-Caveat Lector-

Dave Hartley
http://www.Asheville-Computer.com/dave



THE SCIENCE OF SHOPPING
The American Shopper has never been so fickle. What are stores, including
the new flagship designer boutiques, doing about it? Applying science.

by Malcolm Gladwell

Human beings walk the way they drive, which is to say that Americans tend
to keep to the right when they stroll down shopping-mall concourses or
city sidewalks. This is why in a well-designed airport travellers drifting
toward their gate will always find the fast-food restaurants on their left
and the gift shops on their right: people will readily cross a lane of
pedestrian traffic to satisfy their hunger but rarely to make an impulse
buy of a T-shirt or a magazine. This is also why Paco Underhill tells his
retail clients to make sure that their window displays are canted,
preferably to both sides but especially to the left, so that a potential
shopper approaching the store on the inside of the sidewalk -- the
shopper, that is, with the least impeded view of the store window -- can
see the display from at least twenty-five feet away.

Of course, a lot depends on how fast the potential shopper is walking.
Paco, in his previous life, as an urban geographer in Manhattan, spent a
great deal of time thinking about walking speeds as he listened in on the
great debates of the nineteen-seventies over whether the traffic lights in
midtown should be timed to facilitate the movement of cars or to
facilitate the movement of pedestrians and so break up the big platoons
that move down Manhattan sidewalks. He knows that the faster you walk the
more your peripheral vision narrows, so you become unable to pick up
visual cues as quickly as someone who is just ambling along. He knows,
too, that people who walk fast take a surprising amount of time to slow
down -- just as it takes a good stretch of road to change gears with a
stick-shift automobile. On the basis of his research, Paco estimates the
human downshift period to be anywhere from twelve to twenty-five feet, so
if you own a store, he says, you never want to be next door to a bank:
potential shoppers speed up when they walk past a bank (since there's
nothing to look at), and by the time they slow down they've walked right
past your business. The downshift factor also means that when potential
shoppers enter a store it's going to take them from five to fifteen paces
to adjust to the light and refocus and gear down from walking speed to
shopping speed -- particularly if they've just had to navigate a
treacherous parking lot or hurry to make the light at Fifty-seventh and
Fifth.

Paco calls that area inside the door the Decompression Zone, and something
he tells clients over and over again is never, ever put anything of value
in that zone -- not shopping baskets or tie racks or big promotional
displays -- because no one is going to see it.

Paco believes that, as a rule of thumb, customer interaction with any
product or promotional display in the Decompression Zone will increase at
least thirty per cent once it's moved to the back edge of the zone, and
even more if it's placed to the right, because another of the fundamental
rules of how human beings shop is that upon entering a store -- whether
it's Nordstrom or K mart, Tiffany or the Gap -- the shopper invariably and
reflexively turns to the right.

Paco believes in the existence of the Invariant Right because he has
actually verified it. He has put cameras in stores trained directly on the
doorway, and if you go to his office, just above Union Square, where
videocassettes and boxes of Super-eight film from all his work over the
years are stacked in plastic Tupperware containers practically up to the
ceiling, he can show you reel upon reel of grainy entryway video --
customers striding in the door, downshifting, refocussing, and then, again
and again, making that little half turn.

Paco Underhill is a tall man in his mid-forties, partly bald, with a
neatly trimmed beard and an engaging, almost goofy manner. He wears baggy
khakis and shirts open at the collar, and generally looks like the
academic he might have been if he hadn't been captivated, twenty years
ago, by the ideas of the urban anthropologist William Whyte. It was Whyte
who pioneered the use of time-lapse photography as a tool of urban
planning, putting cameras in parks and the plazas in front of office
buildings in midtown Manhattan, in order to determine what distinguished a
public space that worked from one that didn't. As a Columbia
undergraduate, in 1974, Paco heard a lecture on Whyte's work and, he
recalls, left the room "walking on air." He immediately read everything
Whyte had written. He emptied his bank account to buy cameras and film and
make his own home movie, about a pedestrian mall in Poughkeepsie. He took
his "little exercise" to Whyte's advocacy group, the Project for Public
Spaces, and was offered a job. Soon, however, it dawned on Paco that
Whyte's ideas could be taken a step further -- that the same techniques he
used to establish why a plaza worked or didn't work could also be used to
determine why a store worked or didn't work. Thus was born the field of
retail anthropology, and, not long afterward, Paco founded Envirosell,
which in just over fifteen years has counselled some of the most familiar
names in American retailing, from Levi Strauss to Kinney, Starbucks,
McDonald's, Blockbuster, Apple Computer, A.T. &T., and a number of upscale
retailers that Paco would rather not name.

When Paco gets an assignment, he and his staff set up a series of
videocameras throughout the test store and then back the cameras up with
Envirosell staffers -- trackers, as they're known -- armed with
clipboards. Where the cameras go and how many trackers Paco deploys
depends on exactly what the store wants to know about its shoppers.

