AI is no longer just decorating rooms. It’s redesigning how we live. AI can now rethink rooms, floors, and entire layouts—turning bold ideas into build-ready designs. Would you do floor like that? The data behind the shift: • 30–50% faster design cycles using generative layout tools • 100+ layout permutations generated from a single brief • Up to 20–30% improvement in space utilization • 10–25% energy savings when airflow, lighting, and thermal paths are simulated early • 40% fewer late-stage design changes thanks to digital testing What’s fundamentally different? AI treats floor plans like software systems: Pedestrian movement is simulated before construction Natural light and ventilation are optimized virtually Furniture, walls, and utilities are stress-tested digitally Cost, carbon footprint, and materials are optimized in parallel This enables: Smaller homes that feel larger Offices designed around productivity and wellbeing Buildings that adapt over time instead of aging poorly The biggest myth? AI replaces architects and designers. Reality: AI handles complexity and permutations. Humans focus on vision, culture, emotion, and identity. The future of architecture isn’t just smart. It’s generative, data-driven, and human-centric. #AI #Architecture #Design via @Visual Spaces Lab #PropTech #GenerativeAI #FutureOfLiving #SmartBuildings #Innovation
Store Layout Optimization
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🍱 How To Design Effective Dashboard UX (+ Figma Kits). With practical techniques to drive accurate decisions with the right data. 🤔 Business decisions need reliable insights to support them. ✅ Good dashboards deliver relevant and unbiased insights. ✅ They require clean, well-organized, well-formatted data. ✅ Often packed in a tight grid, with little whitespace (if any). 🚫 Scrolling is inefficient in dashboards: makes comparing hard. ✅ Start with the audience and decisions they need to make. ✅ Study where, when and how the dashboard will be used. ✅ Study what metrics/data would support user’s decisions. ✅ Explore how to aggregate, organize and filter this data. ✅ More data → more filters/views, less data → single values. 🚫 Simpler ≠ better: match user expertise when choosing charts. ✅ Prioritize metrics: key insights → top left, rest → bottom right. ✅ Then set layout density: open, table, grouped or schematic. ✅ Add customizable presets, layouts, views + guides, videos. ✅ Next, sketch dashboards on paper, get feedback, iterate. When designing dashboards, the most damaging thing we can do is to oversimplify a complex domain, or mislead the audience. Our data must be complete and unbiased, our insights accurate and up-to-date, and our UI must match users’ varying levels of data literacy. Dashboard value is measured by useful actions it prompts. So invest most of the design time scrutinizing metrics needed to drive relevant insights. Bring data owners and developers early in the process. You will need their support to find sources, but also clean, verify, aggregate, organize and filter data. Good questions to ask: 🧭 What decisions do you want to be more informed on? (Purpose) 😤 What’s the hardest thing about these decisions? (Frustrations) 📊 Describe how you are making these decisions? (Sources) 🗃️ What data helps you make these decisions? (Metrics) 🧠 How much detail is needed for each metric? (Data literacy) 🚀 How often will you be using this dashboard? (Value) 🎲 What constraints should we know about? (Risks) And, most importantly, test dashboards repeatedly with actual users. Choose key tasks and see how successful users are. It won’t be right at first, but once you get beyond 80% success rate, your users might never leave your dashboard again. ✤ Dashboard Patterns + Figma Kits: Data Dashboards UX: https://lnkd.in/eticxU-N 👍 dYdX: https://lnkd.in/eUBScaHp 👍 Ethr: https://lnkd.in/eSTzcN7V Orange: https://lnkd.in/ewBJZcgC 👍 Semrush: https://lnkd.in/dUgWtwnu 👍 UKO: https://lnkd.in/eNFv2p_a 👍 Wireframing Kit: https://lnkd.in/esqRdDyi 👍 [continues in comments ↓]
