Retail Store Layouts: The Ultimate Guide To Store Design (2022) (2024)

Table of Contents
What is customer flow and why is it important in store layout and design? Free Download: Store Layout Templates Get these free templates delivered right to your inbox. Thanks for downloading. You'll receive your free download soon. In the meantime, start building your store with a free 3-day trial of Shopify. What are the different types of store layouts and designs? 1. Grid store layout 2. Herringbone store layout 3. Loop (racetrack) store layout 4. Free-flow store layout 5. Boutique store layout 6. Straight (spine) store layout 7. Diagonal store layout 8. Angular store layout 9. Geometric store layout 10. Multiple store layouts Store layout design tips Design based on customer flow Start with your window display Avoid the decompression zone Incorporate breaks or stopping points Use the right store layout Display the right amount of product Leave enough space between products and fixtures Spruce up your displays regularly Incorporate cross merchandising 5 real-life examples of good store design The Pop-up Club uses the straight store layout Donne Concept Store uses the free-flow boutique store layout Uniquities uses the mixed store layout I Miss You Vintage uses the geometric store layout Hutspot uses the angular and loop store layout Selecting your retail store layout and design Store layout FAQs How do you create a store layout? How many types of store layout are there? What is the importance of store layout? What is store layout design and visual merchandising? FAQs

Retail store layout, also referred to as store design or layout design, is a term used for the way retailers set up product displays, fixtures, and merchandise in-store.

There’s no right or wrong way to lay out your store, but it’s important to focus on your target market, your space, and the types of products you sell to come up with a retail store layout that works for your business.

Studies have shown that most people naturally look left first, then right as they enter a store. Shoppers typically also prefer to move right and walk counterclockwise around the space.

If you’re looking at opening a new retail shop or you have a shop you want to redesign, you’re likely doing your due diligence into store design that could work for your space. But you don’t need to spend a dime on research and development, as we’re sharing some of the top retail store layouts and store design tips that science has to offer.

Let’s get started.

Table of Contents

  • What is customer flow and why is it important in store layout and design?
  • What are the different types of store layouts and designs?
  • Store layout design tips
  • 5 real-life examples of good store design
  • Selecting your retail store layout and design

What is customer flow and why is it important in store layout and design?

Before we dive into the different types of store layouts, it’s important to understand what customer flow is and how it can impact your sales.

Customer flow is the number of people and patterns of shoppers coming into or passing through a retail store.

You can monitor a store’s customer flow in a few ways, including:

  • Observing the number of people who come into the store
  • Analyzing purchase data
  • Reviewing a time-lapse video, if you have an in-store camera

It’s crucial to understand customer flow to inform flow patterns, store areas that are visited frequently or not visited at all, the number of visitors, and overall customer behavior.

Understanding customer flow will help you create a visual merchandising plan orplanogram that works. By analyzing which areas of the store are performing well and which need improvement, you can pinpoint whether the store design is helping you turn a profit or resulting in lost sales. Once you succeed at setting up the right store layout, customers will flow the way you intended and your sales will increase.

If, through observing customer flow, you find that many areas of your store aren’t getting any shopping traffic and inventory isn’t moving, you can reevaluate your entire store design or just the layout of that particular area to improve customer flow.

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Free Download: Store Layout Templates

Trying to decide which layout is right for your store? Download these free templates to learn which types of layouts work best for different industries and draw inspiration for your own design.

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What are the different types of store layouts and designs?

Your store layout should help you achieve your retail merchandising goals by guiding customers through the store and exposing them to your products, all while managing important stimuli that encourage purchasing behaviors. How people experience your store is a big part of your brand and needs to be as carefully crafted as other aspects of your business.

Make merchandising decisions with confidence

Use Shopify’s analytics and reporting to make the right merchandising decisions at each of your store locations. Spot seasonal trends, see which products require promotion, measure your promotions’ impact on product sales, and more.

That’s a lot to consider, but layouts are a great place to start. Store layouts are the foundation that will guide the experience of your retail space.

There are many store layouts to consider. Here are 10 to get you started:

  1. Grid
  2. Herringbone
  3. Loop, or racetrack
  4. Free-flow
  5. Boutique
  6. Straight, or spine
  7. Diagonal
  8. Angular
  9. Geometric
  10. Multiple, or mixed

We’ll take a closer look at each of them, but let’s first examine the commonalities each of these layouts share by looking at a generic store with a blank interior.

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Exterior signage and window displays are curbside appeal for your store’s real estate. Doing a good job here can help to convert foot traffic into store traffic. Check out these tips on how to create a compelling curbside story.

Once a person steps inside, they enter the decompression zone, which is the first five to 15 feet of your store. Think of this as a transition space—customers take a broad, sweeping look at the store, and anything placed directly in this area likely will not be noticed. Avoid placing key items here, like new arrivals or high-demand products.

