What items do you go to the convenience store for?

Cdubneeddeal

Diamond Member
Oct 22, 2003
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So over the Christmas vacation I went down south to visit the family and check out the new cafe my parents recently purchased. While I was there I glanced over the shelves and wondered in order for them to turn a bigger profit they needed stuff common to people's needs for going to a convenience store.

When you don't need to go to the grocery store, what items do you go to 7Eleven or the like for? I was thinking the obvious, alcohol and cigarettes for starters.


(BTW, this is a cafe/convenience store in the middle of a retirement/condo type living facility)
 

mooglemania85

Diamond Member
May 3, 2007
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Originally posted by: Cdubneeddeal
(BTW, this is a cafe/convenience store in the middle of a retirement/condo type living facility)

I was going to say condoms, but if you're catering to the market then perhaps adult diapers and ribbon candy are more suitable.
 

thepd7

Diamond Member
Jan 2, 2005
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Bread, Milk, Soda, Snacks (Chips, dip, etc), magazines, newspaper, medical stuff (band aids, tylenol, etc). I mean, pretty much go into a 7-11 and steal their ideas...they have been doing it a hell of a long time I am sure they have it down.
 

Cdubneeddeal

Diamond Member
Oct 22, 2003
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Not sure if the condoms would be such a good idea in that kind of place, however, my other sister who helps out at the cafe said one of the older gentlemen who comes in on a regular basis was inviting she and her husband for a swinging party. Hmm..

Chips and magazines are a good idea. I'll have to bring that up to the fam. Please keep the suggestions coming. It really helps.
 

Colt45

Lifer
Apr 18, 2001
19,720
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cigarettes and redbull. Not allowed to sell liquor in convenience stores here.
 

Cdubneeddeal

Diamond Member
Oct 22, 2003
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Originally posted by: yamadakun
What is a cafe/convenience store?

Basically they have a restaurant on one side and a convenience type store on the other side. It's almost in regards to Chevron with Mcdonalds in it except the food that is served is not fast food, it's all freshly made and there is no gas station. It basically caters to the residents of the complex which is around 400 people I would guess.
 

novasatori

Diamond Member
Feb 27, 2003
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Originally posted by: thepd7
Bread, Milk, Soda, Snacks (Chips, dip, etc), magazines, newspaper, medical stuff (band aids, tylenol, etc). I mean, pretty much go into a 7-11 and steal their ideas...they have been doing it a hell of a long time I am sure they have it down.

 

Dr. Detroit

Diamond Member
Sep 25, 2004
8,508
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Ice - tell your parents to buy an ince machine and bag their own. 10lb bags for $1.79

beer, cigs, cheap cigars to the hoodlums, lottery tix




 

Cdubneeddeal

Diamond Member
Oct 22, 2003
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Originally posted by: Fmr12B
Ice - tell your parents to buy an ince machine and bag their own. 10lb bags for $1.79

beer, cigs, cheap cigars to the hoodlums, lottery tix

Good idea with the lottery tickets. Older people love to play lotto. As for the cheap cigars, no hoodlums live there. It's actually a very nice community. One indoor and one outdoor pool, sauna, workout room, banquet room, one large room with a piano and sofas to relax in with a fireplace, free computer with internet for the residents to use, a small game room for puzzles and the like.
 

mooglemania85

Diamond Member
May 3, 2007
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aside frome stalking the some old people, maybe search for elderly consumers, convenience stores?

August 01, 2006
Southwest Georgia Oil Targets New Markets
By Julie Crawshaw

New Sun Stop prototype appeals to women, elderly shoppers.

Getting more stores and giving better customer service are two tried-and-true ways to boost c-store profits, so when Southwest Georgia Oil Co. (SWGO) decided to grow its business, both tactics made the short list. But a third?and much less conventional?approach seems to be working even better: targeting women and elderly shoppers.

