Branded Point-of-Purchase Displays That Sell
A shopper decides whether to notice your display in about the time it takes to walk past it. Some displays stop that walk and turn it into a purchase. Most do not. The difference is rarely the budget and almost always the design decisions, made in the right order.
Here is what separates a point-of-purchase display that sells from one that blends into the aisle.
Lead with one message, not five
The most common mistake is cramming a display with every claim, badge, and burst the brand owns. From ten feet away, a shopper reads exactly one thing. Decide what that one thing is: the brand, the offer, or the product benefit, and let it dominate the header. Everything else is supporting detail that earns attention only after the first message lands. A clean hierarchy out-sells a busy one every time.
Design for the sightline, not the desk
Artwork gets approved on a screen at eye level and then lives in a store at a completely different angle. A floor display’s header is read looking down the aisle, so the message belongs high where it clears other fixtures. A counter unit is read looking down from standing height, so the branding belongs on the top face, not just the front. Mock the display in its real placement before you sign off, or you will brand the one panel nobody sees.
Make the product the hero
The display exists to sell the product, not to show off the display. Keep the structure and graphics in service of the product: frame it, light it with contrast, and leave the facings full and forward. A window box or an open tray that shows the actual item usually beats a fully printed box that hides it, because shoppers buy what they can see.
The elements that drive conversion
| Element | Why it converts |
|---|---|
| Bold header message | Stops the walk from a distance |
| Clear price or offer | Removes the last hesitation |
| Full, forward facings | Signals stock and freshness |
| Brand block on the top face | Read from the natural viewing angle |
| Easy restock design | Keeps the display full and selling |
Design it to be restocked
A display only sells while it holds product, and the fastest way to kill performance is a unit that store staff find annoying to refill. Open trays, gravity feeds that self-face, and shelves at a comfortable height all get restocked more often than a fiddly box a clerk has to disassemble. Easy restocking is a conversion feature, not an afterthought.
Meet the retailer’s specs
The best-designed display is worthless if the buyer rejects it. Chains publish requirements for footprint, height, weight, and shelf-ready format, and a display that ignores them gets bounced at review. Build to the retailer’s spec sheet from the start, and the display clears the buyer and reaches the floor.
Choosing for your order
A display that sells leads with one message, reads from its real sightline, keeps the product the hero, restocks easily, and meets the retailer’s specs. Send us your brand, your product, and the store where it will live, and we will design a free mockup that checks every one of those boxes before you print.
Want a display designed to convert, not just to look good? Send us your brand and product for a free quote — or read more about how we work and browse the rest of the blog.
Get a QuoteDisplays that sell lead with one message, are designed for their real in-store sightline, keep the product the hero, are built to restock easily, and meet the retailer’s spec sheet. Clean hierarchy and a full facing beat a busy, over-branded box every time.