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Notice the empty space at the front—the decompression zone helps customers transition into your store.

As we mentioned above, studies show that the majority of people tend to turn right after entering a space, starting a circulation trail through whatever store layout you’ve designed. Thus, placing your high-demand product or premium promotion in this space will ensure it gets seen. This area is known as your power wall and it can be both an excellent promotional and brand-building space. Use it to strike an impression.

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Here’s an example of a power wall at American Eagle Outfitters. Beyond these common features, store layouts highly influence the remainder of the circulation path and experience of your store—so let’s examine the 10 most used layouts now.

1. Grid store layout

In a grid layout, merchandise is displayedon displays in long aisles where customers weave up and down, browsing as they go. The grid maximizes product display and minimizes white space—nearly every convenience store, pharmacy, and grocery store utilize this familiar layout.

The grid isall about product, product, product. A standard grid layout looks something like this:

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The grid features long aisles with impulse-purchase items near the front and staple items at the back. The ends of aisles are prime real estate and many stores use additional features such as wing shelves to further highlight products. If you ever wondered why milk is at the far end of a grocery store, it's because this design forces customers to walk past an assortment of impulse purchase items, both on the way to and from the staple item they need.

If you have the room, four-foot-wide aisles help prevent customers from bumping into one another. While far from standard, this is something you’ll want to aim for, given that due to the pandemic, 62.2% of consumers in North America say social distancing is one of the top factors that makes them feel more comfortable shopping in-store.

Pros

  • Best for stores with lots of merchandise, especially when products are varied
  • Lots of exposure to products, as the layout encourages customers to browse multiple aisles
  • Familiar for shoppers
  • Predictable traffic flow means you can put promos where you know customers will see them
  • Lots of infrastructure suppliers, such as shelving, are available as this layout is used so much
  • Best practices within this layout are well researched

Cons

  • Least likely to create an experiential retail space; this layout is a dime a dozen
  • Customers may be frustrated they can’t shortcut their way to what they need
  • Customers may not understand your product groupings, leading to frustration and questions (or worse, departure)
  • Few visual breaks and lots of merchandise can make customers feel overwhelmed
  • Cramped aisles often lead to customers bumping into one another

If you operate the type of shop where customers pick up multiple types of items that aren’t naturally grouped together (think shampoo and greeting cards), you may want a layout that makes it easy for customers to browse the whole space and find what they’re looking for.

The grid creates natural barriers that serve to simultaneously group like products together and separate different products. This can help to clear up confusion about where to find things in a shop with a high number of SKUs. Furthermore, customers are highly accustomed to this layout, so flowing up and down aisles is second nature to most shoppers.

Some of the cons of this design can be addressed through creative interior design that helps improve the look of the space beyond the bones of the layout alone, such as using shorter shelving to make the space feel more open and help customers see how you’ve grouped products through visible signage.

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This is an example of a modern grid layout in a store—notice the promotional areas at the ends of each aisle. This shop cleverly uses shorter aisle shelving so that staples at the back are still clearly visible, which opens up the space, improves wayfinding, and helps to reduce thefts. Aisles are spacious, helping to avoid the butt-brush effect.

2. Herringbone store layout

If you think the grid may be best for your merchandise but you have a very long, narrow retail space, the herringbone layout is one to consider.

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The herringbone layout has many of the same pros and cons as the grid, with a few notable exceptions.

Pros

  • Suited to stores with lots of product but minimal space
  • This layout often works well for warehouse-style stores open to the public

Cons

  • Limited visibility down “side roads” can increase shoplifting opportunities
  • Can feel cramped, and customers easily bump into one another

Tuck shops, small hardware stores, and many small community libraries use the herringbone layout to pack a tiny space full of wares. The side roads can be used for promotions, but by adding some welcoming visual breaks within the promo areas, you can provide some much-needed breathing room to an otherwise overwhelming space.

Some herringbone book shops encourage people to linger by setting up a comfy chair at the end, where shoppers can leaf through books before they decide to buy.

You’ll find large warehouse-style stores use the herringbone layout as well. IKEA’s convoluted loop track (which we will examine below) is replaced by the herringbone when you’re in the pickup area and the intention of the shopper changes from browsing to purchase.

A big potential downside with the herringbone is the potential for theft. But one way to mitigate the risk is to park security cameras at the end of the side roads, as visibility from the checkout is likely to be limited to none.

3. Loop (racetrack) store layout

The loop, racetrack, or forced-path store layout takes the grid’s fairly predictable traffic flows a step further and creates a deliberate closed loop that leads customers from the front of the store, past every bit of merchandise, and then to the checkout. Customers are exposed to the most merchandise this way, but the path they take is controlled.

