Showing posts with label specialty retail point of sale. Show all posts
Showing posts with label specialty retail point of sale. Show all posts
Wednesday, February 13, 2013
Mall Kiosk Point of Sale
With the innovation of modern Point of Sale in the market, even carts, booths and mall kiosk are now using and experiencing its advantages! Point of sale systems are so easy to use everyone’s using it. Visit us at www.LivePOS.com and see why lots of people are using our Cloud Computing Point of Sale!
Tuesday, February 12, 2013
Live Point of Sale
Real Time Cloud Computing Point of Sale systems are being used as a powerful tool that can help your store’s operations from sales, purchase orders, inventories, accounting and more. That’s not just an ordinary cash register at your cashier, but a modern computer built specially to help you in your business operations! Visit us at www.LivePOS.com
Sunday, February 10, 2013
Specialty Retail POS
Having a LivePOS Cloud Computing Point of Sale lets you enjoy both the benefits of a web-based and software based software giving you a great advantage for your business! Visit us at www.LivePOS.com
Sunday, January 27, 2013
Affordable Point of Sale
Using mall kiosk or cart POS solutions creates wonderful and very pleading results to your special retail business. With our software in your hand, we will be able to give you multiple and practical solutions to cater to your business to help boost it up. Some of its appealing factors include reduction of costs in your maintenance; respond faster to the trends which are very dynamic and abruptly changing nowadays, to help improve customer service to boost your sales more. With our solutions, getting benefits that you have always dreamed of will be within your reach and success will be at the palm of your hands! Visit www.livepos.com to know more about our great product on point of sale solution!
Monday, April 23, 2012
Carts and Kiosks
Specialty retailers including kiosks and carts are using cloud POS solutions to manage their businesses. Cloud POS is based on the SaaS model and therefore has a smaller upfront cost than traditional POS. Additionally, cloud POS offers up to date store information from anywhere via the Web. Visit us at www.LivePOS.com and see why lots of people are using our Cloud Computing Point of Sale!
Friday, April 20, 2012
POS Solutions
Many companies claim to have the best cloud POS solution. Prior to purchasing the POS, it is recommended to get a demo, free trial and training to ensure that the POS matches your needs. Visit us at www.LivePOS.com and see how we can help you.
Thursday, April 19, 2012
Real Time POS
Real Time POS are becoming more popular because of the convenience they bring retailers including accurate and up to date reporting of everything happening with the business. Learn how LivePOS can help your business by visiting www.LivePOS.com
Wednesday, April 18, 2012
Cloud POS Data storage
A cloud based Point of Sale system will simplify your business operations. With LivePOS’ Real Time Point of Sale, data is sent in real time giving you the opportunity to view your store’s data through the web at anytime and anywhere.
Tuesday, April 17, 2012
Flexible Payment System
Through LivePOS Real Time Point of Sale solution, you can receive cash, credit card, gift card, or checks as a form of payment. A customer can also pay in a combination of the above. Visit us at www.LivePOS.com for more information.
Monday, April 16, 2012
Real Time Cloud Computing Point of Sale
LivePOS offers free tutorials on how to maximize the use of a Real Time Cloud Computing Point of Sale. Unlike other POS providers, LivePOS provides a live demo on how to install, use and maintain our Point of Sale System. LivePOS also provides a free 24/7 Tech Support just in case any unwanted problems occur. Visit us at www.LivePOS.com
Friday, April 13, 2012
Real-Time Point of Sale
With our Real-Time Point of Sale, all essential functions of your retail business like inventory, sales reports, end of day balancing and so forth are automated, which will save you time and reduce the likelihood of human error. Learn more at www.LivePOS.com
Thursday, April 12, 2012
Improve The Accuracy of Your Inventory
Cloud based point of sales have many benefits over traditional point of sales, including maintaining updated inventory counts. Through the cloud, you will receive real time sales and inventory data. Consequently, you can react accordingly. Check out www.LivePOS.com to learn more.
Wednesday, April 11, 2012
Point of Sale
Improve your marketing strategies with the use of a Cloud Point of Sale system. Record customer contact and transaction information and then develop marketing campaigns accordingly. Send letters, emails, or even invites to your current customers based on their purchase information. Learn more at www.LivePOS.com
Tuesday, April 10, 2012
Specialty retail industry
LivePOS provides the latest Cloud Computing Point of Sale technology for the specialty retail industry. We offer a complete set of POS solution which consists of hardware, software and 24/7 technical support! Visit us at www.LivePOS.com and see how we can help your business!
