Anyone here make their own shelf talkers?

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jeffmazen
 
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Anyone here make their own shelf talkers?

Post #1  Postby jeffmazen » June 4th 2009, 3:05am

If so what program do you use for a template?

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Max Marinucci
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Re: Anyone here make their own shelf talkers?

Post #2  Postby Max Marinucci » June 4th 2009, 3:55am

jeffmazen wrote:If so what program do you use for a template?


I am a Mac...I use Pages.
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Re: Anyone here make their own shelf talkers?

Post #3  Postby Peter Tryba » June 4th 2009, 5:31am

ditto
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Re: Anyone here make their own shelf talkers?

Post #4  Postby mike.m » June 4th 2009, 7:16am

I'm PC, I use Excel. I just made a little box for all the info and price. It looks ok, it's about time for a shelf talker revamp though. I'd like something a bit more professional.
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Re: Anyone here make their own shelf talkers?

Post #5  Postby Roberto Rogness » June 4th 2009, 9:21am

We do all of our own POS here and do it on 8 1/2 x 11 sheets for case displays with AppleWorks on a Mac. We had signboards made for us to fit.
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Re: Anyone here make their own shelf talkers?

Post #6  Postby Brent C l a y t o n » June 4th 2009, 9:42am

Word.
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Re: Anyone here make their own shelf talkers?

Post #7  Postby Randy Bowman » June 4th 2009, 1:24pm

Simple set up in word to do twelve at time, then cut them. Time consuming but it works.
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Re: Anyone here make their own shelf talkers?

Post #8  Postby John Davis » June 4th 2009, 2:25pm

Print Shop 2 and I don't like it very much. Used to use Microsoft Publisher which I did like but probably b/c I was used to it. Looking for something new for my Mac.

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Re: Anyone here make their own shelf talkers?

Post #9  Postby chaad thomas » June 4th 2009, 9:58pm

Another Mac / Pages user. Mine look like this:

Image

EDIT: BTW, Jeff, I'm happy to send you one of my files to use as a template if you'd like! You've gotta have Pages, of course, though. I hope your well!
Last edited by chaad thomas on June 4th 2009, 10:21pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Anyone here make their own shelf talkers?

Post #10  Postby chaad thomas » June 4th 2009, 10:00pm

Randy Bowman wrote:Simple set up in word to do twelve at time, then cut them. Time consuming but it works.

Same trouble with mine, although I went for big/bold, so only get 6/pp.
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Re: Anyone here make their own shelf talkers?

Post #11  Postby Veronica Castro » June 4th 2009, 10:01pm

Randy Bowman wrote:Simple set up in word to do twelve at time, then cut them. Time consuming but it works.


Yep! Works for us.
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Re: Anyone here make their own shelf talkers?

Post #12  Postby Daniel Posner » June 7th 2009, 11:26am

Can I see the Boone's Farm shelftalker?

Never made a shelftalker.
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Re: Anyone here make their own shelf talkers?

Post #13  Postby John Liotta » June 7th 2009, 5:47pm

Shelftalkers are lazy.
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Re: Anyone here make their own shelf talkers?

Post #14  Postby Mark.Ricca » June 8th 2009, 10:36am

I'm a PC.
We use Word.
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Re: Anyone here make their own shelf talkers?

Post #15  Postby Thomas Keim » June 8th 2009, 2:05pm

John Liotta wrote:Shelftalkers are lazy.


Why would you make that observation John? So many customers who walk in the door of a wine shop like to browse. They would rather pick something out themselves rather than listen to you or your staff. So a nice shelftalker tells the customer exactly what he wants to hear about each wine and he doesn't have to talk to a clerk.

You have no idea how many times a customer will walk up to the counter with a bottle and state "This wine has 17% Carignan in it and I love Carignan!"

Now how would they have found out about that without a shelftalker?

And don't say that you would have told them that because they already refused your request for help.

It used to make me made as hell to walk up to a customer and ask them if they need any help, only to have them say no, I want to browse (looking at you very distrustfully). Then they walk up with a bottle of wine stating that "it sounds good!"

And you know you wrote the damn shelftalker....
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Re: Anyone here make their own shelf talkers?

Post #16  Postby John Liotta » June 8th 2009, 6:30pm

Shelftalkers turn wine shops into slow-pitch softball leagues . . .
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Re: Anyone here make their own shelf talkers?

Post #17  Postby Mark.Ricca » June 8th 2009, 6:46pm

John Liotta wrote:Shelftalkers turn wine shops into slow-pitch softball leagues . . .


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Re: Anyone here make their own shelf talkers?

