solutions

Retail Response to COVID-19: Rising to the Challenge

Retail Response to COVID-19: Rising to the Challenge

The supermarket industry is truly inspiring during the crisis caused by COVID-19. The workers across the supply chain - from those manufacturing needed products, to truckers and distributors, to the people stocking shelves and checking shoppers out - are on the frontlines of this battle. Everyone and every organization throughout the industry has stepped up to ensure that food and needed supplies continue to flow to shoppers in every community across the United States.

Speaking with retailers and others, many retailers are slowly recovering from the panic buying that has occurred in the first couple weeks of this crisis. Food and supplies are slowly being restocked, and retailers are wisely limiting purchase quantities to insure that the majority of shoppers are able to get needed products. 

The partnerships…

Driving Grocery Store Optimization Through Perishables

Driving Grocery Store Optimization Through Perishables

Grocery stores offer a wide variety of foods, including many perishables that require tight temperature controls. Fridges, freezers, reach-ins, and bunkers that hold these sensitive foods must be checked throughout the day, taking time away from team members from ensuring good experience for their customers. Manual temperature checks, typically done with pen and paper, are error-prone, easily forgotten, increase compliance risk, and lead to unnecessary food waste in the event of a temperature failure. This presents a significant opportunity to leverage…

Looking Ahead to The CART Event at NGAShow 2020

Looking Ahead to The CART Event at NGAShow 2020

The CART Event at the NGA Show coming up in February, 2020, is focused on helping Independent Retail understand What it takes to Thrive in The Age of ‘i’.

Changes in the retail industry are happening faster than ever before, transforming the retail store, and how retailers go to market and interact with their shoppers. Retailers can embrace this change, avail themselves of capabilities never before possible, or be disrupted into irrelevancy. And disruption is exactly what’s happening as the industry undergoes gut-wrenching change as decades of product-first practices give way to a true customer-first retail experience…

Know your Prospect!

Through CART, we talk with and get to know a lot of solution providers, companies seeking to sell some new innovative technology or capability to retailers. It is concerning how few solution providers take the time to do some basic research on their retail prospects, walking into a sales meeting very unprepared.

The first step in selling is to determine what size or type retailer you want to approach first. In the supermarket industry you can think in terms of independent retailers (smaller, privately owned, typically with fewer than 10 stores), regional retailers (est. 10-250 stores), and then larger regiona/national retailers (companies like Ahold, Kroger, Walmart, etc.).

Once you’ve decided on your target, generate some specific retailers you want to approach; maybe retailers in your area or a retailer you have some connection to. Next do a basic Google search to find out more about the retailer. How many stores do they have? What are their annual sales? How many employees? Where are their stores located? Who are their competitors? Search for any recent news articles about them. Identify who the key executives are, especially those you think will be decision makers or influencers relative to whatever solution you’re going to bring to them.

If you get a meeting, visit some of their stores before you meet. This should be a standard operating practice for anyone selling into retail, especially grocery retail. Walk the store, noticing any and all details that may involve whatever solution you’re seeking to sell them. Get a sense for the retailer as an operator and for their customers. When you go into your meeting, share that you were in the retailer’s store - any retailer of any size will appreciate you’ve taken time to learn about them and visit their store operations.

Finally, relate what your solution is to what problem you are solving for the retailer or what opportunity you’re able to help the retailer realize.

What's Your Story?

What's Your Story?

If your company provides solutions, particularly technology solutions, to the retail industry, selling is a mandatory activity and in many younger companies that duty often falls to the founder, CEO, or other key executive. The CART team has worked with hundreds of young tech companies and we’ve seen some things that work and we’ve seen many things that don’t work as well so thought we’d share some lessons with you. Many technology company people are incredibly smart when it comes to the tech, but unprepared when it comes to the selling of it.