Tuesday, April 3, 2012
Business security
Prevent employee errors, product wastage, and theft by using a Cloud based Point of Sale system to improve your overall store operations! Learn more at www.LivePOS.com
Monday, April 2, 2012
Business Management
Manage your business from anywhere and at anytime through our cloud based POS solution without dealing with the hassle of hosting your own servers or hiring IT personnel. Learn more at www.LivePOS.com
Sunday, April 1, 2012
Adaptation
I was browsing through CNN.com one day, and I was totally appalled. People in the news are either in poverty, out of work, dying, or have died. What is this? Tomorrow is just another bad news day. It’s quite sad that we can celebrate the election of Barack Obama and report the death of a teenager at sea all in the same newspaper. I don’t know how things work in this era of chaos. It’s a mess!
But still, as I browse through the same web network, article after article is saying that small businesses, in general, are the best navigators through this crazy economic turmoil. Experts say that it is untraditional marketing that makes all the difference. Well, what do you know?
I can’t really say that small businesses are really doing okay, though. There still is a relevant number of articles saying that the heaviest impact made by the financial crunch are on small to medium sized enterprises. Which is it?
For as long as there are entrepreneurs saying that they’re going downhill fast but ones that say they’re still doing well, I believe there is still hope. We can think of it as a species trying to survive in a changing world. Successful companies must have something that allows them to thrive in a world of crisis. Many if these enterprises adapt to the environment.
Adaptation. I like that word. It means we can go on and continue to live. The ones that can adjust to environmental alterations are the ones that are still here. It’s a struggle, I realize, but what matters is existence. The rule says only the strong survive. Today, that rule has changed to: Only the innovative survive. Untradition. Extra-exaggeration. Un-ordinary. All these elements differentiate “boy-companies” from “man-companies.”
Unconventional, eye-catching marketing is a weapon for many companies. That is why there is an emergence of seminars and classes on marketing and advertising. Why? It works! What would you do if your customers are too budget-conscious? You get their attention out from the money to your funny ad or your crazy gimmick. This is one of those things that are simple on paper, but very difficult to pull off. That’s why these seminars are successful, because people want to get as much knowledge as they can to survive.
The fact is creativity counts. Maybe that’s what all of us should develop because right now, it seems like it’s the way to being victorious.
But still, as I browse through the same web network, article after article is saying that small businesses, in general, are the best navigators through this crazy economic turmoil. Experts say that it is untraditional marketing that makes all the difference. Well, what do you know?
I can’t really say that small businesses are really doing okay, though. There still is a relevant number of articles saying that the heaviest impact made by the financial crunch are on small to medium sized enterprises. Which is it?
For as long as there are entrepreneurs saying that they’re going downhill fast but ones that say they’re still doing well, I believe there is still hope. We can think of it as a species trying to survive in a changing world. Successful companies must have something that allows them to thrive in a world of crisis. Many if these enterprises adapt to the environment.
Adaptation. I like that word. It means we can go on and continue to live. The ones that can adjust to environmental alterations are the ones that are still here. It’s a struggle, I realize, but what matters is existence. The rule says only the strong survive. Today, that rule has changed to: Only the innovative survive. Untradition. Extra-exaggeration. Un-ordinary. All these elements differentiate “boy-companies” from “man-companies.”
Unconventional, eye-catching marketing is a weapon for many companies. That is why there is an emergence of seminars and classes on marketing and advertising. Why? It works! What would you do if your customers are too budget-conscious? You get their attention out from the money to your funny ad or your crazy gimmick. This is one of those things that are simple on paper, but very difficult to pull off. That’s why these seminars are successful, because people want to get as much knowledge as they can to survive.
The fact is creativity counts. Maybe that’s what all of us should develop because right now, it seems like it’s the way to being victorious.
Thursday, March 29, 2012
POS and it’s Humble Beginnings…
Did you know that Retail Point of Sale systems go way back to 1870’s? It all started when James Ritty, an owner of a saloon in Dayton, Ohio got sick of losing sales due to having dishonest employees who often steal his profits. So while on a trip to Europe, Ritty` saw a mechanical device on the ship’s propeller that tracked the number of revolutions for maintenance purposes and applied the same concept by creating a cash register that would record all the cash transactions in his saloon. He and his brother worked on this idea and in 1879, the brothers patented their invention as “Ritty’s Incorruptible Cashier”.
