

By now,
just about everyone has heard of and/or used a POS system. A POS (Point
of
Sale) system allows you to track all sorts of useful things in and
around your
pizzeria.
More and
more operators are discovering the unlimited marketing uses to which
you can
put your POS. Sure, you can use it to keep track of ingredients and
sales, but
you could also use it to boost your bottom line.
Duessa
Holscher, director of marketing at FireFly Technologies, says that many
people
are not taking advantage of all the tricks their POS system can do.
“When we
set up new systems our customers are all very excited about all the
things they
can do with it,” Duessa says. “Most times, however, when we go back, we
find
that only about 25 percent are actually using the marketing-side of
their
systems, which is a huge waste.”
Getting
started
Many POS
companies can preload a database with names, numbers and addresses for
potential customers in your immediate surrounding area into your POS.
Tom
Bronson, CEO of Rockland Technology Group, Inc, the developer of
DiamondTouch
POS, said that the database is worthwhile to begin with, but buying an
updated
one is not necessarily the best thing you could do. “If you already
have a
system, then buying an additional database is only going to add so many
new
names to your list,” Tom says. “You’d be better off at that point to
use the
marketing features of your POS system to build your customer database.”

Once
you
decide how to collect the information, you then have to enter said info
into
your database. Duessa mentioned the importance of training your
employees the
correct way to enter names into your database. It’s important to make
sure
youre employees know what to do. Taking the time to train your staff greatly increases the odds of your
customer being added correctly.
Having
the
correct info entered the first time around allows you to save money and
effort
on mailings and targets the right people. Be careful about multiple
phone
numbers. With people having so many numbers today, you should ask for
all of
them so that when they call back from a different number, you can still
find
them in the database. This helps to prevent multiple entries for the
same
person.
Targeting
customers
Once
you’ve
established at least the beginnings of a database, you should begin
marketing.
According to Tom, you can color code just about anything you can think
of
within your database. “If you want to offer a special to your loyal
customers,
you can tag their names so that when they order, it pops up that they
should be
offered the special,” Tom says. “Not to mention the ability to target
certain
days of the week to boost sales.”
One
of the
most popular methods of targeting specific customers is a 30-60-90 day
mailer.
This kind of mailer lumps your customers into one of several
categories. Rather
than just mass mailing a single offer to your customers, you can pick
and
choose what to send to people depending on their loyalty. For example,
customers that haven’t ordered from you in 30 days may not need as much
of an
incentive to come back as someone who hasn’t been there in 60 days or
90 days.
In this case, your lesser offer/coupon should go to the people who
haven’t
ordered from you in 30 days, a better deal to those who haven’t ordered
in 60
days and your best offer to those who haven’t ordered in 90 days.
Coupon
usage
Using
your
POS system you can track not only how many coupons are redeemed, but
also who
redeemed them. Using that information, you can then specifically target
the
recipients of a promotion, similar to the 30-60-90 day mailer. Think
about it,
if you knew which customers were the most likely to redeem a coupon,
you could
send a coupon to that person or family but not to the neighbor’s house
that
orders religiously every week and pays full price. You can also send
coupons
out to people that have used them before that encourage them to try
different
products.
You
can
generate a list of new customers within a specific time frame. What you
do with
these lists is completely up to you. Thank you notes are always a good
idea.
“You could send out a thank you note with a coupon attached to your new
customers in order to encourage a return visit,” Duessa says. “I’d
recommend
running one of these new lists about once a week, simply because you’ll
want
the new customer mailer to be timely.” Other than thank you notes to
new
customers, you can direct mail reminders for events and specials to
your loyal
customers.
Your
POS
system can also track the popularity of certain menu items. Using that
information, you can push whatever products you feel you need to sell
more of
using suggestive selling both on the phone and in person. You can also
do cross
promotions with other companies and print them onto your receipts.
You
can
also use your POS system with fundraisers. When an organization comes
to you
and asks for money, instead of giving them a lump sum of money, you can
set up
an “account” in your system and have the organization tell everyone
that a
portion of the proceeds from every pizza sold goes to the organization.
By
handling
fundraisers in this way, people have to work to get their money and you
don’t
just give away money. It also allows you to pay a little bit at a time
to an
organization instead of in one lump sum.
Email
marketing
Ever
thought of email marketing? Using your POS, you could send out an email
at just
the right time. You don’t want to abuse or overuse it, but if you ask
for
someone’s email address and get it, you can use that information quite
effectively. You could hit local businesses around 11 a.m. with an
email to
draw the lunch crowd’s attention or at 4:30 to attract people about to
head
home.
Mapping
Mapping and
POS systems work well together. Mapping systems were originally used
for
helping out delivery drivers. Now they’re used integrally with your POS
system
to help you 1) target specific customers and 2) know where those
customers are.
Using a combination of a mapping system and your POS system, you can
discover
which neighborhoods order more often from you and use that information
to
target whichever market you want, whether it’s your more active or less
active
customers.
POS
systems
are always changing. If you’ve been looking for something particular
and can’t
find it, don’t worry—a new system may show up within the next couple of
months
that includes it. “There are hundreds of features we can add in,” Tom
told me.
“We decide what to add from customer feedback. If enough people say,
‘Hey, we want
this feature’ then we start creating a program for it.”
Using
your
POS, you can keep up with ingredients, sales, coupon redemptions,
fundraisers
and a variety of other things. Just by doing a few of these things, you
can
boost your bottom line and pocket your POS profits. In fact, if you
think that
you’ve done everything you know of to maximize the use of your POS
system, give
your POS company a call for new ideas—I guarantee that they’ll have
something
for you.
– PMQ –