A basic loop layout is shown below—the white path represents the main corridor that traffic flows through, although the central area would be populated with a micro version of any layout, which suits the product offerings and fits the space.

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Pros

  • Maximum product exposure
  • Most predictable traffic pattern; easiest to place promotions and have highest assurance they’ll be seen
  • Can be experiential—may work with retail where a journey makes sense and time spent in store doesn’t need to be brief

Cons

  • Customers don’t get to browse at will
  • May waste the time of customers who knows what they’ve come for; they may avoid this shop in the future when buying intent is specific
  • Not suited for shops that encourage high traffic turnover or carry products people need to spend little time considering before purchase

IKEA takes the loop layout to the extreme, and if you’ve been to one, you’ve probably experienced both the pros and the cons of this design depending on your intent in the shop. If you’re there to browse, the experience can be quite nice—it encourages perusing and the creative displays spark ideas for your home. However, if you’ve gone there for a few specific items, it’s a daunting, frustrating place to be—it’s no coincidence that haunted houses use the loop layout too.

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The loop doesn’t have to be frustrating though, so long as it’s carefully selected for the appropriate purpose.

One well-considered loop layout application are those pop-up gift shops accompanying time-limited museum exhibitions that continue the story of the exhibit by making the shop a natural extension of the display rather than a sudden, jarring retail space.

A well-executed loop layout can let retailers tell a story, albeit within very well-defined parameters.

4. Free-flow store layout

The free-flow layout philosophy is almost a rejection of the others. With free-flow, there is no deliberate attempt to force customers through predictable traffic patterns: wandering is encouraged. Therefore, with free-flow, there are far fewer rules, but that doesn’t mean there aren’t any—don’t forget about the commonalities that are based on natural human behavior.

A sample free-flow store layout below demonstrates that exterior signage, window display, and, most likely, the start path and power wall still remain the same. But beyond that, it’s a very creative layout to work within.

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Free-flow has been called the simplest store layout, because there’s no defined pattern, but arguably that’s what makes it the most complex. How you organize your merchandise in a free-flow store is limited only by your square footage and your imagination.

With so few rules, it’s easy to go wrong. However, the biggest mistake you can make if you decide to go with this layout is thinking there are no best practices—human preferences and behavior still matter and need to be considered for this layout to be successful for your shop.

Pros

  • Great for small spaces
  • Also works within areas of loop and spine layouts (more on that below)
  • Creates more space between products
  • Less likelihood customers will bump into one another
  • Better suited to higher-end shops with less merchandise
  • Most likely to create an experiential retail space

Cons

  • Often less space to display product
  • Easy to forget there are best practices that still should be followed; breaking the unwritten rules can turn people off and away from your store
  • Can be confusing for customers
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Well-designed free-flow layouts can encourage browsing and impulse purchases. They are ideally suited to more creatively focused shops or upscale brands that want to prioritize experiential retail as a key component of what they do.

The flip side is that, because there’s so much variety in free-flow shops, it’s easy to do the wrong things and discourage customers. Setting shelves too close together, not creating enough visual breaks, or putting checkout in the wrong part of the store can encourage departure rather than purchase.

5. Boutique store layout

The boutique store layout, also known as shop-in-shop or alcove layout, is a commonly used type of free-flow layout. Merchandise is separated by brand or category, encouraging shoppers to engage with complementary items in designated areas. Walls, product displays, and fixtures divide areas and create the feeling of small shops within one store.

Pros

  • Sparks curiosity in shoppers
  • Highlights different brands and product categories
  • Helps with cross merchandising and cross-selling

Cons

  • May limit the total display space for merchandise
  • Shoppers may not explore the entire store
  • Customers may be confused

If you carry multiple brands, this type of retail store layout is a great way to use store design to tell a story about each label. One way to reduce the likelihood of shoppers not exploring the entire store is to make sure you don’t close off each section too much. Rather than put up a wall, use shelving, tables, and racks to create alcoves that people can easily flow in and out of.

6. Straight (spine) store layout

The straight store layout, also known as the spine layout, is easy to plan, effective, and creates space for customers to peruse your store. A basic straight design can help lure customers all the way to the back of the store, ensuring that all featured merchandise is seen. This is done with signage, product displays, and strategically placed merchandise to keep customers interested and moving down the main aisle of the shop.

This store design works for small markets, food stores, and department stores that use the spine as a main aisle to connect the various sections on each floor.