The brothers manufactured their cash registers in a small factory in Dayton and several years later, Jacob H. Eckert of Cincinnati bought the business from the Ritty’s. He formed the National Manufacturing Company in 1881 and later sold it to John H. Patterson who continued to improve the cash register by including rolls of paper that serves as a record for the day’s transactions as well as a receipt.
In 1906, the first electronic cash register was invented by Charles F. Kettering of the National Manufacturing Company.
Several years later, more and more companies launched improved cash registers. August of 1973 where IBM introduced the first commercial use of client-server technology, P2P (peer to peer) communications, LAN (Local Area Network) simultaneous backup, and remote initialization through IBM3650 and IBM3660 Store Systems which could control 128 IBM 3653/3663 Point Of Sale Registers.
In 1979, Gene Mosher, the owner of Old Canal Café in Syracuse, New York created a POS software that ran on an Apple II, to take his customer’s orders by the entrance of the restaurant and print complete preparation details in the restaurant’s kitchen. After giving their orders, customers would just proceed to their tables and find their food waiting for them. Then in 1986, Mosher created the first graphical touch-screen POS software by using the Atari ST and bundled NeoChrome.
Seeing the need for a standard computerized POS system that would simplify the interconnection between POS devices, UnifiedPOS led by The National Retail Foundation created an initiative to combine two existing device interface standards under one specification to allow retailers freedom of choice in the selections of POS devices. And in 1996, Microsoft, NCR Corporation, Epson and Fujitsu-ICL created the first commonly-adopted standard point of sale system named OPOS (OLE for POS) and the following year, Sun Microsystems, IBM and NCR Corporation developed JavaPOS which was released in1999, both of which conforms to UnifiedPOS’s standard.
The Point of Sale systems that we are now using is way advance compared to the ones from the past. Who would’ve thought that we would be able to develop a Point of Sale system that would be able to cater to specific industries, business sizes and utilize a variety of operating systems, hardware requirements and much more? With the advancement of technology, human creativity and innovation, a day would surely come when people would develop a Point of Sale system that would surpass the POS systems we are currently using, and make a new one that is way beyond our imagination.
The brothers manufactured their cash registers in a small factory in Dayton and several years later, Jacob H. Eckert of Cincinnati bought the business from the Ritty’s. He formed the National Manufacturing Company in 1881 and later sold it to John H. Patterson who continued to improve the cash register by including rolls of paper that serves as a record for the day’s transactions as well as a receipt.
In 1906, the first electronic cash register was invented by Charles F. Kettering of the National Manufacturing Company.
Several years later, more and more companies launched improved cash registers. August of 1973 where IBM introduced the first commercial use of client-server technology, P2P (peer to peer) communications, LAN (Local Area Network) simultaneous backup, and remote initialization through IBM3650 and IBM3660 Store Systems which could control 128 IBM 3653/3663 Point Of Sale Registers.
In 1979, Gene Mosher, the owner of Old Canal Café in Syracuse, New York created a POS software that ran on an Apple II, to take his customer’s orders by the entrance of the restaurant and print complete preparation details in the restaurant’s kitchen. After giving their orders, customers would just proceed to their tables and find their food waiting for them. Then in 1986, Mosher created the first graphical touch-screen POS software by using the Atari ST and bundled NeoChrome.
Seeing the need for a standard computerized POS system that would simplify the interconnection between POS devices, UnifiedPOS led by The National Retail Foundation created an initiative to combine two existing device interface standards under one specification to allow retailers freedom of choice in the selections of POS devices. And in 1996, Microsoft, NCR Corporation, Epson and Fujitsu-ICL created the first commonly-adopted standard point of sale system named OPOS (OLE for POS) and the following year, Sun Microsystems, IBM and NCR Corporation developed JavaPOS which was released in1999, both of which conforms to UnifiedPOS’s standard.
The Point of Sale systems that we are now using is way advance compared to the ones from the past. Who would’ve thought that we would be able to develop a Point of Sale system that would be able to cater to specific industries, business sizes and utilize a variety of operating systems, hardware requirements and much more? With the advancement of technology, human creativity and innovation, a day would surely come when people would develop a Point of Sale system that would surpass the POS systems we are currently using, and make a new one that is way beyond our imagination.
