’ attention
4.7 A picture says more than a thousand words: Using in-store graphics to trigger cognitive schemas
From my bookshelf

Week 5: Making shopping fun through experiential store design
I'll teach you to make shopping memorable and fun by creating unique experiences.

5.1 Overview of the module
5.2 Competing with cyberspace: Reasons for experiential store design
5.3 Necessity or fun: Utilitarian and hedonic shopping
5.4 Appealing to the pleasure seekers: 4 steps for creating shopping experiences for hedonic shoppers
5.5 Exciting places and live entertainment: Designing experiences for adventure shoppers
5.6 Creating a third place: Designing experiences for social shoppers
5.7 Gifts, indulgence and curiosity: Experiences for role, gratification, and idea shoppers
5.8 Appealing to the bargain hunters: Designing experiences for deal-prone consumers
5.9 Jungles, castles and Harry Potter: Creating effective themed experiences
From my bookshelf

Week 6: Recipes for influencing shoppers
Find out how you can apply the concepts learned in this course to influence specific shopping behaviors and achieve positive effects for the store.

6.1 Overview of the module
6.2 How much longer? Shorten consumers’ wait-time perceptions
6.3 Expensive or cheap? Influence shoppers’ price perceptions
6.4 Accessibility for all: Design the store for senior citizens
6.5 Wait, wait, don’t go! Keep shoppers in the store longer
6.6 I must have that! Encourage impulse purchases
6.7 Make shopping simple and fun: The importance of processing fluency
6.8 Course conclusion

Taught by

Claus Ebster

Reviews

4.5 rating, based on 2 Class Central reviews

Start your review of Store Design, Visual Merchandising and Shopper Marketing

  • Anonymous
    This so interesting I would like to do it founding more about merchandise and customers I love everything about clothes the store the customers I would love to have my own store
  • Jemti

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