Pros

  • Customers are more likely to make it to the back of the store
  • Shoppers have space to look around
  • Allows for space to display merchandise

Cons

  • Shoppers may move quickly down the main aisle and merchandise at the front or sides of your store will go unseen
  • A straight aisle may not lend itself as well to exploration and discovering new products

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7. Diagonal store layout

Exactly as the name suggests, the diagonal store layout incorporates aisles placed at an angle to expose more merchandise to customers as they walk through the shop. It’s a variation of the grid layout and can help guide shoppers to the checkout counter. This store design is helpful for space management, making it a good option for retail stores with limited space. It also encourages more movement, so customers can easily circulate through the store and see all of the products you sell.

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Pros

  • Better customer circulation
  • If the checkout counter is located in the center of the store, the diagonal layout provides better security—you’ll be able to see more throughout the store

Cons

  • Shoppers cannot take a shortcut to specific products
  • Narrower aisles are common in the diagonal store layout

8. Angular store layout

A better name for angular store layout would be “curved store layout.” “Angular” is deceptive, as this store layout includes rounded product displays, curved walls and corners, and other curved store fixtures to maintain the customer flow.

The angular layout uses free-standing product displays and can create the perception of higher quality merchandise, making it a good retail design option for luxury retailers and boutiques.

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Pros

  • Creates a unique retail store design
  • Elevates the in-store experience

Cons

  • Rounded displays eliminate wall shelf space
  • Less inventory can be displayed

9. Geometric store layout

The geometric store layout is a great way to combine creativity and functionality. It’s commonly used by retailers selling products targeted at stylish millennials and Gen Z. If your shop has a unique interior including support columns, wall angles, and ceiling design, a geometric layout can enhance the look of your store.

You can combine geometric product displays and fixtures in a range of shapes and sizes to make a statement and build your brand identity. Typically, clothing and apparel stores also use merchandising strategies such as artwork, music, and scents combined with a geometric store layout to create an atmosphere that heightens customer experience.

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Pros

  • Creates a unique store design without a high cost
  • Helps make a statement about the products

Cons

  • May be too eccentric for less “trendy” products (or an older audience)
  • It may not be the best option to maximize space to display merchandise

10. Multiple store layouts

You don’t have to select just one store layout. Some retailers use elements from multiple layouts to create a flexible store design, also known as a mixed layout. A dynamic mix of diagonal, straight, and angular store layouts can help you create a compelling in-store experience where customers naturally flow from one area to another.

You can use one layout type as your starting point and build from there. For example, the loop layout lends itself to more than one option—a loop on the outside and grid or free-flow in the center. Large-sized department stores often use multiple configurations connected by a single power aisle.

Nordstrom, for example, uses several layouts to differentiate between various branded shops that live within the store. The department store transitions from a grid layout Nike store-within-a-store to a free-flow, high-end designer label embedded within the space. It cleverly mixes and matches store layouts to create the feeling of different shops, even though they’re all under the same roof and umbrella brand.

A main corridor acts as a spine connecting each of the shops, while visual décor helps customers understand where one embedded shop ends and another begins.

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The spine is clearly seen at Kid’s Cavern, which is flanked by free-flow layouts.

Store layout design tips

Humans are highly visual. In fact, 65% of people are visual learners and half of the human brain is directly or indirectly devoted to processing visual information. If you want to get and keep shoppers’ attention, it’s vital to create a visually appealing and stimulating store design.

This is where you can use retail merchandising and store design to attract customers. It’s important to spend time building a merchandising strategy that improves customer experience and boosts sales.

Let’s take a look at a few store layout design tips that will help you draw customers in and encourage them to buy.

Design based on customer flow

You’ll want shoppers to see your best and most appealing merchandise or product displays the moment they walk into your store. For this reason, knowing where people go or turn after entering your shop is key. Do they usually flow to the right or the left? What do their eyes focus on first? These are just a few of the questions you should consider when you’re working on your store design.

In most cases, shoppers enter and almost always turn right, walking counterclockwise. But, it’s also important to consider your location and the common flow of traffic. In fact, studies have shown that in-store traffic flow could be influenced by traffic patterns on the road. Herb Sorensen, author of Inside the Mind of the Shopper, notes:

“The pattern of movement in the supermarket is counterclockwise in the United States, but PathTracker studies in the UK, Australia, and Japan show a much greater tendency for shoppers to move in a clockwise pattern there…traffic patterns in the store may also be affected by vehicle traffic patterns outside. In these small studies, we noted that in countries with right-hand driving, where traffic circles move in a clockwise pattern, shoppers in stores may be more comfortable moving the same direction.”

Depending on where your store is located, you can consider this information to arrange a store layout that embraces the direction most commonly used in your area.

It’s also important to note that you shouldn’t base all of your store design decisions on outside research. Making your own observations will help you assess the traffic patterns of your own customers.

You can use foot traffic tools to evaluate how shoppers flow through your store, or simply pay attention and observe where people go and what they look at when they come into your store.