Typically, though, he might use six cameras and two or three trackers, and
let the study run for two or three days, so that at the end he would have
pages and pages of carefully annotated tracking sheets and anywhere from a
hundred to five hundred hours of film. These days, given the expansion of
his business, he might tape fifteen thousand hours in a year, and, given
that he has been in operation since the late seventies, he now has well
over a hundred thousand hours of tape in his library.

Even in the best of times, this would be a valuable archive. But today,
with the retail business in crisis, it is a gold mine. The time per visit
that the average American spends in a shopping mall was sixty-six minutes
last year down from seventy-two minutes in 1992 -- and is the lowest
number ever recorded. The amount of selling space per American shopper is
now more than double what it was in the mid-seventies, meaning that profit
margins have never been narrower, and the costs of starting a retail
business -- and of failing -- have never been higher. In the past few
years, countless dazzling new retailing temples have been built along
Fifth and Madison Avenues -- Barneys, Calvin Klein, Armani, Valentino,
Banana Republic, Prada, Chanel, Nike Town, and on and on -- but it is an
explosion of growth based on no more than a hunch, a hopeful
multimillion-dollar gamble that the way to break through is to provide the
shopper with spectacle and more spectacle. "The arrogance is gone,"
Millard Drexer, the president and C.E.O. of the Gap, told me. "Arrogance
makes failure. Once you think you know the answer, it's almost always
over." In such a competitive environment, retailers don't just want to
know how shoppers behave in their stores. They have to know. And who
better to ask than Paco Underhill, who in the past decade and a half has
analyzed tens of thousands of hours of shopping videotape and, as a
result, probably knows more about the strange habits and quirks of the
species Emptor americanus than anyone else alive?

Paco is considered the originator, for example, of what is known in the
trade as the butt-brush theory -- or, as Paco calls it, more delicately,
le facteur bousculade -- which holds that the likelihood of a woman's
being converted from a browser to a buyer is inversely proportional to the
likelihood of her being brushed on her behind while she's examining
merchandise. Touch -- or brush or bump or jostle -- a woman on the behind
when she has stopped to look at an item, and she will bolt. Actually,
calling this a theory is something of a misnomer, because Paco doesn't
offer any explanation for why women react that way, aside from venturing
that they are "more sensitive back there." It's really an observation,
based on repeated and close analysis of his videotape library, that Paco
has transformed into a retailing commandment: a women's product that
requires extensive examination should never be placed in a narrow aisle.

Paco approaches the problem of the Invariant Right the same way. Some
retail thinkers see this as a subject crying out for interpretation and
speculation. The design guru Joseph Weishar, for example, argues, in his
magisterial "Design for Effective Selling Space," that the Invariant Right
is a function of the fact that we "absorb and digest information in the
left part of the brain" and "assimilate and logically use this information
in the right half," the result being that we scan the store from left to
right and then fix on an object to the right "essentially at a 45 degree
angle from the point that we enter." When I asked Paco about this
interpretation, he shrugged, and said he thought the reason was simply
that most people are right-handed. Uncovering the fundamentals of "why" is
clearly not a pursuit that engages him much. He is not a theoretician but
an empiricist, and for him the important thing is that in amassing his
huge library of in-store time-lapse photography he has gained enough hard
evidence to know how often and under what circumstances the Invariant
Right is expressed and how to take advantage of it.

What Paco likes are facts. They come tumbling out when he talks, and,
because he speaks with a slight hesitation -- lingering over the first
syllable in, for example, "re-tail" or "de-sign" -- he draws you in, and
you find yourself truly hanging on his words. "We have reached a historic
point in American history," he told me in our very first conversation.
"Men, for the first time, have begun to buy their own underwear." He then
paused to let the comment sink in, so that I could absorb its
implications, before he elaborated: "Which means that we have to totally
rethink the way we sell that product." In the parlance of Hollywood
scriptwriters, the best endings must be surprising and yet inevitable; and
the best of Paco's pronouncements take the same shape. It would never have
occurred to me to wonder about the increasingly critical role played by
touching -- or, as Paco calls it, petting clothes in the course of making
the decision to buy them. But then I went to the Gap and to Banana
Republic and saw people touching and fondling and, one after another,
buying shirts and sweaters laid out on big wooden tables, and what Paco
told me -- which was no doubt based on what he had seen on his videotapes
-- made perfect sense: that the reason the Gap and Banana Republic have
tables is not merely that sweaters and shirts look better there, or that
tables fit into the warm and relaxing residential feeling that the Gap and
Banana Republic are trying to create in their stores, but that tables
invite -- indeed, symbolize -- touching.

"Where do we eat?" Paco asks. "We eat, we pick up food, on tables." Paco
produces for his clients a series of carefully detailed studies, totalling
forty to a hundred and fifty pages, filled with product-by-product
breakdowns and bright-colored charts and graphs. In one recent case, he
was asked by a major clothing retailer to analyze the first of a new chain
of stores that the firm planned to open. One of the things the client
wanted to know was how successful the store was in drawing people into its
depths, since the chances that shoppers will buy something are directly
related to how long they spend shopping, and how long they spend shopping
is directly related to how deep they get pulled into the store. For this
reason, a supermarket will often put dairy products on one side, meat at
the back, and fresh produce on the other side, so that the typical shopper
can't just do a drive-by but has to make an entire circuit of the store,
and be tempted by everything the supermarket has to offer. In the case of
the new clothing store, Paco found that ninety-one per cent of all
shoppers penetrated as deep as what he called Zone 4, meaning more than
three-quarters of the way in, well past the accessories and shirt racks
and belts in the front, and little short of the far wall, with the
changing rooms and the pants stacked on shelves. Paco regarded this as an
extraordinary figure, particularly for a long, narrow store like this one,
where it is not unusual for the rate of penetration past, say, Zone 3 to
be under fifty per cent. But that didn't mean the store was perfect -- far
from it. For Paco, all kinds of questions remained.

