Let Your Labels do the Selling

Let Your Labels Do the Selling: How Shelf Talkers Can Increase Sales

May 20, 20262 min read

Here’s this weeks Impact Retail Tip of the Week - and this one is simple, practical, and something you can improve straight away.

Shelf talkers. Or as I call them, “talkies”.

Most retailers rely on the person behind the counter to do the selling. And when the team is confident and engaged, that works well. But the reality is, a lot of buying decisions happen before a word is ever spoken.

Customers are looking.

Scanning.

Making decisions.

That’s where your labels come in.

This is something that really stuck with me from a visit to Zingerman’s Deli in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Every product they sold had a ticket with a story behind it. Not just a name and a price, but something that explained where it was from, what made it special, and why it was worth buying.

The label was doing the selling.

That’s the opportunity most independent retailers miss.

A standard ticket tells people what something is. But a good shelf talker helps them understand why it matters - and that shift changes how people buy.

Instead of simply showing the product and the price, you’re adding context, meaning and reassurance. You’re helping the customer make a decision without needing to ask a question.

And that’s powerful.

Especially when you’re busy, or when not every member of the team feels confident selling in the same way. A well-written shelf talker works consistently, all day, every day.

Instead of:

Pie – £6

You move to:

Slow cooked beef pie

Made with locally sourced beef

Rich, tender and full of flavour

Now the product has a story

It has value.

It has a reason to be chosen.

So here’s a quick win for this week: pick three products - your best sellers, or the ones you’d like to sell more of - and upgrade the ticket. Add a line, add a reason, or add a short story that helps the customer understand why it’s worth buying.

Not everything.

Just a few.

Because in retail, when you tell a better story, you sell more of the product.

Food for thought this week.

Have a great day.

Mark

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