"We were spending a lot of time and energy marketing to the Bubbas of the world, but weren't targeting women and older shoppers, two market segments c-stores frequently miss," said Aaron Goodman, the chief operating officer for the Bainbridge, Ga.-based oil company. To remedy this oversight, about six years ago SWGO had Atlanta retail design firm Antista Fairclough design a new prototype for its Sun Stop c-stores that offers a much more open, airy and welllighted environment.

Today, 12 of the of the company's 27 Sun Stop convenience stores are prototypes. All feature a protective T-canopy that shelters customers en route to a full glass front with backlighted fascia. Inside, ceilings two feet higher than usual are banded by paintings of clouds that surround huge central skylights.

"Brighter, well-lighted stores make a safer environment," Goodman said. "We still get the blue-collar customers, who are the backbone of our business, but we also find that women and elderly customers feel more comfortable shopping now."

To further enhance security, the company has also installed closed circuit TV and time-lock safes in all its stores.

Hefty Investment
Goodman acknowledges that the prototype stores are expensive to build? about $500,000-$700,000 more than a traditional c-store?but said they outperform the company's other retail outlets in sales per foot and volumes by 15% to 25%.

In addition to their more enjoyable environment, Sun Stop stores offer an upscale product mix that includes a nice selection of wines, F'real milkshakes, Jelly Belly jellybeans and a variety of healthy snacks. Signage above dispensers makes finding products easy.

Goodman notes that focusing on upscale, high-profit areas and creating proprietary products increases brand identity. Sun Stop beefed up coffee sales by rolling out its own "Sunshine Coffee" brand that features various gourmet blends and real milk products instead of powdered creamer. The company also does a brisk business with its proprietary "Sunshine Bakery" chocolate chip, oatmeal raisin and macadamia nut cookies, which are baked fresh three or four times per day.

"Cookie sales average about 30 units per store per day," Goodman said. "At 99' each, that translates to $30,000 in incremental sales."

Acquisition, Expanded Property Use Boost Revenues
In addition to furthering sales through its prototype stores, SWGO is presently working on acquiring another c-store chain with 21 outlets and pursuing better use of contiguous property. Four of its stores presently have carwashes, and Goodman expects four more will be added by year's end; the company just installed its first "Ice Stop" bulk ice dispenser that delivers a 20-pound bag of ice for $1.50.

To further enhance its brand identity, SWGO turned its transport fleet into rolling billboards that feature full color pictures of its upscale proprietary products. The company operates stores in Georgia, Florida and Alabama, netting a large passive audience for advertising messages.

"We've made every vehicle in our transport fleet a moving ad," Goodman observes, adding that SWGO plans to offer its vendors the opportunity to share the advertising benefit by featuring their products as well.

The marketer pumps E-10 ethanol blend at all locations, will offer E-85 in Florida beginning this month and is a major shareholder in ethanol refinery expected to produce 200 million gallons per year. Goodman said that SWGO President and CEO Mike Harrell is the driving force behind the company's renewable fuels push, which includes building a biodiesel facility expected to pump 10 million gallons per year. (See "Pursuing Alternatives," p. 28.)

Service Driven
Customer service is the biggest brand builder of all, according to SWGO Director of Training Sean Hader. "Frontline employees are number one asset we have," he said. "Customers are a very close second, but without great employees, we wouldn't have a company."

Hader notes that the company used to let individual managers teach new employees the basics, but decided to standardize training several years ago. Every new employee is required to attend basic training within a month of being hired. Classes are held in four cities to ensure that new hires don't have to drive longer than 45 minutes and students receive 25' per hour pay increase upon completion.

SWGO's basic training covers company history, customer service, store cleanliness, team member appearance, alcohol and tobacco, loss prevention, safety, security, robbery deterrents and benefits.

"It sounds military, but I call it basic training because it covers the basics we expect of them and the basics they can expect from us," Hader said.