Purchasers, for example, spent an average of eleven minutes and
twenty-seven seconds in the store, nonpurchasers two minutes and
thirty-six seconds. It wasn't that the nonpurchasers just cruised in and
out: in those two minutes and thirty-six seconds, they went deep into the
store and examined an average of 3.42 items. So why didn't they buy? What,
exactly, happened to cause some browsers to buy and other browsers to walk
out the door?

Then, there was the issue of the number of products examined. The
purchasers were looking at an average of 4.81 items but buying only 1.33
items. Paco found this statistic deeply disturbing. As the retail market
grows more cutthroat, store owners have come to realize that it's all but
impossible to increase the number of customers coming in, and have
concentrated instead on getting the customers they do have to buy more.
Paco thinks that if you can sell someone a pair of pants you must also be
able to sell that person a belt, or a pair of socks, or a pair of
underpants, or even do what the Gap does so well: sell a person a complete
outfit. To Paco, the figure 1.33 suggested that the store was doing
something very wrong, and one day when I visited him in his office he sat
me down in front of one of his many VCRs to see how he looked for the 1.33
culprit.

It should be said that sitting next to Paco is a rather strange
experience. "My mother says that I'm the best-paid spy in America," he
told me. He laughed, but he wasn't entirely joking. As a child, Paco had a
nearly debilitating stammer, and, he says, "since I was never that
comfortable talking I always relied on my eyes to understand things." That
much is obvious from the first moment you meet him: Paco is one of those
people who look right at you, soaking up every nuance and detail. It isn't
a hostile gaze, because Paco isn't hostile at all. He has a big smile, and
he'll call you "chief" and use your first name a lot and generally act as
if he knew you well. But that's the awkward thing: he has looked at you so
closely that you're sure he does know you well, and you, meanwhile, hardly
know him at all.

This kind of asymmetry is even more pronounced when you watch his shopping
videos with him, because every movement or gesture means something to Paco
-- he has spent his adult life deconstructing the shopping experience --
but nothing to the outsider, or, at least, not at first. Paco had to keep
stopping the video to get me to see things through his eyes before I began
to understand. In one sequence, for example, a camera mounted high on the
wall outside the changing rooms documented a man and a woman shopping for
a pair of pants for what appeared to be their daughter, a girl in her
mid-teens. The tapes are soundless, but the basic steps of the shopping
dance are so familiar to Paco that, once I'd grasped the general idea, he
was able to provide a running commentary on what was being said and
thought. There is the girl emerging from the changing room wearing her
first pair. There she is glancing at her reflection in the mirror, then
turning to see herself from the back. There is the mother looking on.
There is the father -- or, as fathers are known in the trade, the "wallet
carrier" -- stepping forward and pulling up the jeans.

There's the girl trying on another pair. There's the primp again. The
twirl. The mother. The wallet carrier. And then again, with another pair.
The full sequence lasted twenty minutes, and at the end came the take-home
lesson, for which Paco called in one of his colleagues, Tom Moseman, who
had supervised the project.

"This is a very critical moment," Tom, a young, intense man wearing little
round glasses, said, and he pulled up a chair next to mine. "She's saying,
'I don't know whether I should wear a belt.' Now here's the salesclerk.
The girl says to him, 'I need a belt,' and he says, 'Take mine.' Now there
he is taking her back to the full-length mirror."

A moment later, the girl returns, clearly happy with the purchase. She
wants the jeans. The wallet carrier turns to her, and then gestures to the
salesclerk. The wallet carrier is telling his daughter to give back the
belt. The girl gives back the belt. Tom stops the tape. He's leaning
forward now, a finger jabbing at the screen. Beside me, Paco is shaking
his head. I don't get it -- at least, not at first -- and so Tom replays
that last segment. The wallet carrier tells the girl to give back the
belt. She gives back the belt. And then, finally, it dawns on me why this
store has an average purchase number of only 1.33. "Don't you see?" Tom
said. "She wanted the belt. A great opportunity to make an add-on sale . .
. lost!"

