Remove Jewelry Remove Location Remove Promotions Remove Visual Merchandising
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Saks Uses Events to Promote Immersive Pop-up Debuting in Aspen

Retail TouchPoints

Visitors to the Saks Aspen Pop-Up will find luxury women’s, men’s and ready-to-wear fashion, swim, accessories and jewelry, with Saks stylists available to provide on-demand personal consultations. Additional events are scheduled throughout the weekend, including a dinner with jewelry designer Anita Ko.

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How to Use Fixtures to Direct Traffic Flow

Independent Retailer

Used to announce inventory or stock items, they can often be positioned around your store’s space with captivating imagery to help customers locate where kitchen gadgets are or where exactly electronics are located. This is a subtle way to promote, complete a look, and help your store make sales without having to lift a finger.

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Three Key Considerations Affecting Retail Design in 2022

Retail TouchPoints

Stores still need traditional shop-ability: having the right mix of products, promotions, prices and people — but also simple factors like ease of entering the store, browsing, trying on items, all the way through to completing the purchase at the cashwrap. The Ongoing Evolution of Retail Spaces.

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Amazon Style’s Digitally Powered Brick-and-Mortar Experience Blends Human Touch With AI Sales Support

Retail TouchPoints

Amazon Style plans to open a second brick-and-mortar location later in 2022 at the Easton Town Center in Columbus, Ohio. The technology also persists beyond the in-store shopping trip, affording shoppers online access to items they scanned during their visit, thereby allowing guests to continue shopping the store at home.

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From Cobblestones to Cyberspace: VMSD Celebrates Its 125th Year of Service to the Retail Industry

VMS

These innovations were the sparks that led to the inception of the visual merchandising and store design industries. And while these megastores were in their seminal stages, nobody quite knew what to do with them and the unending mountain of merchandise sitting under their roofs. As such, visual merchandising was born.