Start with your window display

Your retail window display is one of the first engagements a potential customer has with your store. It can also be one of the most important store displays to help your business stand out.

You’re not only competing with other local shops, but large retailers as well. A well-designed window display can help separate your business from its competitors and boost in-store foot traffic.

Use store window displays to tell your brand story and get the attention of passersby. With the right window display design, people will be more likely to stop, look, and then walk into your shop, giving you the opportunity to engage and make a sale.

Avoid the decompression zone

As we mentioned earlier, the decompression zone is the first five to 15 feet of your store, where the customer transitions into shopping mode. At this point, people take a broad look at the store, so merchandise in this area usually goes unnoticed.

That’s why it’s important to avoid putting key products or signage near the entrance. Shoppers in this area are still adjusting to their surroundings and tend to overlook merchandise and product displays placed in the decompression zone.

Incorporate breaks or stopping points

If all of your fixtures look the same, it could lead to shoppers glancing over particular merchandise. To avoid products getting skipped over, you can use speedbumps to stop foot traffic.

For example, a shelf stopper can be used to highlight an item on a shelf. The sign sticks out from the shelf, drawing in the customer’s attention and causing them to stop. Once they’ve stopped, they’re more likely to browse all of the products on the shelf. This helps prevent shoppers from skipping over products in your store.

Use the right store layout

Now that you know about all the different store layouts to choose from, using the right one for your space and customer base plays a critical role in managing customer flow. Deciding on the right store design depends on a number of factors, including the products you sell, the size of your store, and your target audience.

Put yourself in the shoes of your customers by evaluating these questions before you decide on your store layout:

  • What are your customers like?
  • Are they likely to be in a hurry or do they take their time shopping?
  • Are they open to discovery or do they prefer efficiency?
  • Do they like guidance from sales associates or prefer self-service options?

Display the right amount of product

Determining the right amount of product to display is not always easy. While having more merchandise on the sales floor can help you sell more, displaying too much product can lower the perceived value of the merchandise you sell. This is especially true for high-end or boutique retailers.

So what’s the right amount of stock to display? The bottom line is it depends on the size of your store, the type of customer experience you want to create, and how you want shoppers to perceive your business.

If you own a high-end boutique, it’s better to curate a limited assortment of products and display only a few at a time. Conversely, discount retailers who want to utilize every inch of floor space to sell as much as possible can pack the store with merchandise.

Leave enough space between products and fixtures

Depending on your target market and the type of customer experience you want to create, you may opt for shelves that are filled with merchandise or you might sparsely display products. It all depends on what type of store you have. Most importantly, you need to make sure your customers still have their personal space. They shouldn’t have to squeeze or worry about brushing up against fixtures with their body or belongings.

Spruce up your displays regularly

How often you freshen up your store displays can vary depending on factors such as how regularly you receive new merchandise shipments, whether your products are seasonal, and how frequently shoppers return.

Keeping your product displays and merchandise assortment updated can entice customers to come back regularly to check out new products. You can test different strategies to refresh your displays. For example, rotate products on a weekly or bi-weekly basis to see how it affects sales. You can do this by moving merchandise from the middle of the store to the front and from the front to the back, or however you see fit.

Of course, whenever you receive a new shipment of products, it’s important to display them right away and in an area of your store that has high foot traffic.

The main idea is to make sure customers don’t get too familiar with your store and the merchandise you’re displaying to the point that they don’t even bother coming in anymore.

Incorporate cross merchandising

Cross merchandising, which you may also know as secondary product placement, is a great way to display complementary products next to each other to boost sales.

For example, if you sell jeans, you can display them on a table next to a rack with blouses to help the customer easily find products to complete an outfit. Or, if you sell running shoes, place socks and running shorts nearby.

Cross merchandising helps make the shopping experience more convenient for customers and can also spark ideas or remind them of additional products they need. When you get it right, you’ll enjoy making more sales and increasing your average order value (AOV).

5 real-life examples of good store design

Coming up with a design for your store layout can feel like a lot of work, especially when you’re running a small business and wearing many hats. But it can also be fun and exciting. And, in most cases, you’ll be able to switch things up and test merchandising strategies to see what works best for your business.

Here are five real-life examples of good store design to get you started.

The Pop-up Club uses the straight store layout

The Pop-up Club creates space for small businesses to showcase their products and crafts to customers, removing technology and encouraging human interaction and connection. It does this by taking dilapidated empty spaces and temporarily turning them into beautiful shops where local vendors can display and sell their merchandise.

This is an example of one of its recent marketplaces. The straight, or spine, layout leaves an open path for customers to discover the various brands and makers that are showcasing their products.