Should we be afraid of Paco Underhill? One of the fundamental anxieties of
the American consumer, after all, has always been that beneath the
pleasure and the frivolity of the shopping experience runs an undercurrent
of manipulation, and that anxiety has rarely seemed more justified than
today. The practice of prying into the minds and habits of American
consumers is now a multibillion-dollar business. Every time a product is
pulled across a supermarket checkout scanner, information is recorded,
assembled, and sold to a market-research firm for analysis. There are
companies that put tiny cameras inside frozen-food cases in supermarket
aisles; market-research firms that feed census data and behavioral
statistics into algorithms and come out with complicated maps of the
American consumer; anthropologists who sift through the garbage of
carefully targeted households to analyze their true consumption patterns;
and endless rounds of highly organized focus groups and questionnaire
takers and phone surveyors. That some people are now tracking our every
shopping move with video cameras seems in many respects the last straw:
Paco's movies are, after all, creepy. They look like the surveillance
videos taken during convenience-store holdups -- hazy and soundless and
slightly warped by the angle of the lens. When you watch them, you find
yourself waiting for something bad to happen, for someone to shoplift or
pull a gun on a cashier.

The more time you spend with Paco's videos, though, the less scary they
seem. After an hour or so, it's no longer clear whether simply by watching
people shop -- and analyzing their every move -- you can learn how to
control them. The shopper that emerges from the videos is not pliable or
manipulable. The screen shows people filtering in and out of stores,
petting and moving on, abandoning their merchandise because checkout lines
are too long, or leaving a store empty-handed because they couldn't fit
their stroller into the aisle between two shirt racks. Paco's shoppers are
fickle and headstrong, and are quite unwilling to buy anything unless
conditions are perfect -- unless the belt is presented at exactly the
right moment. His theories of the butt-brush and petting and the
Decompression Zone and the Invariant Right seek not to make shoppers
conform to the desires of sellers but to make sellers conform to the
desires of shoppers.

What Paco is teaching his clients is a kind of slavish devotion to the
shopper's every whim. He is teaching them humility. Paco has worked with
supermarket chains, and when you first see one of his videos of grocery
aisles it looks as if he really had -- at least in this instance -- got
one up on the shopper. The clip he showed me was of a father shopping with
a small child, and it was an example of what is known in the trade as
"advocacy," which basically means what happens when your four-year-old
goes over and grabs a bag of cookies that the store has conveniently put
on the bottom shelf, and demands that it be purchased. In the clip, the
father takes what the child offers him. "Generally, dads are not as good
as moms at saying no," Paco said as we watched the little boy approach his
dad.

"Men tend to be more impulse-driven than women in grocery stores. We know
that they tend to shop less often with a list. We know that they tend to
shop much less frequently with coupons, and we know, simply by watching
them shop, that they can be marching down the aisle and something will
catch their eye and they will stop and buy." This kind of weakness on the
part of fathers might seem to give the supermarket an advantage in the
cookie-selling wars, particularly since more and more men go grocery
shopping with their children. But then Paco let drop a hint about a study
he'd just done in which he discovered, to his and everyone else's
amazement, that shoppers had already figured this out, that they were
already one step ahead -- that families were avoiding the cookie aisle.

This may seem like a small point. But it begins to explain why, even
though retailers seem to know more than ever about how shoppers behave,
even though their efforts at intelligence gathering have rarely seemed
more intrusive and more formidable, the retail business remains in crisis.
The reason is that shoppers are a moving target. They are becoming more
and more complicated, and retailers need to know more and more about them
simply to keep pace.

This fall, for example, Estee Lauder is testing in a Toronto shopping mall
a new concept in cosmetics retailing. Gone is the enclosed rectangular
counter, with the sales staff on one side, customers on the other, and the
product under glass in the middle. In its place the company has provided
an assortment of product-display, consultation, and testing kiosks
arranged in a broken circle, with a service desk and a cashier in the
middle. One of the kiosks is a "makeup play area," which allows customers
to experiment on their own with a hundred and thirty different shades of
lipstick. There are four self-service displays -- for perfumes, skin-care
products, and makeup -- which are easily accessible to customers who have
already made up their minds. And, for those who haven't, there is a
semiprivate booth for personal consultations with beauty advisers and
makeup artists. The redesign was prompted by the realization that the
modem working woman no longer had the time or the inclination to ask a
salesclerk to assist her in every purchase, that choosing among shades of
lipstick did not require the same level of service as, say, getting up to
speed on new developments in skin care, that a shopper's needs were now
too diverse to be adequately served by just one kind of counter.

"I was going from store to store, and the traffic just wasn't there,"
Robin Burns, the president and C.E.O. of Estee Lauder U.S.A. and Canada,
told me. "We had to get rid of the glass barricade." The most interesting
thing about the new venture, though, is what it says about the shifting
balance of power between buyer and seller. Around the old rectangular
counter, the relationship of clerk to customer was formal and subtly
paternalistic. If you wanted to look at a lipsticks you had to ask for it.
Twenty years ago, the sales staff would consult with you and tell you what
you needed, as opposed to asking and recommending," Burns said. "And in
those days people believed what the salesperson told them." Today, the old
hierarchy has been inverted. Women want to draw their own conclusions,"
Burns said. Even the architecture of the consultation kiosk speaks to the
transformation: the beauty adviser now sits beside the customer, not
across from her.