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(FMCG Blueprint) 🛒 Planogramming & Shelf Management in GT – The Art of ‘Eye-Level is Buy-Level’ Ever walked into a kirana store and magically picked up a product you didn’t even plan to buy? Well, that’s not magic—it’s planogramming at work! For those in FMCG sales, especially in General Trade (GT), mastering shelf management can be the difference between a slow-moving SKU collecting dust or flying off the shelf like a viral meme. Let’s break it down (with some humor & data!): Why Planogramming Matters in GT? ✅ Eye-Level is Buy-Level – 80% of shoppers buy what they see first. Your product at the bottom shelf? Good luck competing with the store dog’s snacks. 🐶 ✅ First Impression Wins – Studies show products placed at the store entrance get 40% more eyeballs. Ever noticed why impulse buys (like chocolates & gums) are near the checkout? ✅ The Power of Adjacency – Ever wondered why chips & soft drinks are always neighbors? Because 60% of shoppers buy them together. If your snack brand is sitting next to floor cleaner instead, well… good luck! Common GT Shelf Mistakes (That Kill Sales!) 🚨 Dumping stock anywhere – Just because the retailer has shelf space doesn’t mean it’s the right space. Your premium biscuits don’t belong in the ‘Rs. 5 wala’ section! 🚨 No FIFO (First In, First Out) – Old stock rotting at the back is a crime in FMCG. Unless you’re selling aged whiskey, rotate your stock! 🚨 Ignoring Visibility – A bright red competitor pack on the prime shelf while your SKU hides behind a ‘Buy 1 Get 1 Free’ board? Big mistake. The GT Shelf Formula for FMCG Success 🚀 📌 Prime Shelf = High Velocity SKUs 📌 Impulse SKUs = Checkout Counter 📌 Complementary Products = Placed Together 📌 Slow Movers = Extra Push with Visibility (POP, Danglers, Shelf Strips) Takeaway: Treat Shelf Space Like Real Estate! • Rent is high – so fight for the best spot! • Location matters – the closer to eye-level, the better. • Rotation is key – old stock should never be ‘lost & found.’ If you’re in FMCG sales, your job doesn’t end at getting the order—it starts with ensuring your product gets visibility & velocity at the shelf! What’s the funniest GT shelf placement mistake you’ve seen? Drop it in the comments! 👇
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I recently visited one of Kohl’s mall-based stores. It’s a large shop on two levels, so there is more space and scope to offer a deep assortment and merchandise creatively. Positively, the store was fairly neat; nowhere near as messy as many other Kohl’s I have visited. Unfortunately, it was also extremely lackluster and very difficult to shop. Merchandising is dense. Delineation between departments is poor. Sightlines are bad. Displays are somewhat random. Lighting is poor. And so on. The net result is a very unappetizing shopping experience that does little to entice the customer or make their journey easy. Now, one question I often get asked is: does this actually matter? Does it really damage sales? Fortunately, we track lost sales. And the answer is very clear: yes, it does. Last year, we estimate that poor merchandising and friction in the store shopping experience cost Kohl’s $832 million in lost sales. This is from people either spending less than they intended or forgoing purchases they came in to make. Now, let’s be clear. Every single retailer and store has lost sales. It’s a part of doing business and no one ever reduces it to zero because there will always be something unsatisfactory to some consumer. It is also impossible to execute flawlessly at all times. But, the issue with Kohl’s is twofold. First, as a proportion of overall revenue, lost sales are much higher than for other retailers. Second, the value being lost has increased sharply over the past five years and is still going in the wrong direction. Stores and store experiences matter. Ultimately, they impact the top and bottom lines. That's why it's important to invest in people, places and processes. #retail #retailnews #stores #merchandising #
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Walking into a beauty store today is closer to entering a curated world than stepping into a point of sale. The space is designed to slow you down, invite exploration and spark emotion before a single product is touched. Experiential retail in beauty is about how a brand is lived, not just how it is displayed. Every element, from the rhythm of the space to the way products are revealed, is intentional. Instead of guiding consumers directly to a shelf, the environment encourages wandering, discovery and moments of pause. >>The store becomes a place where curiosity leads the journey.