Post #18  Postby Mark.Ricca » June 8th 2009, 6:49pm

I write shelftalkers for lots of different types of wine, some I like and think are valid some are not. The challenge lies in not projecting my tastes onto all of my customers and not using verbage that it too highbrow or technical.

I also have written descriptions for many store websites. It takes good temperament not to overwrite or be too fluffy in your descriptions. Think of it like a good boxer: Get in, hit, get out.

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Re: Anyone here make their own shelf talkers?

Post #19  Postby Randy Bowman » June 8th 2009, 7:31pm

I use a simple format and will use the notes from WS or WA whenever possible. Will admit we haven't been using shelf talkers since we moved to our new location. This is about the size of them and nothing glitzy:

Winery: Badge
Wine: Pinot Noir 2005
Santa Rita Hills
Score: 91

“Rich and complex, showing
layers of firm, ripe black
cherry, plum and wild berry
fruit that's well-structured,
with the flavors sailing on
through the finish. With good
tannins and fine balance,
this should provide lots of
fun drinking over the next
five years.
Drink now thru 2011. 800
cases made.”

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Re: Anyone here make their own shelf talkers?

Post #20  Postby Thomas Keim » June 8th 2009, 9:23pm

John Liotta wrote:Shelftalkers turn wine shops into slow-pitch softball leagues . . .


Are you in retail John?
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Re: Anyone here make their own shelf talkers?

Post #21  Postby chaad thomas » June 9th 2009, 6:18am

Randy Bowman wrote:I use a simple format and will use the notes from WS or WA whenever possible. Will admit we haven't been using shelf talkers since we moved to our new location. This is about the size of them and nothing glitzy:

Winery: Badge
Wine: Pinot Noir 2005
Santa Rita Hills
Score: 91

“Rich and complex, showing
layers of firm, ripe black
cherry, plum and wild berry
fruit that's well-structured,
with the flavors sailing on
through the finish. With good
tannins and fine balance,
this should provide lots of
fun drinking over the next
five years.
Drink now thru 2011. 800
cases made.”

(DS)
Wine Spectator

Not to pick on you, but this is the kind of shelf talker that turns shops into "slow-pitch softball leagues," as Liotta put it.

Just regurgitating scores and/or third-party notes wrecks the market and cripples your credibility.

Implicit here is the notion that it is not your shop that are the experts, but Wine Spectator (et. al). It also builds this paradigm where wines without ratings don't sell to the public because their viewed as inferior, and the commerical buyers don't buy them because they think they don't sell.

While these kinds of shelftalkers may be an expeditious way for a retailer to do business, they really degrade the integrity of the market overall.
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Re: Anyone here make their own shelf talkers?

Post #22  Postby John Liotta » June 9th 2009, 7:05am

Thomas Keim wrote:
John Liotta wrote:Shelftalkers turn wine shops into slow-pitch softball leagues . . .


Are you in retail John?



Seems like every day . . .
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Re: Anyone here make their own shelf talkers?

Post #23  Postby Thomas Keim » June 9th 2009, 7:44am

John Liotta wrote:
Thomas Keim wrote:[b]
John Liotta wrote:Shelftalkers turn wine shops into slow-pitch softball leagues . . .


Are you in retail John?



Seems like every day . . .
[/b]

Well, that must mean yes in kidspeak - I would be very careful in dismissing things that you have no experience in if you are going to stay in this business - shelftalkers are the easiest way to reach the consumer that just does not want help -

And please don't give me that superman shit about every customer who walks into your store asks for help - it that is the case, you must work in a very small store and receive your customers one at a time.

And John - when a customer actually does ask you a question - are you that vague with them?

Do you ever wonder why they never come back a second time?
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Re: Anyone here make their own shelf talkers?

Post #24  Postby Mark.Ricca » June 10th 2009, 9:25am

Chaad,
While I understand where you're coming from, there is no denying that some people resonate to scores and popular press reviews.

I think incorporating some of that into point of sale merchandising along with store generated descriptions is effective in reaching the ultimate goal of branding yourself (or your shop).

Building a rapport with your customer base that gives you the benefit of being the resource for recommendations whether or not the pop press has reviewed them should be everyone's dream, but there are many ways to get there.

Thom,
I don't think Liotta was being literal, at the risk of interpreting....
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Re: Anyone here make their own shelf talkers?

Post #25  Postby Peter Tryba » June 10th 2009, 11:19am

Thomas Keim wrote:
John Liotta wrote:
Thomas Keim wrote:
John Liotta wrote:Shelftalkers turn wine shops into slow-pitch softball leagues . . .


Are you in retail John?



Seems like every day . . .