This doesn't mean that marketers and retailers have stopped trying to
figure out what goes on in the minds of shoppers. One of the hottest areas
in market research, for example, is something called typing, which is a
sophisticated attempt to predict the kinds of products that people will
buy or the kind of promotional pitch they will be susceptible to on the
basis of where they live or how they score on short standardized
questionnaires. One market research firm in Virginia, Claritas, has
divided the entire country, neighborhood by neighborhood, into sixty-two
different categories -- Pools & Patios, Shotguns & Pickups, Bohemia Mix,
and so on -- using census data and results from behavioral surveys. On the
basis of my address in Greenwich Village, Claritas classifies me as Urban
Gold Coast, which means that I like Kellogg's Special K, spend more than
two hundred and fifty dollars on sports coats, watch "Seinfeld," and buy
metal polish. Such typing systems -- and there are a number of them -- can
be scarily accurate. I actually do buy Kellogg's Special K, have spent
more than two hundred and fifty dollars on a sports coat, and watch
"Seinfeld." (I don't buy metal polish.) In fact, when I was typed by a
company called Total Research, in Princeton, the results were so dead-on
that I got the same kind of creepy feeling that I got when I first watched
Paco's videos. On the basis of a seemingly innocuous multiple-choice test,
I was scored as an eighty-nine-per-cent Intellect and a seven-per-cent
Relief Seeker (which I thought was impressive until John Morton, who
developed the system, told me that virtually everyone who reads The New
Yorker is an Intellect). When I asked Morton to guess, on the basis of my
score, what kind of razor I used, he rifted, brilliantly, and without a
moment's hesitation. "If you used an electric razor, it would be a Braun,"
he began. "But, if not, you're probably shaving with Gillette, if only
because there really isn't an Intellect safety-razor positioning out
there. Schick and Bic are simply not logical choices for you, although I'm
thinking, You're fairly young, and you've got that Relief Seeker side.
It's possible you would use Bic because you don't like that all-American,
overly confident masculine statement of Gillette. It's a very, very
conventional positioning that Gillette uses. But then they've got the
technological angle with the Gillette Sensor.... I'm thinking Gillette.
It's Gillette."

He was right. I shave with Gillette -- though I didn't even know that I
do. I had to go home and check. But information about my own predilections
may be of limited usefulness in predicting how I shop. In the past few
years, market researchers have paid growing attention to the role in the
shopping experience of a type of consumer known as a Market Maven. "This
is a person you would go to for advice on a car or a new fashion," said
Linda Price, a marketing professor at the University of South Florida, who
first came up with the Market Maven concept, in the late eighties. "This
is a person who has information on a lot of different products or prices
or places to shop. This is a person who likes to initiate discussions with
consumers and respond to requests. Market Mavens like to be helpers in the
marketplace. They take you shopping. They go shopping for you, and it
turns out they are a lot more prevalent than you would expect." Mavens
watch more television than almost anyone else does, and they read more
magazines and open their junk mail and look closely at advertisements and
have an awful lot of influence on everyone else. According to Price, sixty
per cent of Americans claim to know a Maven.

The key question, then, is not what I think but what my Mavens think. The
challenge for retailers and marketers, in turn, is not so much to figure
out and influence my preferences as to figure out and influence the
preferences of my Mavens, and that is a much harder task. "What's really
interesting is that the distribution of Mavens doesn't vary by ethnic
category, by income, or by professional status," Price said. "A working
woman is just as likely to be a Market Maven as a nonworking woman. You
might say that Mavens are likely to be older, unemployed people, but
that's wrong, too. There is simply not a dear demographic guide to how to
find these people."

More important, Mavens are better consumers than most of the rest of us.
In another of the typing systems, developed by the California-based SRI
International, Mavens are considered to be a subcategory of the consumer
type known as Fulfilled, and Fulfilleds, one SRI official told me, are
"the consumers from Hell -- they are very feature oriented." He explained,
"They are not pushed by promotions. You can reach them, but it's an
intellectual argument."

As the complexity of the marketplace grows, in other words, we have
responded by appointing the most skeptical and the most savvy in our midst
to mediate between us and sellers. The harder stores and manufacturers
work to sharpen and refine their marketing strategies, and the harder they
try to read the minds of shoppers, the more we hide behind Mavens.

Imagine that you want to open a clothing store, men's and women's, in the
upper-middle range -- say, khakis at fifty dollars, dress shirts at forty
dollars, sports coats and women's suits at two hundred dollars and up. The
work of Paco Underhill would suggest that in order to succeed you need to
pay complete and concentrated attention to the whims of your customers.
What does that mean, in practical terms? Well, let's start with what's
called the shopping gender gap. In the retail-store study that Paco showed
me, for example, male buyers stayed an average of nine minutes and
thirty-nine seconds in the store and female buyers stayed twelve minutes
and fifty-seven seconds. This is not atypical. Women always shop longer
than men, which is one of the major reasons that in the standard regional
mall women account for seventy per cent of the dollar value of all
purchases. "Women have more patience than men," Paco says. "Men are more
distractible. Their tolerance level for confusion or time spent in a store
is much shorter than women's." If you wanted, then, you could build a
store designed for men, to try to raise that thirty-percent sales figure
to forty or forty-five per cent. You could make the look more masculine --
more metal, darker woods. You could turn up the music. You could simplify
the store, put less product on the floor. "I'd go narrow and deep," says
James Adams, the design director for NBBJ Retail Concepts, a division of
one of the country's largest retail-design firms. "You wouldn't have fifty
different cuts of pants. You'd have your four basics with lots of color.
You know the Garanimals they used to do to help kids pick out clothes,
where you match the giraffe top with the giraffe bottom? I'm sure every
guy is like 'I wish I could get those, too.' You'd want to stick with the
basics. Making sure most of the color story goes together. That is a big
deal with guys, because they are always screwing the colors up." When I
asked Carrie Gennuso, the Gap's regional vice-president for New York, what
she would do in an all-male store, she laughed and said, "I might do fewer
displays and more signage. Big signs. Men! Smalls! Here!"