Bridging the Expectation Gap
There is frequently a huge initial gap between what associates believe constitutes great customer service how the company defines it. "We expect our employees to provide 'outrageous customer service,' but the reality is that most of the people who come to work for us don't know what great customer service is," Hader said. "Most have never stayed at a five-star hotel or eaten in a five-star restaurant, so their vision of customer service and ours don't match."

Making employees' vision match the company's vision is what training is all about. "Good customer service means treating every customer the way you want to be treated," Hader said. "Outrageous customer service means treating every customer better than you want to be treated."

Hader cites three conditions of employment with SWGO: Every associate must greet, plus sell and thank every customer.

Hader also points out to new employees that they will spend the majority of their waking hours at work. "I tell them, 'If you don't enjoy this, find something else to do; otherwise, you will look back on your life and think it was miserable,'" he said

Basic training emphasizes the "Yes, Sir, No, Ma'am, Please and Thank You" basic tenets of respect and excellent telephone etiquette. As a result, Hader said some vendors have told him they could hardly believe they were calling a convenience store because associates answered the phone so courteously.

Mystery Shoppers Bring Rewards
To keep employees on their toes, the company sends mystery shoppers to every store twice a month seeking the "Outrageous Customer Service" it desires. There are monthly sales contests for associates with prizes such as a pizza party for the associate and a group of friends, or a $100 gift certificate for a local mall. The associate with the biggest overall sales gets to participate in the monthly managers' meeting, arriving in a limousine.

Managers benefit as well: The top manager from each of the company's four zones receive a substantial reward at the end of each year. Last year winning managers received new Jeeps.

"The bottom line is that if you are courteous, respectful, customers will reward with continued patronage, and continued patronage is what it's all about," Hader said.
 

Kelemvor

Lifer
May 23, 2002
16,928
8
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I don't ever go to those types of stores. Grocery stores have better prices and better selection 99% of the time. I haven't set foot in a gas station in years. I would never go to one that wasn't attached to a gas station at all. Unless they had a huge sale on something that I wanted, but I wouldn't but anything else so they wouldn't make a profit on me.
 

nageov3t

Lifer
Feb 18, 2004
42,808
83
91
there's a bodega across the street from my apartment... generally speaking, I prefer to go to a grocery store (better prices, better selection), but I'll hit up the bodega if I only need a couple small things that I don't want to go without but don't want to drive all the way to the grocery store (ie: a bottle of soda, bread, etc) or things I'd need in a hurry (condoms, light bulbs, TP)
 

ATLien247

Diamond Member
Feb 1, 2000
4,597
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I've never been in a convenience store that wasn't attached to a gas station. But at those that I've been to I've gotten mostly snack foods. Usually things like chips, donuts, coffee, soda pop, energy drinks, bottled water, candy bars, chewing gum, and jerky. I've gotten the occasional hot dog, nachos, and breakfast burrito, but not regularly. I've gotten a newspaper once, and a half gallon of milk when the grocery store was closed. My wife goes nuts with the lottery tickets whenever we're out of state.
 

GoatMonkey

Golden Member
Feb 25, 2005
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Quaker Oat Meal. That old guy from Cocoon liked that stuff.

Herbal Viagra and condoms. Old guys in retirement homes are players. Those places are mostly women since the guys die much earlier, so the old guys get to pick any prunes they like. (It's just heartwarming how I phrased that isn't it?)

Flowers, cards, candy. Basic gifts that the visitors can pick up when they visit granny.

Hair dye.

Soft easy to chew snack foods. Don't waste your money on jawbreakers or now & laters. That crap would rip their teeth out.

Microwave popcorn.

Basic beauty products. Oil of Olay, lipstick, hand lotion, etc.

Most importantly, ask the customers what they would like to have available there.
 

BarneyFife

Diamond Member
Aug 12, 2001
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76
Never go. Just stop at places like CVS or the grocery store because prices are much better and they are just as "convenient".
 

Scouzer

Lifer
Jun 3, 2001
10,358
5
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botox injections
phone books to every congressman in the u.s. for them to complain to