Well, that must mean yes in kidspeak - I would be very careful in dismissing things that you have no experience in if you are going to stay in this business - shelftalkers are the easiest way to reach the consumer that just does not want help -

And please don't give me that superman shit about every customer who walks into your store asks for help - it that is the case, you must work in a very small store and receive your customers one at a time.

And John - when a customer actually does ask you a question - are you that vague with them?

Do you ever wonder why they never come back a second time?

When you have nearly 1000 unique walk-in customers per day like my shop, shelf-talkers help the customers who don't want personalized assistance. Our staff of 10 winos help everyone else with personalized selections.
That being said, well over half of our signs are staff tasting notes, not magazine reviews.
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Re: Anyone here make their own shelf talkers?

Post #26  Postby John Davis » June 10th 2009, 1:16pm

I own a grocery store with a good wine section given my size and locale. My job, without a staff to hand sell, is to give as much info as possible. I sell gruners, viogniers, chenin blancs, Spanish, Austrian, etc... Stuff people aren't going to see in a usual grocery store set in Indiana. I deal with a lot of wholesalers, big ones and the tiny ones and I taste everything I put notes on. There is NO way I would be selling these wines without talkers. Once they realize that New Zealand makes good SBs they might venture out to a NZ pinot.

My section is nothing special and not much in the big scheme of things. But I have been into a lot of wine shops, like everyone else here and shelf talkers are everywhere and they do work. And, as someone mentioned there are those who do not want to ask for help.

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Re: Anyone here make their own shelf talkers?

Post #27  Postby Thomas Keim » June 10th 2009, 3:20pm

Mark.Ricca wrote:Chaad,
While I understand where you're coming from, there is no denying that some people resonate to scores and popular press reviews.

I think incorporating some of that into point of sale merchandising along with store generated descriptions is effective in reaching the ultimate goal of branding yourself (or your shop).

Building a rapport with your customer base that gives you the benefit of being the resource for recommendations whether or not the pop press has reviewed them should be everyone's dream, but there are many ways to get there.

Thom,
I don't think Liotta was being literal, at the risk of interpreting....


So true Mark -

Many times - a shelftalker can start a conversation with someone who originally just wanted to brouse -

I like using a little card that tells consumers the basic grape makeup in each wine - this is so valuable with Rhone/Provence/Languedoc reds where everyone knows Grenache, Syrah & Cabernet/Merlot grapes - but usually don't know that is the basic makeup of Southern French reds - it simplifies things so much - and gives the consumer needed info without hitting them over the head with it -

And I originally thought John was being tongue in cheek, he just missed the cheek -
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Re: Anyone here make their own shelf talkers?

Post #28  Postby chaad thomas » June 12th 2009, 6:33pm

Mark.Ricca wrote:Chaad,
While I understand where you're coming from, there is no denying that some people resonate to scores and popular press reviews.

I think incorporating some of that into point of sale merchandising along with store generated descriptions is effective in reaching the ultimate goal of branding yourself (or your shop).

Building a rapport with your customer base that gives you the benefit of being the resource for recommendations whether or not the pop press has reviewed them should be everyone's dream, but there are many ways to get there.

Thom,
I don't think Liotta was being literal, at the risk of interpreting....

Mark,

When you say, "along with store generated descriptions," I think we're on the same page, here. As I said earlier, "just regurgitating scores and/or third-party notes" is the problem, so I agree that they can be *part* of a successful mix.

I would be surprised to see a serious, professional, wine specialty shop to use a talker like the type Bowman posted, though.

Hmmm, this might be a good topic for a poll...
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Re: Anyone here make their own shelf talkers?

Post #29  Postby Randy Bowman » June 12th 2009, 7:11pm

Guess the sample I posted wasn't well received, but it was a sample of the format. Our tasting notes and/or the wine makers notes were used also. The notes are simple, not glitzy like grocery stores and bevmo like warehouses and they take minimal space. They worked well in our old hole in the wall shop.

We don't use shelf talkers any more, now that the wine is displayed in a temperature controlled cellar. But, we still get the people through here that want to know WS or WA scores and notes, (Point chasers).
IN THE BUSINESS SHILL: An associate of a person selling goods, who pretends no association to the seller and assumes the air of an enthusiastic customer.
Current WOTY:
Cali Cab: 2009 Hobel
Europe: 2008 El Nido El Nido, even better than 2006!
Cali White: 2009 Herb Lamb EII Sauvignon Blanc
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Re: Anyone here make their own shelf talkers?