<< Beauty retail thrives when it appeals to the senses in subtle, intelligent ways. The temperature of materials, the softness of a tester, the way light enhances skin tones or highlights textures. These details don’t shout; they whisper. And that quiet sophistication is what builds trust. Consumers feel comfortable taking their time, trying, learning and engaging at their own pace. In this context, the physical space acts as a translator. It transforms abstract brand values into something tangible. Minimalism becomes calm. Innovation becomes interaction. Care becomes ritual. The layout doesn’t just organize products; it shapes behavior and emotion. Technology, when used well, blends seamlessly into the experience. It supports personalization and guidance without becoming the focus. The human element remains central, with tools enhancing dialogue rather than replacing it. The most successful spaces feel intuitive, not instructional. What truly differentiates experiential retail is its ability to create lasting impressions. Products can be forgotten, but feelings are stored in memory. When a consumer associates a brand with a pleasant, inspiring or reassuring moment, that emotion travels with them beyond the store and into daily use. Beauty retail, at its best, is not about urgency or pressure. It’s about presence. About giving consumers a reason to stay, to explore, and to return. In an era where convenience is everywhere, experience is what gives physical spaces their meaning. Featured brands: Yves Saint Laurent Dewy ball Miin Clinique Guisou #RetailAsExperience #ExperientialDesign #BeautySpaces #BrandJourney
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I walked into Miniso just to browse, but a tiny design detail caught my attention I reached for a perfume tester, expecting to spray it on my wrist. But there was no push-button. Just an open nozzle, forcing me to bring it close and take a sniff. Observations: 🛍️ Smart Product Placement: Perfumes were neatly arranged in visually appealing color blocks, making selection feel intuitive. 👃 Tester Trick: The tester bottles had no push-button sprays! Instead, customers had to directly sniff the nozzle—reducing impulse spraying by passersby and ensuring serious buyers engage more deeply. 👉 Behavioral Science in Action: 📌 Commitment Bias: If you take the effort to pick up and sniff, you're more likely to consider buying. 📌Scarcity Effect: No free-flowing spray means the product feels more 'exclusive.' 📌Decision Fatigue Reduction: Minimal distractions, clear choices, and a structured layout make buying easier. Retailers are getting smarter—it's not just about WHAT they sell but HOW they sell it. Have you noticed any clever behavioral tactics in stores lately? #BehavioralScience #RetailPsychology #ConsumerBehavior #MarketingStrategy #BrandExperience
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What do the first 10 seconds in your store say about your brand? First impressions aren’t just for people. They define your brand too. In a physical store, your brand speaks before your staff does. In the first 10 seconds, a customer already knows: "Do I want to be here or do I want to leave?" The music, the lighting, the scent, the VM at the store entrance, the staff energy, the store layout, it all adds up to one silent yet powerful feeling: “This space is for me” or “This space isn’t for me!” Yet retailers often get caught up in shelf layout and product visibility. But they rarely pause to ask—what’s the emotional temperature of my store? The magic of a retail store isn’t just that it invites you in but also invites you to explore. Customer journeys need to be planned. Not just to help people find what they need, but to cross-sell, upsell, and keep them engaged. Think tops with bottoms. Accessories that complete the look. Or offers that nudge you to add one more item to your basket. This makes the journey more coherent, and the brand more relevant. Beauty stores do this well—inviting you in with colours and fragrance. A store that ensures you see the ‘complete range’ and hence buy more in my view is IKEA. They take you from one ‘room’ to another. The merchandise is the visual merchandise. You not only all the options available for a bed or a sofa, but other furniture and accessories that would liven up the space. Think of a side table. With a lamp or a vase. Maybe even a bedside clock. Or a magazine rack. Some photo frames. And voila, you have a redesigned your room, and not just bought a piece of furniture. That’s the brilliance of it. You’re not just shopping, you’re imagining. It’s retail done right. Not by shouting louder, but by designing better. Which store was that for you? One you walked into… and never really forgot? #retail #marketing #branding #linkedin
