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How Not To Get Burned When Choosing a POS System for Your Retail Store |
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Hours and hours of practice and scripting go into that demo. POS vendors work hard to impress you with their newest and coolest features and try to develop a presentation that showcases their finest attributes. Unfortunately, if you get caught up in the show, you could end up spending a fortune on a system that does not do what you need it to do.
Any POS system out there can ring up a sale. Any of them allow you to add inventory, customers, vendors, employees, and more. So how do you make sure that you get what you need in the system?
You look first at your own business. Look for the "curveballs," the processes or procedures within your own retail store that might be difficult to replicate in a system. Great examples of this include special orders (how do you record them, process them, sell them, etc.? This is an especially tricky area, so include all the variables), wholesaling, employee sales, and manufacturing/kits.
If your store requires any of the above processes, make sure you figure out how you want it done, and then go over that in detail with the POS provider. Most importantly, make them show you how it would work within their system as part of the demo. Never take the word of the salesperson who says, "Yeah, we could do something like that."
Reporting is another area where many retailers find themselves sorry that they chose the system they did. During the demo, the POS provider will again attempt to impress you with incredible reports and maybe even show you how you can design your own. This does not mean that you can get anything you ever wanted! The best way to do this is to take blank pieces of paper, draw the reports you want (make sure you indicate how you want the report sorted and subtotaled, and if you want it filtered for certain data), and ask the vendor to create those for you. Some retailers tell us that they hadn't given that much thought before, but they are sure glad that they went through this exercise! Having the right reports in a POS system is how you turn the cost of a retail system into an investment, and how you make that investment pay for itself!
In summary, make sure that you tell the vendor the oddities, the unusual processes and procedures, and the differentiators in your business. Then make him/her show you how his/her system can be adapted to fit your business model. At that point, the seemingly unending sea of POS vendors will suddenly become very easy to navigate.
About Author
This guide is presented by SDCR Business Systems, a leading full-service POS corporation in North America. For more information on its retail POS products, go to www.retailproexpress.com or www.sdcr.com.Pelle Atterholm is a marketing and communications specialist and project manager who has worked with several different start up companies. He has developed a broad range of strategies in the fields of technical marketing, media, and innovative promotions. He holds Bachelor degrees in Communications & Journalism, and a Masters of Science in Information Systems from Hawaii Pacific University in Honolulu. Pelle can be reached at 800-683-2778 ext 188.
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