Donne Concept Store uses the free-flow boutique store layout

Donne Concept Store is a retail boutique that stocks luxury brands, special accessories, and hosts events to merge the in-store and online shopping experience.

They usea free-flow boutique layout that lets customers wander from one fixture to another and discover each of the brands it carries. The combination of racks that hang from the ceiling (appearing to be floating), tables, and sparsely stocked shelving creates an open space that’s easier for customers to walk through. The store has also done a great job of designing its layout with it’s target market in mind. As we mentioned earlier, displaying fewer items at a time lends itself to high-end retail stores.

Uniquities uses the mixed store layout

Uniquities sells premium denim and designer brands that are curated from around the world.

In this example, the boutique does a great job of using the mixed store layout. By displaying products on a rack, round table, and wall shelving, it’s making use of various shapes, fixture types, and display sizes. Dressing a mannequin next to the rack helps shoppers visualize the outfit and entices them to try it on and hopefully make a purchase.

I Miss You Vintage uses the geometric store layout

I Miss You Vintage is Toronto’s premier destination for luxury designer label resale. It’s not your usual vintage shop where you have to comb through racks and racks of merchandise to find a gem.

Instead, it uses a mostly geometric layout to merchandise products in a colorful way and does a great job of cross merchandising. For example, you can find dresses, shoes, and bags all on one rack, and the outfits are already color coordinated for you.

Hutspot uses the angular and loop store layout

Hutspot is a Dutch retailer offering a unique combination of timeless fashion, innovative design, and local art. Its aim is to help young designers and artists sell their goods alongside established brands.

This example from Hutspot is an angular and loop store layout. By placing a large round fixture in the center of the floor, shoppers can walk in a loop as they peruse the products hanging on the racks around the edges.

Make merchandising decisions with confidence

Use Shopify’s analytics and reporting to make the right merchandising decisions at each of your store locations. Spot seasonal trends, see which products require promotion, measure your promotions’ impact on product sales, and more.

Selecting your retail store layout and design

When deciding upon a layout for your retail space, carefully consider your products, desired consumer behavior, and square footage you have available. If you have a lot of dissimilar products, consider the grid. A smaller number of products may work well in free-flow arrangements. If you want shoppers to slow down and browse, consider mixing loop and free-flow styles.

Picking the bones of your store matters a great deal and can directly impact your sales.

What layouts do you prefer for your shop? Let us know in the comments.

Store layout FAQs

How do you create a store layout?

When deciding upon a layout for your retail space, carefully consider your products, desired consumer behavior, and square footage you have available. If you have a lot of dissimilar products, consider the grid. A smaller number of products may work well in free-flow arrangements. If you want shoppers to slow down and browse, consider mixing loop and free-flow styles.

How many types of store layout are there?

There are roughly 10 different types of store layouts, including: grid, herringbone, loop or racetrack, free-flow, boutique, straight or spine, diagonal, angular, geometric, and multiple or mixed.

What is the importance of store layout?

Your store layout should help you achieve your retail merchandising goals by guiding customers through the store and exposing them to your products, all while managing important stimuli that encourage purchasing behaviors. How people experience your store is a big part of your brand and needs to be as carefully crafted as other aspects of your business.

What is store layout design and visual merchandising?

Store layout or design refers to the way you set up your retail store to direct customer flow, while visual merchandising is the process of planning, designing, and displaying products to highlight their features and benefits.

Retail Store Layouts: The Ultimate Guide To Store Design (2022) (2024)

FAQs

What is the best layout for a retail store? ›

The straight store layout is efficient, simple to plan, and capable of creating individual spaces for the customer. Plus, a basic straight design helps pull customers towards featured merchandise in the back of the store. Merchandise displays and signage is used to keep customers moving and interested.

What are the 6 basic designs for store layout? ›

Large or small, most retail stores use one of six basic types of retail store layouts: grid, loop, free-flow/mixed, diagonal, forced-path, and angular.

What are the 7 types of layout? ›

Product layout or line processing layout or flow-line layout. Process layout or functional layout or job shop layout. Fixed position layout or static layout. Cellular manufacturing (CM) layout or Group Technology layout.

What are the 7 strategies for store planning? ›

Retail Planning: 7 Steps to Ensure the Success of Your Retail...
  • What is retail planning?
  • Analyze your market.
  • Analyze your customers' behavior.
  • Set your objectives.
  • Outline and implement your strategy.
  • Analyze your performance.
  • Final thoughts.
Nov 30, 2021

What are the three most common store layouts? ›

Top 7 Types of Retail Layouts
  • Forced-Path. The forced-path layout puts customers on a pre-determined route through a retail store, guiding customers past whichever products need the most attention. ...
  • Straight. ...
  • Angular. ...
  • Geometric. ...
  • Grid. ...
  • Loop. ...
  • Free-Flow.
Nov 8, 2021

How do I optimize my store layout? ›

Store layout optimization strategies using video analytics
  1. Streamline customer flow. ...
  2. Delight customers with a better checkout experience. ...
  3. Improve product placement. ...
  4. A/B test store design or layout changes. ...
  5. Supercharge merchandising tactics. ...
  6. Improve storefront design. ...
  7. Ensure layout and design compliance.

