Wednesday, April 2, 2014


Exciting News!!!

Corman & Associates, Inc. is excited to announce their most recent award for a custom wall treatment designed for the Aquarium of the Pacific in Long Beach California. The store was a labor of love and to receive an award is icing on the cake! We are truly pleased with the outcome and look forward to providing three additional fixtures to the retail space.

Alexis Sutherland, Director of Design
www.cormans.com

Monday, March 24, 2014

Trade Show Know......

Choosing the right trade show to attend can change more than just the scenery.

 APPL2014

Maybe this year you need something to change with your business. You can’t always change much in your business, the logo, the product, the people. Maybe instead your business could use a change of scenery.
Sounds simple enough, right! “Trade shows are so expensive, and time consuming and require all my workers.” I hear what you’re saying, but consider the instant benefits of all that hard work. Trade shows can drop you right into the center of where your new clients are. Plus, managing your trade show in a different way might allow you to enjoy the experience. So here are some tips to follow.
KNOW where you’re going...
I’m not talking about which hotel you’re staying in or what airport you need to be in at least 2 hours early. I’m asking, where is your business headed? What are your goals? Where will you be in 5 years or more? Are you looking to branch out beyond your current borders? Are you thinking locally, globally, socially? Research trade shows that get your business in touch with the most customers you can. If you are a new business owner, go to local trade shows. Go as a guest. See what others are doing and who is featured in that trade show. Seeing what others in your field are doing can benifit you as well. Studies have shown that when similar businesses are near each other geographically it improves the traffic of both businesses; the same is true in trade shows. Parking your booth next to your arch rival can benefit you both.
Know what you can do...
Sounds simple enough, but when is the last time you brainstormed on what your business can really do. Is there a way you can use your companies’ products or service that hasn’t been done before. Finding simple ways to improve people’s lives can have a big affect. This is an opportunity for you to dream in your company. Those in their late 30’s and younger know, we expect our jobs to accomplish a goal beyond the monetary. Forbes.com has an article called What Millennial's Want Most: A Career That Actually Matters. Why is this important? Because that is also what your consumer wants. Your consumer now cares about whether or not your company recycles, supports its workers and buys local. It all matters and it’s all marketable. Looking for trade shows that allow your company to reach the ever growing Green Movement. Like the Eco Expo Asia, Eco Build, Eco Transport and Logistics trade shows.


APPL 2014 Albuquerque, New MexicoKnow where you are...
This is an important step, knowing where you are in your business is probably the least appealing thing to deal with. Not everyone, but many will not want to face the proverbial mirror on this. We don’t like change, we don’t want to have to change, but, as my daddy always said, “life isn’t fair.” So be prepared. Every year around trade show time you should be examining how you appear. Step outside of your own business and play the part of the consumer looking in. Do you like what you see? Are you attracted to your business? “But I sell auto parts..” So, are you attracted to your business? Your consumer will make judgment calls based on appearance, and then based on product and service.
Forbes.com has an article called What Millennials Want Most: A Career That Actually Matters.  Why is this important? Because that is also what your consumer wants.
                                                                                                               Barry Salzberg
                                                                                                               Forbes Magazine 
 Trade shows give consumers a glimpse into your business. Staffing your booth properly, using excellent graphics and having the right materials to give away to your consumer helps them chose you in the future. You need to have encouraging, hard working, knowledgeable people running the booth and allow each other breaks to see the trade show for yourselves. This is a time to learn and absorb ten times the information you normally get day to day. At the end of your trade show you’ll have a new outlook and even if it wasn’t a perfect fit, you’ll Know more than you did before. 




Friday, February 21, 2014

The Plush Fixture



A plush fixture is a unit that displays or merchandises stuffed animals or plush items in an organized visual way.  It is great for smaller soft toys and ideal for bulk items. 
aopplush resized 600
 (This is a stationary plush bin)
There are many different variations of plush fixtures.  There are tall, slender, multi-tiered, wide and single tiered plush fixtures.  Sizes and shapes can vary with the customer and what best fits their store design. 
gwplush resized 600                               tall round plush
(This is a mobile plush fixture)

