"Basically" Farming A | Helpful hints for new I and existing farmers PtNNSIATE What Retail Produce Marketing Is About! John Berry Agricultural Marketing Educa- tor Lehigh County Cooperative Extension The incentive to be a retail marketer is obvious. The closer you can get to retail customers, the more retail dollars go in your pocket instead of the middleman. If you want to sell retail, you have to provide services the wholesalers, packagers, distribu tors and retailers provide. This article reviews some of the key details of operating a di rect-to-the-consumer produce marketing enterprise. Visual Display Fresh produce is responsible for creating the image of a store. Proper presentation of products increases sales. Shoppers receive a positive impression if products are top quality, clean, and taste fully displayed. Remember that high-quality products are the strength of pro duce markets. A lively, well-stocked produce department entices the customer to buy and increases sales and profits. Think of yourself as an artist, with several palettes of col ors to choose from: visual (color, contrast, shape, size), smell (herbs, fruits), and touch (soft or firm). Make displays that look like they came from the farm. Wood en crates or boxes work well. Bas kets are beautiful; slant them to ward the customer. Even an attractive tablecloth can add to your sales. Stair-step ped displays create an array of depth, color and texture; how ever, they may not be easy for the ■It#I*IT mJpßiiPpX FARM & HOME CENTER 464-3321 or 800-732-0053 2 1/2 Miles South of Willow Valley Square Not Responsible For Typographical Errors m&m HI College of Agricultural Sciences Cooperative Extension - Southeast Region customer to reach or easy to re stock. Utilize vertical space by hang ing products from slings or hang ers. “Pile it high and kiss it good- bye!” Full, well-stocked displays make customers want to come and get it. Customers don’t like taking the last of something from a bare, picked-over display; they want the best. A cornucopia of produce con veys abundance, prosperity, and quality. Never overstock, how ever, to prevent the risk of crush ing tender items on the bottom. For most products, avoid pil ing them higher than six or eight inches they might bruise or tumble. Avoid steep pyramid dis plays, for instance, where prod ucts continuously roll off the top. Stock fully, but not so picture perfect that customers hesitate to disrupt the display by removing produce. Removing one or two may even help customers start buying. Make it easy for the customers to reach for the produce. Your display should be no more than an arm’s reach in depth, and be tween knee- or waist-level and eye-level in height. Don’t put your merchandise on the ground. Instead of placing your boxes flat, try slanting your produce to give the customer a more pleas ing visual sense of your product. Organize products in related groupings. Such groups might in clude dessert items, salad items, cooking vegetables, apples and pears, etc. Displaying compatible products together serves as a sug gestion for additional purchases and uses of the products. LMHERR www.aceretailer.com/emherr Herrville Rd. & Rt. 272 South Merchandising Mon.-Fri. 6:30 am-8:00 pm Sat. 7:30 am-6:00 pm Place high demand items in strategic locations throughout the market. Large displays attract at tention, so use bulk displays to generate sales, especially for high-volume seasonal crops such as apples or com. Use color and texture to en hance eye appeal. People enjoy food with their senses, so displays must be eye- and sense-appeal ing. Mix a row of radishes be tween the mustard and kale, to matoes between the lettuce and cukes, or intersperse peaches with blueberries to create daz zling color displays. Good color groupings: • Red and yellow or green • Light green with yellow or purple • Dark green with red, orange or yellow If you don’t have a lot of vari ety, create a color mixture with flowers or signs. Creative touches can enliven a produce display, e.g., carrot wheels, fresh flower bouquets, garden-like groupings of lettuce and greens, baskets in displays, or hand stacked yams. Seasonal themes work well on dry tables, such as fall squash and yam displays, or summer time berries. Produce has its best flavor, holding qualities, and overall value in season, when it is available at its greatest volume and lowest price. Price signs Prices should be clearly marked on or near the display. Most shoppers are in a hurry and will not search out the manager to find out how much something costs. Restock displays frequently, rotate products as needed, and remove damaged, decayed, or unsaleable products promptly. Unsightly produce left on your stand not only detracts from sales, but it leaves the customer with the notion that you sell rot ten produce. If you’d buy it, leave it, if not, pull it out. 10 Rules Of Customer Service Of course, an abundant supply of customers makes retailing a little easier. One component of ensuring a steady stream of buyers is effec tive customer service. Good customer service skills can be learned. As you consider the following customer service guidelines, remember back to a particularly pleasant, or unpleasant, customer service encounter you may have ex perienced. 1. The customer is never an interruption to your work. The customer is. your real reason for being in business. Chores can wait. 2. Greet every customer with a friendly smile. Cus tomers are people and they like friendly contact. They usually return it. 3. Call customers by name. Make a game of learning customers’ names. See how many you can re member. 4. Remember, you are the company! As an owner and an employee, the way you represent yourself to your customer is the way your Some Models Cut and Mix Hay Where’s The Beef? From left, Andy Marchevsky, president of Lebanon Val ley Farmer’s Bank; John Moose, senior vice president of agriculture lending group; Mike Firestone, senior vice president of agriculture lending group; and Rink Ashby, Fulton Bank CEO, serve food to farmers from Eliza bethtown, Mount Joy, and surrounding areas during the annual customer appreciation event this week. Photo by Nicki Lefever, special corresponent John Moose, senior vice president of Fulton Banks’s agriculture lending group, serves a beef sandwich to Ray mond and Emma Gruber of Mount Joy. The among 450 local farmers Invited to Fulton Bank and Leba non Valley Farmer’s 17th annual beef roast at the Eliza bethtown fairgrounds. Bank employees served beef sand wiches, corn-on-the-cob, and hand-dipped ice cream to show their appreciation to their customers. Photo by Nicki Lefever, special correspondent business will be perceived by that customer. 5. Never argue with customers. The customer is always right (in his or her eyes). Be a good listen er; agree where you can, and do what you can to make the cus tomer happy. 6. Never say “I don’t know.” If you don’t know the answer to a question say, “That’s a good question. Let me see if I can find out for you.” 7. Remember, every dollar you earn comes from the customer’s pockets. Treat them like the boss. 8. State things in a positive way. It takes practice, but will help you become a better commu nicator. 9. Try to get your customers to remember a good experience at your market. 10. Always go that extra mile. Always do just a little more than the customer expects. Models from 55 to 490 cu. ft. mixing capacity... - 5 stationary Building T.M.R. Mixers MIXERS Since 1981 *~RISSLER~j - MIXERS & FEEDERS • PROVEN RUGGED • PROVEN EFFICIENT • PROVEN ECONOMICAL 800-436-5623 717-484-0551 New Members Appointed To USD A Committee WASHINGTON, D. C. Ag riculture Secretary Ann M. Vene man recently announced the ap pointment of five new members to the U.S. Department of Agri culture’s Advisory Committee on Emerging Markets. Newly appointed are: Gail R. Carlson of Arlington, Va.; Ger alyn C. Contini of Baton Rouge, La.; Harriett A. Paul of Tallahas see, Fla.; John F. Tarburton of Dover, Del.; and James J. Will rett of Malta, 111. These new members will join the other 15 members currently serving on the committee. The committee reviews fund ing proposals under the Emerg ing Markets Program, which is managed by USDA’s Foreign Ag ricultural Service. This program supports private and govern mental projects to promote U.S. agricultural exports in emerging economies. The committee also advises USDA on the U.S. private sector’s ef forts to enhance food and rural business sys tems in developing countries. Congress reauthorized this pro gram in the 2002 Farm Bill. Committee members must have expertise in international agricul ture, trade and develop ment, especially as they relate to emerging mar ket economies. They serve without compensa tjnn