• 520@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    That is not how marketing for a retail store works at all! They’d put themselves out of business by pulling that shit.

    They want to gauge what you are interested in for a number of reasons:

    1. purchasing frequency. Do people who buy this product tend to do so as a repeat purchase or as one-off purchases? If you know this you can adjust discounts to pull in more people that would otherwise make this purchase at a different store.

    2. purchasing correlation. So you’ve bought a new Xbox. What else do you want to buy alongside it? Games and controllers of course! There are a ton of other, less obvious correlated purchases out there, and this is great information for bundling promotions.

    3. attention span: does this product actually get people’s attention? Seems pretty obvious why they want this data.

    4. does said attention translate into purchases? If not, why not? Might be an ideal target for a targeted survey later. Can be used to justify replacing a product on store shelves.

    5. customer metrics: provides accurate information about the activity going on in the store, what times are the busiest, which times are the lull hours, and accurate headcounts for number of customers.

    • PuppyOSAndCoffee@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      Why are the things I want on the top or bottom shelf and the things I don’t want on end caps or the middle of the shelf?

      • Monkey With A Shell@lemmy.socdojo.com
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        1 year ago

        Impulse purchases. You’re there looking for a thing that brings you to an area, put something tangentially related in easy view nearby. It’s the same sort of thing as why there are single serve candy and soda at the checkout ‘cheap, easy, convinient’ on items that will generally have high margin to them.

        • PuppyOSAndCoffee@lemmy.ml
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          1 year ago

          Maybe / maybe not

          Companies pay to place their product that may or may not sell, c/o inventory discount.

          Remember, in a perfect world, advertising to someone who will neither purchase more nor less is wasted advertising.

          Marketing is not about what you want, but influencing you to do things that you aren’t doing already, or to keep you doing something you are about to stop.