1 / 24

Flower shop displays

Flower shop displays. Mrs. Hendrix Principles and Elements of Floral Design. Terms to know. Artistic Display Buying Up Display Display Elements Impulse Buying Product-Oriented Displays Theme Displays Visual Merchandising. Introduction.

minya
Download Presentation

Flower shop displays

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Flower shop displays Mrs. Hendrix Principles and Elements of Floral Design

  2. Terms to know • Artistic Display • Buying Up • Display • Display Elements • Impulse Buying • Product-Oriented Displays • Theme Displays • Visual Merchandising

  3. Introduction • The goal of a florist is to sell products/services • To do so, customers must be attracted to store • Known as “Visual Merchandising” • Building design • Store layout • Lights • Signs • Fixtures • Displays • General store decorations • Focus here will be displays

  4. Displays • Visual and artistic aspect of presenting a product to customers • Make store seem unique • Use advertisement to get them there, use displays to keep them there • Customers make judgments based on the way a store looks • Attractive, well maintained with easy to read signs • Adequate parking with easy access to store entrance

  5. Primary purpose • Motivate customers to make purchases • To work, florist must understand visual merchandising • Attract attention • Arouse interest • Create desire • Initiate buying

  6. Attract attention • Causes people to look • Color • Contrast • Light • Motion • Turntables • Fountains • Fans • Flashers • Fabric (if used properly)

  7. Arouse interest • Must hold viewer’s attention long enough to develop interest in merchandise • Must have a focal point • Movement through the display should be encouraged

  8. Create desire • Viewer should become enthusiastic about buying the merchandise • Show products in everyday settings • Helps customer envision how to use it at home • Show products in glamorous/fantastic settings • Helps customer become part of the “fantasy”

  9. Initiate buying • If first three steps are accomplished the result should be a sale • Information like price and/or availability should be accessible to customer

  10. Secondary purpose • Impulse buying • Buying up • Multiple sales • Create store image • Showcasing products • Reinforce advertising • Educate customers • Encourage future sales

  11. Artistic displays • Designed to stop traffic and focus attention • Doesn’t sale directly • Used to • Pull customers through store • Draw people to “dead” area • Stop shoppers at important section • Create an image

  12. Theme Displays • Based on specific subject or topic • Holidays • Christmas, Valentine’s Day, Easter • Seasons • Spring, Summer, Autumn, Winter • Life events • Weddings, Graduations, Proms • Commemorations • Veterans Day, Secretaries’ Day • Community Celebrations • Local fairs, civic projects, political and cultural events

  13. Suggested display planner • January • Winter Seasonal, Valentine’s Day • February • Valentine’s Day, Mardi Gras, National FFA Week • March • Spring Seasonal, St. Patrick’s Day, Easter • April • Spring, Easter, Secretaries’ Week

  14. Suggested display calendar • May • Mother’s Day, Summer Seasonal, Memorial Day, Commencement • June • Summer Seasonal, Father’s Day • July • Summer Seasonal, Independence Day • August • Summer Seasonal, Back to School

  15. Suggested display calendar • September • Labor Day, Grandparent’s Day • October • Autumn Seasonal, Halloween, Sweetest Day, Bosses’ Day • November • Autumn Seasonal, Veterans’ Day, Thanksgiving • December • Winter Seasonal, Christmas

  16. Product-oriented display • Focus on direct promotion of merchandise • Single Item Display • Line-of-goods Display • Single type • Related Merchandise Display • Collection of items used together or similar • Variety Displays • Unrelated merchandise, common color or price

  17. Designing display • Display elements • Components used in assembling display • Can be mixed in many combinations • Includes merchandise, fixtures, props • Repetition • Step • Zigzag • Pyramid • Radiation

  18. Repetition • Simple in form • Achieves effect through repeated use of similar items • All same: • Height • Spacing • Direction

  19. Step • Varied size merchandise in progression from smallest to largest • Easy for eye to follow • All same • Height • Face same direction

  20. ZigZag • Leads eye back and forth and up and down • Interesting and continuous line for eye to follow • Columns and pedestals can be used to achieve height desired

  21. Pyramid • Triangular arrangement of products with broad base rising to center peak • Formal arrangement • Effective with most merchandise • Potted plants and flowers

  22. radiation • Merchandise appears to radiate from central point • Columns and pedestals display at appropriate heights to create fanlike arrangement or complete circle

  23. review • Identify as theme-oriented or product-oriented • Valentine’s Day • Wedding • New Line of Vases • Cultural Event • Display of cut flowers • Secretaries’ Day • Display of potted plants, pots, growing medium • Display of balloons

  24. Review • Illustrate following display arrangements • Zigzag • Step • Radiation • Repetition • Pyramid

More Related