As a rule, though, you wouldn't want to cater to male customers at the
expense of female ones. It's no accident that many clothing stores have a
single look in both men's and women's sections, and that the
quintessential nineties look -- light woods, white walls -- is more
feminine than masculine. Women are still the shoppers in America, and the
real money is to be made by making retailing styles more female-friendly,
not less. Recently, for example, NBBJ did a project to try to increase
sales of the Armstrong flooring chain. Its researchers found that the
sales staff was selling the flooring based on its functional virtues --
the fact that it didn't scuff, that it was long-lasting, that it didn't
stain, that it was easy to clean. It was being sold by men to men, as if
it were a car or a stereo. And that was the problem. "It's a wonder
product technologically," Adams says. "But the woman is the decision-maker
on flooring, and that's not what's she's looking for. This product is
about fashion, about color and design. You don't want to get too caught up
in the man's way of thinking."

To appeal to men, then, retailers do subtler things. At the Banana
Republic store on Fifth Avenue in midtown, the men's socks are displayed
near the shoes and between men's pants and the cash register (or
cash/wrap, as it is known in the trade), so that the man can grab them
easily as he rushes to pay. Women's accessories are by the fitting rooms,
because women are much more likely to try on pants first, and then choose
an item like a belt or a bag. At the men's shirt table, the display shirts
have matching ties on them -- the tie table is next to it -- in a grownup
version of the Garanimals system. But Banana Republic would never match
scarves with women's blouses or jackets. "You don't have to be that direct
with women," Jeanne Jackson, the president of Banana Republic, told me.
"In fact, the Banana woman is proud of her sense of style. She puts her
own looks together." Jackson said she liked the Fifth Avenue store because
it's on two floors, so she can separate men's and women's sections and
give men what she calls "clarity of offer," which is the peace of mind
that they won't inadvertently end up in, say, women's undergarments. In a
one-floor store, most retailers would rather put the menswear up front and
the women's wear at the back (that is, if they weren't going to split the
sexes left and right), because women don't get spooked navigating through
apparel of the opposite sex, whereas men most assuredly do. (Of course, in
a store like the Gap at Thirty-ninth and Fifth, where, Carrie Gennuso
says, "I don't know if I've ever seen a man," the issue is moot. There,
it's safe to put the women's wear out front.)

The next thing retailers want to do is to encourage the shopper to walk
deep into the store. The trick there is to put "destination items" --
basics, staples, things that people know you have and buy a lot of -- at
the rear of the store. Gap stores, invariably, will have denim, which is a
classic destination item for them, on the back wall. Many clothing stores
also situate the cash/wrap and the fitting rooms in the rear of the store,
to compel shoppers to walk back into Zone 3 or 4. In the store's prime
real estate -- which, given Paco's theory of the Decompression Zone and
the Invariant Right, is to the right of the front entrance and five to
fifteen paces in -- you always put your hottest and newest merchandise,
because that's where the maximum number of people will see it. Right now,
in virtually every Gap in the country, the front of the store is devoted
to the Gap fall look -- casual combinations in black and gray, plaid
shirts and jackets, sweaters, black wool and brushed-twill pants. At the
Gap at Fifth Avenue and Seventeenth Street, for example, there is a fall
ensemble of plaid jacket, plaid shirt, and black pants in the first prime
spot, followed, three paces later, by an ensemble of gray sweater, plaid
shirt, T-shirt, and black pants, followed, three paces after that, by an
ensemble of plaid jacket, gray sweater, white T-shirt, and black pants. In
all, three variations on the same theme, each placed so that the eye
bounces naturally from the first to the second to the third, and then,
inexorably, to a table deep inside Zone 1 where merchandise is arrayed and
folded for petting. Every week or ten days, the combinations will change,
the "look" highlighted at the front will be different, and the entryway
will be transformed.

Through all of this, the store environment -- the lighting, the colors,
the fixtures -- and the clothes have to work together. The point is not so
much beauty as coherence. The clothes have to match the environment. "In
the nineteen-seventies, you didn't have to have a complete wardrobe all
the time," Gabriella Forte, the president and chief operating officer of
Calvin Klein, says. "I think now the store has to have a complete point of
view. It has to have all the options offered, so people have choices. It's
the famous one-stop shopping. People want to come in be serviced, and go
out. They want to understand the clear statement the designer is making."