What are the 6 pillars of retail? ›

The Six Retail Pillars of Effective Competitor Monitoring
  • Product.
  • Promotions.
  • Inventory.
  • Reviews.
  • Media.

What are the seven 7 basic principle of layouts? ›

The principles of design are the rules a designer must follow to create an effective and attractive composition. The fundamental principles of design are: Emphasis, Balance and Alignment, Contrast, Repetition, Proportion, Movement and White Space.

Which layout is the simplest type of store layout? ›

Free-flow layout

Considered the simplest type of store layout, your free-flow layout groups your fixtures and merchandise into a free-flowing pattern on your sales floor.

What are three techniques of design layout? ›

Several layout patterns are often recommended to take advantage of how people scan or read through a design. 3 of the more common are the Gutenberg diagram, the z-pattern layout, and the f-pattern layout.

Which is the most important component of layout design? ›

Space. Space is important in a layout because it helps separate and organize different elements. In a grid, space typically fills the gaps between columns, or gutters.

What is the difference between store design and store layout? ›

It's how the merchandise is placed within the store. Essentially, layout is a smaller slice of the overall retail design pie. Retail layout includes several smaller components, including display and fixture placement, zones and departments, and merchandise location.

What are the principles of good layout? ›

The design must have balance, rhythm, emphasis, unity, simplicity, preparation, harmony, line, shape and movement. Good layouts never just happen, they have to be deliberately and carefully planned and worked out.

What is layout strategy? ›

The objective of layout strategy is to develop an economic layout that will meet the firm's competitive requirements. 1. It establishes competitive priorities. 2. It supports differentiation, low cost, and rapid response strategies.

How do you design a layout? ›

7 Tips for Creating a Layout Design
  1. Create a mood board. Make an inspiration collage or mood board before getting started on your own design. ...
  2. Match your design to your content. ...
  3. Turn to templates to guide yourself. ...
  4. Create visual contrast. ...
  5. Play around with typography. ...
  6. Embrace white space. ...
  7. Experiment with the rules.
Jun 7, 2021

What are the 4 steps of retailing? ›

It involves the planning, promotion, and presentation of a product. Having a unique commodity is only the first step -- addition components of retail marketing include ergonomic packaging, competitive pricing, and sales campaigns. The four gold standards of retail marketing are product, price, place, and promotion.

What is the first step in retail strategy? ›

The very first step in your strategic retail planning process is to define the business mission. In other words, describe what your broad objectives are going to be and what activities you're going to engage in.

What are the types of store layout? ›

6 types of store layouts
  • Racetrack layout. The racetrack layout is a loop that takes customers through the store in a large perimeter. ...
  • Grid layout. A grid layout is ideal for businesses that want to maintain control over their inventory. ...
  • Diagonal layout. ...
  • Angular layout. ...
  • Geometric layout. ...
  • Mixed floor plan.
Apr 29, 2022

Which layout is the best layout? ›

The most commonly used layout classes that are found in Android SDK are:
  • FrameLayout- It is the simplest of the Layout Managers that pins each child view within its frame. ...
  • LinearLayout- A LinearLayout aligns each of the child View in either a vertical or a horizontal line.
Jul 11, 2022

What is the most common layout? ›

Below you'll find the most popular and effective website layouts that designers the world over use to make their websites.
  • Asymmetrical Layout. ...
  • Split Screen Layout. ...
  • Headline and Thumbnails Gallery Layout. ...
  • Modular Layout (also known as Card Layout / Block Layout) ...
  • Magazine Layout. ...
  • Single Page Layout. ...
  • Radial Symmetry Layout.
Jul 18, 2021

What are the four phases of layout planning? ›

Site layout: shows how the building should be located in a proper way. Block layout: shows the sizes of departments in the buildings. Detailed layout: shows the arrangements of equipment and workstations in the departments. Workstation layout: shows the locations of every part of the workstation.

What are the three 3 most important things in retailing? ›

The four Ps - Product, Price, Place, Promotion - are the basic foundations of a successful retail business.
  • Product. You need products that your customers want to buy, and a product range that will satisfy your customers' needs and desires. ...
  • Price. ...
  • Place. ...
  • Promotion.