A plush that features four surfaces can be merchandised so that customers have good access to see and touch the items comfortably.  Designed as a taller and more compact fixture, it allows the eye to gravitate to the display and visually see more product. Casters installed on the bottom give it mobility.  Being mobile allows the unit to be placed in high or low traffic areas depending on what the store plan calls for. Another good quality is that it takes less space--- in the retail world space is better than gold.
Alaska Mining Oval Plush
The unit above contrasts the last plush fixture we described, this being a longer and wider unit.  This fixture sits low to the ground allowing easy and comfortable access to the product placed in the divided areas.  The multi-tiered feature gives the ability to have many different merchandising options and a bit more opportunity to creatively showcase your product.
 Custom Plush Fixture Aquarium of the Pacific
  Custom plush unit built for Aquarium of the Pacific by Corman and Associates                                                                                  
 All in all, having a plush bin won’t break the budget; it will give you a fixture that not only provides an attractive visual element, but an ergonomical way to present your products to your customers young and old.
Jungala plush fixturecustom volcano plush
                                  column wrap fixture
 Here at Corman & Associates, Inc., we can customize a plush bin to almost anything our customers want.  We are always thinking of new ways to meet your needs, new ways to define the retail environment.Whether you want to update a look with one or two elements or design an entire store, we invite you to let us help you create an exciting retail selling space.  859.233.0544 www.cormans.com


 Click on these links below to download our catalogs



CALL US TODAY 859.233.0544

Tuesday, January 21, 2014

Retail Design: Why it Matters So Much for Sales & the Success of a Business

Today’s guest blogger is Naomi Shaw, who is honored to have had the opportunity to share her insights on why retail design is so important, and what businesses can do to increase their sales. 

Retail Design: Why it Matters So Much for Sales & the Success of a Business
 Naomi Shaw
Running a business is never easy, regardless of whether you are running it solely online or in an actual storefront. But when you do have physical space for your retail business, getting customers in the door is almost always the most difficult factor of growing. Once you get the customers in the door, you’ll be making sales, right? It really all depends...
 How do you attract those customers and how do you get them interested enough to come in, especially if they’re not already familiar with your business? Let’s say, for example, you’re in the fashion industry-- what will make customers be more interested in your brand of jeans or shoes than the more well-known and reputable store across the way?
 At this point, what will make the difference between attracting customers and steering them away are your retail design skills. Does your storefront have what it takes to encourage curiosity?
 Below, you’ll find a variety of tips to help you draw more customers into your store and influence your clientele to buy from you.
download resized 600
 An-eye catching sign goes further than you might think.
Image Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons

Why Does Retail Design Matter?
 When many business owners think about the design of their store, they think about efficiency. While the cost of building and maximizing space are two very important things to keep in mind, the interior of your store is just as vital to your business’s success. You can spend all your time and money on strategically-placed signs and fanciful window designs, but what will keep those customers intrigued by what you have to offer if the inside of your store is bare?
 The first impression will be the only chance you’ll have to impress potential customers and keep them coming back, so you need to consider the following:

  1. How am I going to draw customers in?
  2. How am I going to keep them interested in what I have to offer?

How Do I Make Customers Notice My Store?
 The first thing you need to do to make customers notice your store is make it abundantly clear what your business does. That means clear signage – and signage that advertises your style, as well. You might be a jeweler, but if you’re a high-end jeweler instead of a middle-of-the-road store, you need to make that clear in your aesthetic or wording.
 The next most important thing you can do is simply give customers something visual to look at – something to draw them in. Using the same jeweler example, displaying a countertop caseof wonderful watches that really catch the eye in your front window can work, as can a more abstract display.
 What doesn’t work is the old-school signage that advertises that you HAVE watches.
apple resized 600
 Creating an instantly recognizable aesthetic will help boost sales over time.
Image Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons

How Do I Improve My Retail Design?
 The answer to this question isn’t something that can be simple, and good retail design really depends on the type of store that you are. A store that sells cough syrup, like a convenience store, doesn’t need the same type of design as a high-end boutique clothing store.
 Still, there are some basic tips you can follow:

  • Consider what you’re selling. In short, the design should match the aesthetic and lifestyle you’re trying to put forward. Think about how the Apple store displays its products versus how a high-end department store does. They both have an aesthetic, and you can feel that as soon as you walk in.
  • Don’t overcrowd your product. That means leaving a bit of space between items on shelves and showcasing what you’re really trying to sell. Crowding makes customers want to leave your store – not buy from it. No one likes clutter, regardless of how amazing your product really is.
  • Think about product volume. If customers are coming into your store for multiple items, making things easy to find is incredibly important. However, if they’re coming in for one item, something large like a television, making sure other items are visible in the store is key to boosting sales.