At the new Versace store on Fifth Avenue, in the restored neoclassical
Vanderbilt mansion, Gianni Versace says that the "statement" he is making
with the elaborate mosaic and parquet floors the marble facade and the
Corinthian columns is "quality -- my message is always a scream for
quality." At her two new stores in London, Donna Karan told me, she never
wants "customers to think that they are walking into a clothing store."
She said, "I want them to think that they are walking into an environment,
that I am transforming them out of their lives and into an experience,
that it's not about clothes, it's about who they are as people." The first
thing the shopper sees in her stark, all-white DKNY store is a video
monitor and cafe: "It's about energy," Karan said, "and nourishment."

In her more sophisticated, "collection" store, where the walls are black
and ivory and gold, the first thing that the customer notices is the scent
of a candle: "I wanted a nurturing environment where you feel that you
will be taken care of." And why, at a Giorgio Armani store, is there often
only a single suit in each style on display? Not because the store has
only the one suit in stock but because the way the merchandise is
displayed has to be consistent with the message of the designers: that
Armani suits are exclusive, that the Armani customer isn't going to run
into another man wearing his suit every time he goes to an art opening at
Gagosian.

The best stores all have an image -- or what retailers like to call a
"point of view." The flagship store for Ralph Lauren's Polo collection,
for example, is in the restored Rhinelander mansion, on Madison Avenue and
Seventy-second Street. The Polo Mansion, as it is known, is alive with
color and artifacts that suggest a notional prewar English gentility.
There are fireplaces and comfortable leather chairs and deep-red Oriental
carpets and soft, thick drapes and vintage photographs and paintings of
country squires and a color palette of warm crimsons and browns and greens
-- to the point that after you've picked out a double-breasted blazer or a
cashmere sweater set or an antique silver snuffbox you feel as though you
ought to venture over to Central Park for a vigorous morning of
foxhunting. The Calvin Klein flagship store, twelve blocks down Madison
Avenue, on the other hand, is a vast, achingly beautiful minimalist
temple, with white walls, muted lighting, soaring ceilings, gray stone
flooring, and, so it seems, less merchandise in the entire store than
Lauren puts in a single room. The store's architect, John Pawson, says,
"People who enter are given a sense of release. They are getting away from
the hustle and bustle of the street and New York. They are in a calm
space. It's a modern idea of luxury, to give people space."

The first thing you see when you enter the Polo Mansion is a display of
two hundred and eight sweaters, in twenty-eight colors, stacked in a
haberdasher's wooden fixture, behind an antique glass counter; the first
thing you see at the Klein store is a white wall, and then, if you turn to
the right, four clear-glass shelves, each adorned with three
solitary-looking black handbags. The Polo Mansion is an English club. The
Klein store, Pawson says, is the equivalent of an art gallery, a place
where "neutral space and light make a work of art look the most potent."
When I visited the Polo Mansion, the stereo was playing Bobby Short. At
Klein, the stereo was playing what sounded like Brian Eno. At the Polo
Mansion, I was taken around by Charles Fagan, a vice-president at Polo
Ralph Lauren. He wore pale-yellow socks, black loafers, tight jeans, a
pale-purple polo shirt, blue old-school tie, and a brown plaid jacket --
which sounds less attractive on paper than it was in reality. He looked,
in a very Ralph Lauren way, fabulous. He was funny and engaging and
bounded through the store, keeping up a constant patter ("This room is
sort of sportswear, Telluride-y, vintage"), all the while laughing and
hugging people and having his freshly cut red hair tousled by the sales
assistants in each section. At the Calvin Klein store, the idea that the
staff -- tall, austere, sombre-suited -- might laugh and hug and tousle
each other's hair is unthinkable. Lean over and whisper, perhaps. At the
most, murmur discreetly into tiny black cellular phones. Visiting the Polo
Mansion and the Calvin Klein flagship in quick succession is rather like
seeing a "Howards End"-"The Seventh Seal" double feature.

Despite their differences, though, these stores are both about the same
thing communicating the point of view that shoppers are now thought to
demand. At Polo, the "life style" message is so coherent and
all-encompassing that the store never has the 1.33 items-per-purchase
problem that Paco saw in the retailer he studied. "We have multiple
purchases in excess -- it's the cap, it's the tie, it's the sweater, it's
the jacket, it's the pants," Fagan told me, plucking each item from its
shelf and tossing it onto a tartan-covered bench seat. "People say, 'I
have to have the belt.' It's a life-style decision."

As for the Klein store, it's really concerned with setting the tone for
the Calvin Klein clothes and products sold outside the store -- including
the designer's phenomenally successful underwear line, the sales of which
have grown nearly fivefold in the past two and a half years, making it one
of the country's dominant brands. Calvin Klein underwear is partly a
design triumph: lowering the waistband just a tad in order to elongate,
and flatter, the torso. But it is also a triumph of image -- transforming,
as Gabriella Forte says, a "commodity good into something desirable,"
turning a forgotten necessity into fashion. In the case of women's
underwear, Bob Mazzoli, president of Calvin Klein Underwear, told me that
the company "obsessed about the box being a perfect square, about the
symmetry of it all, how it would feel in a woman's hand." He added, "When
you look at the boxes they are little works of art." And the underwear
itself is without any of the usual busyness -- without, in Mazzoli's
words, "the excessive detail" of most women's undergarments. It's a clean
look, selling primarily in white, heather gray, and black. It's a look, in
other words, not unlike that of the Calvin Klein flagship store, and it
exemplifies the brilliance of the merchandising of the Calvin Klein image:
preposterous as it may seem, once you've seen the store and worn the
underwear, it's difficult not to make a connection between the two.

