They don't want to read, they want to quickly scan the price tags.
I'm not asking them to read novels or long signs. Just to friggin LOOK at signs and COMPREHEND them. It's something a first grader can do. Asking people to read is very, very little to ask.
It might be little to ask, but even that is too much. They don't want to read, they want to scan. If you make sure they can, they'll be much more inclined to buy something.
If reading a sign is a "hurdle" then I pity that person should they need to: a)buy a car. b)buy a house. c)buy a cellphone. d)start a credit card. e)open a bank account....
But you're not a shop where they buy a car, or a house or start a credit card, or am I missing something? Simple retailers (with electronic stuff, or groceries and such) do not ask questions and the customers don't need to think, that's how it is. And that's good; as
Holdfast has already rightfully stated, you
don't want the people to think. You want them to simply buy stuff, no more.
Considering my numbers have been consistantly good, and up, to the point I have to hold-back my inventory a bit to prevent them from being TOO good, I must be doing something right despite the few mouth-breathers I encounter who cannot understand a simple paper sign that says "8oz Steak for 3.99" and then look at a package with TWO steaks in it CLEARLY INDIVIDUAL MARKED AT $7,98.
If your signs are anything like those you posted here, I believe that your numbers could be much, much better. Now, you might not have the capacity to deal with that at the moment, but that's no excuse to put up signs that are clearly confusing.
Please, take my examples and explain to me how they are confusing.
I don't have to explain; shut your mind off (go think about something else) and quickly look at the signs in a simple, microsecond glance. The moment one requires any sort of thinking is a clear sign (pardon the phun) that the sign isn't clear enough. And do remember that, because you know these signs, half of those you find instantly understandable, customers who've never seem them before might find very confusing.
But I'll go over a few:
The "as advertised" has no function. It is unnecessary, and everything that's unnecessary can confuse matters. The "2/400" is unclear; it can mean multiple things. It can mean "2 packages of 400 gram for the price of one", it can mean "each package has 2 items of 400 gram" or it can mean "2 items for 400 currency". The currency is a problem also; you regular store customers might surmise that 4 is a normal price, therefore, you actually mean 4,- instead of 400. But foreign visitors may not. Also, the currency itself is not displayed, which is generally not done. You might mean Euro's, for all your visitors know.
The "price decline" has no function. The happy arrow has no function; a simple arrow would suffice. The arrow points downward; this can mean multiple things: "the item below is on sale", "the item's price has dropped" or it can even mean nothing at all. Without reading, there is no way to be sure.
The items are packed per two in a package. Each package is 2 bucks. But the sign says "2 for 2 bucks". It's not clear if it means "2 for the price of one", or "one package with two items for 2 bucks". People are going to have to assume, and when people assume they will
always assume in their favor. And when they do that, the feel ripped off when their assumptions are proven incorrect. You really don't want to allow any possible doubt in interpretation of the signs. In this case, people would assume that it's 2 for the price of one, which is probably not what you meant.
Again, the customer always assumes in their favor; and there's going to be assuming going on here. All a customer sees is the actual price. As such, while the product says it's $ 2,99 per lb and that item itself is $ 3.29, the sign below it says $ 2,99, because even the 'lb' addition doesn't make it clear that the sign is about the product per lb. If you put a single price sign on a piece where every package has a difference price (like with meat), people are going to assume every package has that single price, even if the package itself says differently.