In such a saturated market, which almost every market is in 2014, retail design is playing a major role in the success of every business. Unless you want to be left behind and allow your competitors and new entrants in your field pass you up, it’s time to get on board and improve your aesthetic right away.


Wednesday, January 15, 2014

Shared Blogs

HOW IKEA GOT CUSTOMERS IN NORWAY TO RECREATE ITS ENTIRE PRINT CATALOG ON INSTAGRAM


Posted by Omar Akhtar on 01.09.14 at 12:05pm

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Here's a clever marketing idea from IKEA Norway that's almost laughably simple
ikeasocialcatalog.JPG
The furniture retailer wanted to get pictures of its merchandise out on social media. But instead of just shoveling photos onto Facebook and Instagram, the company had a better idea. Why not just get its social media followers to do it?
In Norway, every household gets mailed an IKEA catalog, so people are pretty well-versed in the products. In order to get them talking about and sharing images of its products, IKEA encouraged its social media followers on Facebook and Instagram to snap pictures of furniture items on the pages of the catalog, and post them under the hashtag #ikeakatalogen along with the item's name. As an added incentive, every week, IKEA would give away an item to one of the posters.
The result? Within just four weeks, the campaign was able to successfully recreate IKEA's print catalog online, after every item in the catalog had been photographed and uploaded. The campaign, the brainchild of Oslo based agency SMFB, succeeded in dramatically increasing IKEA Norway's social media following and engagement, especially on Instagram, where it went from having 0 to 12,000 followers.
Here's a video about the campaign and how it was executed.

Shared Blogs About the Retail Experience

COOL SOCIAL CAFE, ZIFERBLAT

Cool Social Cafe, Ziferblat

Ziferblat, the new social café opened in London’s Shoreditch has revolutionised the environment we drink coffee. Ziferblat – meaning clock face in Russian – is London’s first pay-per-minute café.  Rather than paying for hot drinks, customers pay for the amount of time they spend there.

If you visit the Russian chain it will cost you 3p for each minute you spend there - so one hour of endless cups of tea or coffee, biscuits and Wi-Fi will cost you £1.80!

An eclectic space that is full of personality with its nostalgic record player providing a gorgeous backdrop of wistful music, the refurbished retro furniture all creating the perfect indie hang out for the hipsters of London’s Shoreditch.

This is a retail space with a community spirit, it is more than just a café, but a lifestyle and you pay to be in the space and absorb the atmosphere. The original concept grew from a social experiment. Could this be the new alternative to the global coffee chains taking over the high streets?

The café is a “social space you treat like your home”, here, you are not just a customer, but part of an exclusive club. Situated in the London hub of coolness, Shoreditch, this café is destined to be successful! Hopefully it still retains its elusive, mystical charm.

Great idea, absolutely love it!

Tuesday, January 7, 2014

The Cash wrap a.k.a point of sale

The Collins English Dictionary describes a cash wrap/POS as the place at which a sale is made. These days the cash wrap is so much more to a business. Here are just a few ways we at Corman & Associates, Inc. believe that the cash wrap/POS isn’t just a single use fixture.
The cash wrap/POS, is the place in most business’s where you make the first connection(s) with your customers. By allowing that connection to be positive, it shows your customer who you are and what you have to offer.

The cash wrap has many faces, one being the information center. A well designed cash wrap provides a place customers can approach. By making the cash wrap a comfortable height with attractive colors, the store can also post useful information to answer the common FAQ’s, that will guide them to what they need.



                                                      
               

 It is also a work space allowing employees to multi task and still be on the floor present to assist customers instead of in an office or backroom. Don’t forget, multiple work functions can be designed and built in per your unique store requirements.



So while most of us think it is just a fixture that holds a register, please don’t underestimate the impact of a cash wrap/POS. By taking advantage of its many functions, your cash wrap/POS will be the centerpiece of your customer’s positive experience.