Wednesday, March 28, 2012
How Stand Out in the Market Crowd
When you are buying your groceries in the supermarket, do you find it astonishing that there are a lot of brands for a certain kind of product that you will buy? For example; Toothpaste, you will choose from tartar control, whitening, for sensitive teeth or an all day protection? What about bread? White bread, Wheat bread, Wholemeal bread, Wheat germ bread or Whole grain bread.
In this over communicated society, where information, products, ideas, talent or distribution are not limited commodities, business owners try to get the attention of their customers. In this society, owners miss the point, they believe, if they work hard and well, customers will come making this businesses plan mediocre marketing strategies.
In this attention dilemma, where business owners compete for attention; small business owners has an advantage, they have better chances to differentiate themselves because they could create a manageable and flexible strategy.
Here are some Guidelines so your Business could differentiate itself from others.
Survey the market or make a SWOT Analysis
SWOT means Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities and Threats. Survey and compile a list of competitors, see their marketing taglines and key messages, group similar messages together so that you will have a picture of the competitiveness of the market. You will know the strength and weaknesses of your marketing strategy and determine the opportunities that could be integrated on your plan and threats that could jeopardize your plan.
Conceptualize
Put up a small group of people that could create a creative and innovative marketing strategy that could put your business in a favorable and alternative market position. Determine the needs of your customers and create simple direct to the point ideas.
Find and determine your Target Market
The target market is the group of customers where your product or services is the first priority. You marketing plan should be streamlined on this group. Create your market position in a niche group that is growing, distinct or there is minimal competition and large enough to be profitable
Develop your tagline
This is a short one sentence pitch that tells what your company or product is what you do and how you do it. You should make your message stand out; be creative and make it straight to the point.
Hear and collect feedbacks
A message is not one way, but two ways, there should always be customer’s feedback. How will you know if your strategy is working or not right? Talk to customers or with industry experts, Look for “Hype” or “WOW” responses this could tell you if your new plan can is good or not.
Create a creative, stand-out marketing plan that could differentiate you from the rest. After all, the problem is not resources but attention with a big competition in the field. Being creative and solving specific needs of your customers in the market can reap profits, loyalty and rewards.
In this over communicated society, where information, products, ideas, talent or distribution are not limited commodities, business owners try to get the attention of their customers. In this society, owners miss the point, they believe, if they work hard and well, customers will come making this businesses plan mediocre marketing strategies.
In this attention dilemma, where business owners compete for attention; small business owners has an advantage, they have better chances to differentiate themselves because they could create a manageable and flexible strategy.
Here are some Guidelines so your Business could differentiate itself from others.
Survey the market or make a SWOT Analysis
SWOT means Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities and Threats. Survey and compile a list of competitors, see their marketing taglines and key messages, group similar messages together so that you will have a picture of the competitiveness of the market. You will know the strength and weaknesses of your marketing strategy and determine the opportunities that could be integrated on your plan and threats that could jeopardize your plan.
Conceptualize
Put up a small group of people that could create a creative and innovative marketing strategy that could put your business in a favorable and alternative market position. Determine the needs of your customers and create simple direct to the point ideas.
Find and determine your Target Market
The target market is the group of customers where your product or services is the first priority. You marketing plan should be streamlined on this group. Create your market position in a niche group that is growing, distinct or there is minimal competition and large enough to be profitable
Develop your tagline
This is a short one sentence pitch that tells what your company or product is what you do and how you do it. You should make your message stand out; be creative and make it straight to the point.
Hear and collect feedbacks
A message is not one way, but two ways, there should always be customer’s feedback. How will you know if your strategy is working or not right? Talk to customers or with industry experts, Look for “Hype” or “WOW” responses this could tell you if your new plan can is good or not.
Create a creative, stand-out marketing plan that could differentiate you from the rest. After all, the problem is not resources but attention with a big competition in the field. Being creative and solving specific needs of your customers in the market can reap profits, loyalty and rewards.
Tuesday, March 27, 2012
The Power of Cloud based point-of-sale system
With a cloud computing POS system, prices are easier to adjust, as there is no need to manually change prices with an old fashioned price gun. You just have to enter the new price information on the Admin Site and the updated price will affect all location in real time if you choose this option. Visit us at www.LivePOS.com to learn more
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