Jump to content

Retail shelf: Difference between revisions

367 bytes removed ,  28 February 2004
m
removed a silly paragraph about audio access to consumerium services at the retail shelf
No edit summary
 
m (removed a silly paragraph about audio access to consumerium services at the retail shelf)
Line 1: Line 1:
The '''retail shelf''' is where a customer first encounters the [[barcode]] and other aspects of the [[product label]] (like [[nutritional information]] and any [[standard label]] included on it like "[[kosher]]" or "[[dolphin free]]").
The '''retail shelf''' is where a customer first encounters the [[barcode]] and other aspects of the [[product label]] (like [[nutritional information]] and any [[standard label]] included on it like "[[kosher]]" or "[[dolphin free]]").
Because a customer moves past many such shelves rapidly, this is probably the worst possible point to ask them to use a [[worn device]], certainly not one that they must pull off a [[belt]] or out of a [[pocket]] to use, or which is not [[handsfree]].  For these reasons the [[headset]] is the best device for delivering any detailed information at this location.


This and the [[checkout counter]] are the only two guaranteed places in-store that the customer will encounter, so any [[Consumerium Service access]] should be optimized for these.  In [[friendly retail]] locations, e.g. the [[Big Carrot]] type store or [[local co-op]]s, it might be possible to augment the '''shelf''' itself, if the [[institutional buying criteria]] of that store are likely to closely match the [[individual buying criteria]] of the customer.  In that case, the [[Consumerium buying signal]]'s positive choice information becomes a definite [[price premium]] factor, and the whole store will probably be able to charge more for providing such complete profiles of what the customer is buying.
This and the [[checkout counter]] are the only two guaranteed places in-store that the customer will encounter, so any [[Consumerium Service access]] should be optimized for these.  In [[friendly retail]] locations, e.g. the [[Big Carrot]] type store or [[local co-op]]s, it might be possible to augment the '''shelf''' itself, if the [[institutional buying criteria]] of that store are likely to closely match the [[individual buying criteria]] of the customer.  In that case, the [[Consumerium buying signal]]'s positive choice information becomes a definite [[price premium]] factor, and the whole store will probably be able to charge more for providing such complete profiles of what the customer is buying.
9,842

edits

We use only those cookies necessary for the functioning of the website.