How do I make my retail store stand out? ›

9 product display tips to make your store stand out
  1. Tell your story with window displays and focal points.
  2. Play around with colors.
  3. Consider bundling your products.
  4. Immerse customers through touch and smell.
  5. Educate customers through signage.
  6. Make sure your displays are well-lit.
  7. Keep things fresh and seasonal.
May 18, 2022

What is a power wall in retail? ›

Known throughout the retail industry as the 'power wall,' the space found to the customer's immediate right should be carefully designed to instantly convey a store's brand and purpose. If consumers are unimpressed with this area, they may choose to abandon the store altogether.

What are the 5 R's of retailing? ›

In 1927, Paul Mazur defined retail product merchandising as the five rights of merchandising: 1) the right merchandise, 2) in the right quantities, 3) at the right time, 4) at the right price, 5) in the right place.

What are the 5 P's in retail? ›

The 5 Ps of product, price, promotion, place, and people are the holy grail of business for retailers and consumer packaged goods (CPG) enterprises. Data scientists are now simplifying and creating the optimal mix of these 5 Ps for enterprises, using the massive amount of data they generate.

What are the five S's of retail operation? ›

Building on previous studies on retail operations, Pal and Byrom (2003) further developed the 'five S's' (stock, space, staff, standards, and systems) of retail operations, which provides managers with a useful guiding framework that can be exploited in the retail operations process. ...

What are the 5 main design principles? ›

Principles of design
  • Balance.
  • Alignment.
  • Proximity.
  • Repetition.
  • Contrast.
Feb 27, 2019

What are 5 visual design principles? ›

Summary: The principles of scale, visual hierarchy, balance, contrast, and Gestalt not only create beautiful designs, but also increase usability when applied correctly.

What are the 4 basic principles of design rules? ›

Effective design centres on four basic principles: contrast, repetition, alignment and proximity. These appear in every design.

How wide should retail aisles be? ›

Aisles. A wide walkway is absolutely essential for individuals with mobility devices. The minimum width requirement is 36 inches, and if the aisles are longer than 200 feet, then they must have at least 60 inches to provide clearance for passing other shoppers.

What makes a good store design? ›

An effective store design takes into account the type of merchandise sold, the demographics of the shoppers, and the size and shape of the space. It should also be flexible enough to accommodate changes in merchandise mix and shopper preferences. A well-designed store makes shopping easy and enjoyable.

Which retailer is most likely to use a grid store layout? ›

Grid Layout

Used in supermarkets, drug stores, and many big box retail stores, it's used when stores carry a lot of products (particularly different kinds of products), or when a retail location needs to maximize space.

What is the Z rule in design? ›

The Z Pattern

The Z-pattern layout is typically used on pages that are not content heavy. Its design mimics the route the human eye travels when it reads — left to right, zigzagging top to bottom: Visitors first scan from the top-left to the top-right, forming an imaginary horizontal line.

What is the F rule in design? ›

The F-Pattern

Users first read in a horizontal movement, usually across the upper part of the content area. This initial element forms the F's top bar. Next, users move down the page a bit and then read across in a second horizontal movement that typically covers a shorter area than the previous movement.

What is the 7 principles of design? ›

What Are the Seven Principles of Art and Design? The seven principles of art and design are balance, rhythm, pattern, emphasis, contrast, unity, and movement. The elements of art and design are line, shape/form, space, value, color, and texture.

What are the four elements of layout? ›

4 Visual Elements of a Good Layout
  • Visual Hierarchy: Scale and visual hierarchy are both crucial factors for proper layout and visual aligning, so it's vital to have a decent hang on them to keep up a balanced mix. ...
  • Composition: ...
  • Alignment: ...
  • Typography:

What is the most effective page layout style? ›

The F-shaped layout is effective because it appeals to how most people read a webpage. You start at the top of the page, reading left to right, then you make your way down repeating the process.

What are the two important consideration of store design? ›

Merchandising and ambience are two of the most important aspects of a retail interior, but there are quite a few other considerations to take note of as well.

What are the main elements of store design? ›

6 Important Elements in Retail Store Design
  • Traffic Flow. ...
  • Lighting. ...
  • Displays. ...
  • Checkout Area. ...
  • Style. ...
  • Shelving and Racks. ...
  • Leave Retail Store Design to the Experts.
May 23, 2022

What are the 4 pillars of retail? ›

It's those four, culture, operating model, process and people.

What are the 4 Ps of retail? ›

As noted earlier, the four Ps of marketing are product, pricing, place, and promotion. The retail marketing mix adds two more: people and presentation. Product: The product is the item purchased by a customer.

What are the 6 P's of retailing? ›

The building blocks of an effective marketing strategy include the 6 P's of marketing: product, price, place, promotion, people, and presentation. The effective integration of the 6 P's of marketing can serve as the foundation for an effective growth strategy.

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