All this imagemaking seeks to put the shopping experience in a different
context, to give it a story line. "I wish that the customers who come to
my stores feel the same comfort they would entering a friend's house --
that is to say, that they feel at ease, without the impression of having
to deal with the 'sanctum sanctorum' of a designer," Giorgio Armani told
me. Armani has a house. Donna Karan has a kitchen and a womb. Ralph Lauren
has a men's club. Calvin Klein has an art gallery. These are all very
different points of view. What they have in common is that they have
nothing to do with the actual act of shopping. (No one buys anything at a
friend's house or a men's club.) Presumably, by engaging in this kind of
misdirection designers aim to put us at ease, to create a kind of oasis.
But perhaps they change the subject because they must, because they cannot
offer an ultimate account of the shopping experience itself. After all,
what do we really know, in the end, about why people buy? We know about
the Invariant Right and the Decompression Zone. We know to put destination
items at the back and fashion at the front, to treat male shoppers like
small children, to respect the female derriere, and to put the socks
between the cash/ wrap and the men's pants. But this is grammar, it's not
prose. It is enough. But it is not much.

One of the best ways to understand the new humility in shopping theory is
to go back to the work of William Whyte. Whyte put his cameras in parks
and in the plazas in front of office buildings because he believed in the
then radical notion that the design of public spaces had been turned
inside out -- that planners were thinking of their designs first and of
people second, when they should have been thinking of people first and of
design second. In his 1980 classic, "The Social Life of Small Urban
Spaces," for example, Whyte trained his cameras on a dozen or so of the
public spaces and small parks around Manhattan, like the plaza in front of
the General Motors Building, on Fifth Avenue, and the small park at 77
Water Street, downtown, and Paley Park, on Fifty-third Street, in order to
determine why some, like the tiny Water Street park, averaged well over a
hundred and fifty people during a typical sunny lunch hour and others,
like the much bigger plaza at 280 Park Avenue, were almost empty. He
concluded that all the things used by designers to attempt to lure people
into their spaces made little or no difference. It wasn't the size of the
space, or its beauty, or the presence of waterfalls, or the amount of sun,
or whether a park was a narrow strip along the sidewalk or a pleasing open
space. What mattered, overwhelmingly, was that there were plenty of places
to sit, that the space was in some way connected to the street, and -- the
mystical circularity -- that it was already well frequented. "What
attracts people most, it would appear, is other people," Whyte noted:

If I labor the point, it is because many urban spaces still are being
designed as though the opposite were true -- as though what people liked
best were the places they stay away from. People often do talk along such
lines, and therefore their responses to questionnaires can be entirely
misleading. How many people would say they like to sit in the middle of a
crowd? Instead, they speak of "getting away from it all," and use words
like "escape," "oasis," "retreat." What people do, however, reveals a
different priority.

Whyte's conclusions demystified the question of how to make public space
work. Places to sit, streets to enjoy, and people to watch turned out to
be the simple and powerful rules for park designers to follow, and these
rules demolished the orthodoxies and theoretical principles of
conventional urban design. But in a more important sense -- and it is here
that Whyte's connection with Paco Underhill and retail anthropology and
the stores that line Fifth and Madison is most striking -- what Whyte did
was to remystify the art of urban planning. He said, emphatically, that
people could not be manipulated, that they would enter a public space only
on their own terms, that the goal of observers like him was to find out
what people wanted, not why they wanted it. Whyte, like Paco, was armed
with all kinds of facts and observations about what it took to build a
successful public space. He had strict views on how wide ledges had to be
to lure passersby (at least thirty inches, or two backsides deep), and
what the carrying capacity of prime outdoor sitting space is (total number
of square feet divided by three). But, fundamentally, he was awed by the
infinite complexity and the ultimate mystery of human behavior. He took
people too seriously to think that he could control them. Here is Whyte,
in "The Social Life of Small Urban Spaces," analyzing hours of videotape
and describing what he has observed about the way men stand in public.
He's talking about feet. He could just as easily be talking about
shopping:

Foot movements . . . seem to be a silent language. Often, in a schmoozing
group, no one will be saying anything. Men stand bound in amiable silence,
surveying the passing scene. Then, slowly, rhythmical one of the men rocks
up and down, first on the ball of the foot, then back on the heel. He
stops. Another man starts the same movement. Sometimes there are
reciprocal gestures. One man makes a half turn to the right. Then, after a
rhythmic interval, another responds with a half turn to the left. Some
kind of communication seems to be taking place here, but I've never broken
the code. --



=================================


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