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The Silent Value of Store Design! Long before a product is touched, a store already speaks. The layout, lighting, acoustics, and even the scent silently shape the client’s perception. In luxury, these details are not decoration; they are strategy. I once visited two flagships on the same day. One had a strong product but poor flow. Clients walked in and immediately stalled at a wall of color, with lighting that flattened fabrics and music that clashed with the mood. The team worked hard, but the environment worked against them. The second store was different. The entrance revealed the collection gradually, inviting curiosity. Lighting elevated key pieces, seating created moments of pause, and the cash desk was hidden so that the shopping journey never felt transactional. The space itself seemed to breathe with intention. The staff were confident because the store carried half their work. Luxury retail is not just about what is sold, but how it is staged. A poorly designed store can drain the energy of even the strongest brand. A well-designed one makes every client feel as if they are part of a carefully crafted world. In luxury, the room sells before the product does. #RetailDesign #LuxuryRetail #StoreStrategy #VisualMerchandising
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When a customer walks into a jewellery store, nobody says: “The lighting temperature is off.” “The chair height is wrong.” “The staff energy feels tired.” They just leave. Over the last week at our new store, I wasn’t tracking sales. I was tracking micro-frictions. Here are small things most retailers miss: 1. AC Air Direction If cold air hits directly on the trial area, customers rush decisions. Comfort affects patience. 2. Chair Height vs Counter Height If the customer sits lower than the display tray, posture becomes awkward. Awkward posture reduces confidence. 3. Tray Weight Heavy trays subconsciously signal “burden.” Light trays feel easy and premium. 4. Tag Visibility If price tags are visible before storytelling begins, the brain anchors on cost, not value. 5. Staff Foot Positioning Standing too close invades space. Standing too far feels disinterested. There’s a 2–3 ft sweet spot. 6. Mirror Lighting vs Store Lighting If the mirror has a different tone of light than the display, the diamond looks different when she turns. 7. Music BPM Faster music increases decision speed but lowers ticket size. Slower music increases comfort and dwell time. 8. Glass Cleanliness at Eye Level Most stores clean the centre. Smudges usually exist at child-height or shoulder-height. 9. Billing Silence If the billing area goes silent, excitement drops. Light conversation maintains emotional continuity. 10. Staff Energy at 8:30 PM The last customer deserves the same enthusiasm as the first. Fatigue is visible. 11. Scent Consistency Inconsistent fragrance across days breaks subconscious brand memory. 12. Phone Usage Visibility Even one staff member checking WhatsApp signals low demand. None of these appear in daily MIS reports. But each one compounds. Retail isn’t won by marketing campaigns. It’s won by operational sharpness. The difference between a ₹70,000 bill and a ₹1,20,000 bill is often a 6- inch adjustment.
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I realized my "misspent youth" playing Dungeons & Dragons was actually a masterclass in behavioral economics. A few months ago, I was sitting in a Manchester pub watching a Dungeon Master control a game. I realized he wasn't just telling a story; he was running a behavioral simulation. He knew exactly where we would walk, where we would get stuck, and what would trigger a "fight or flight" response. I realized I could do the exact same thing for my retail clients. Instead of guessing where to put the register, I started using Agent-Based Modelling (essentially digital D&D) to run 1,000 "simulated customers" through a floor plan before we built it. I recently tested this on a luxury chocolate shop. The design looked beautiful on paper. But the simulation revealed it was quietly hemorrhaging money. The "Invisible" Errors we found: The "Butt-Brush" Effect: A narrow passage between an island and a high-margin truffle display. 40% of customers abandoned the display because they didn't want to block traffic. Decompression Blindness: Premium products were too close to the door. 84% of simulated customers walked right past them while their eyes were still adjusting to the light. The Canyon: The layout forced people to rush to the back and leave. They never saw 40% of the store. The Fix: We moved the POS (till) to the back wall. Suddenly, "The Canyon" became "The Loop." Customers had to browse the full collection to pay. The Result: Bounce Rate: Dropped from 18.4% to roughly 12%. Dwell Time: Increased by 90 seconds. In 2026, we don't need to guess if a layout works. We can run the simulation. Fix the problems in the digital twin, before they become expensive concrete.
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