Post #30  Postby chaad thomas » June 12th 2009, 7:34pm

Randy Bowman wrote:Guess the sample I posted wasn't well received, but it was a sample of the format. Our tasting notes and/or the wine makers notes were used also. The notes are simple, not glitzy like grocery stores and bevmo like warehouses and they take minimal space. They worked well in our old hole in the wall shop.

We don't use shelf talkers any more, now that the wine is displayed in a temperature controlled cellar. But, we still get the people through here that want to know WS or WA scores and notes, (Point chasers).

I don't get why you don't use them anymore, Randy? Is it something to do with the type of racking in the cellar?
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Re: Anyone here make their own shelf talkers?

Post #31  Postby mike.m » June 12th 2009, 8:15pm

We use them in my store.

Right now we have a number of Distributor generated ones, but only ones that look nice.

I also make little ones in Excel to highlight the wines that we choose to bring in the store. They are simple and mounted on a piece of green construction paper. They look ok, but they are personal and people are reacting pretty well to them.

I am waiting on delivery of business cards that will be used for our new tasting notes. They just have a strip across the bottom with our store name and logo and the top is where we can handwrite tasting notes. Just a sentence or two about the wine and then the price. Simple and clean, I'm just concerned about my crappy handwriting!

We don't use points on any of our store generated notes, and I'm hoping to slowly get rid of the few that distributors gave us. Mostly those are on case cards, but there are a few shelftalkers too.

I'm not into the 100 point scale, so I'm conflicted about using them. I know it makes people feel better to see a 90 pt raiting on a wine. They just aren't for me.
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Re: Anyone here make their own shelf talkers?

Post #32  Postby Randy Bowman » June 12th 2009, 8:42pm

chaad thomas wrote:
Randy Bowman wrote:Guess the sample I posted wasn't well received, but it was a sample of the format. Our tasting notes and/or the wine makers notes were used also. The notes are simple, not glitzy like grocery stores and bevmo like warehouses and they take minimal space. They worked well in our old hole in the wall shop.

We don't use shelf talkers any more, now that the wine is displayed in a temperature controlled cellar. But, we still get the people through here that want to know WS or WA scores and notes, (Point chasers).

I don't get why you don't use them anymore, Randy? Is it something to do with the type of racking in the cellar?


It's not the racking, as we are still using the same type of racking. Some of it has to do with limited time but mostly, Carrie likes to spend the time with people. As we've grown in knowledge and understanding, we have gotten better at reading what the person is looking for in a wine by their descriptions and examples of what they've liked in the past. Carrie is excellent at matching wines to people and visa versa, giving them suggestions of wines they might like. The personnal touch results in more return customers. The drop-in point chasers and some of those who want to "shop for themselves," are generally looking for deals and shop sporadically. When we were heavy on Aussie wines, the shelf talkers were helpful. With 1001 wines, 872 displayed in racks, shelf talkers get cumbersome.
One other point the others have touched on, shelf talkers can be negative. Think about the last time you were in a grocery or low end wine store. The shelf talkers were BS on swill, sale pricing on plop or a paragraph of drivel from an untrained store employee. Contrary to those who don't condone shelf talkers with WS and WA ratings, they are more believable and respected than those of an unknown store employee.
IN THE BUSINESS SHILL: An associate of a person selling goods, who pretends no association to the seller and assumes the air of an enthusiastic customer.
Current WOTY:
Cali Cab: 2009 Hobel
Europe: 2008 El Nido El Nido, even better than 2006!
Cali White: 2009 Herb Lamb EII Sauvignon Blanc
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Re: Anyone here make their own shelf talkers?

Post #33  Postby Mark.Ricca » June 15th 2009, 6:20pm

We're 25,000 ft. overall and about 80% of that selling space. Lots of case stacks! Shelf talkers are necessary help on the floor. We use Word as the template with photo of a member of the wine staff and a description that may or may not incorporate a pop press review/score. We use those as an embellishment to our worded description where we feel it is warranted. One of my favorite examples being Bob Varner's Foxglove label Chardonnay. Three vintages in a row RP gave it 90 pts. and after tasting the wines I felt that it was more than justified so I include that in my note.

People do read them and they are comprehensive enough that they appeal to novices and experienced wine enthusiasts alike.
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Re: Anyone here make their own shelf talkers?

Post #34  Postby Greg Taylor » November 2nd 2009, 8:14pm

i use an actual person... sitting on the shelf... talking...gets quite noisy sometimes, all that babbling going on...


btw.... newhere
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Re: Anyone here make their own shelf talkers?

Post #35  Postby Roberto Rogness » November 2nd 2009, 8:16pm

Creativity works. Dig this: The LA Weekly did a story on our SIGNS...

http://blogs.laweekly.com/squidink/wine ... a-tequila/
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