In our experience, many businesses that are deciding where to locate a store or open a new business location jump right to defining site criteria. Without a doubt, it’s important for you to think carefully about your location (even if there is more to making a site successful).
What do we mean by site criteria? These are the physical attributes of a location—the condition of the shopping center, how convenient it is to get into (e.g. the ingress) and out of (egress), the number and arrangement of parking spots, the side of the street and volume of traffic it provides, for example.
So, how do you approach defining the site criteria that is important to you? Here are a few steps:
For many businesses, the degree of success can be influenced by the tenants with which you share a shopping center. So, it’s worthwhile to do some analysis on prospective anchor tenants and whether those cotenants would be helpful or harmful to your business. Will the cotenant provide additional traffic to your location or monopolize your limited parking spaces? A tool like SiteSeer’s Void Analysis can help you evaluate how often an anchor co-locates with businesses like yours and how different cotenants perform.
Let’s assume you arrive at five important site criteria:
It is likely that the sites you are considering will meet some of your criteria and be lacking in others. Thus, you might want to rank those criteria in order of importance. This is useful in general for evaluating sites, but can be used as a metric in a model for evaluating sites. SiteSeer’s Model Builder lets you choose key performance indicators and build site report cards. The benefit of this is that you can confirm the accuracy of your gut feel about a specific site criterion with data—like whether being in an end cap is as important as you assume it is. If you’re not sure where to begin when coming up with and ranking site criteria, here’s a list of questions to answer:
This is its own step in the site selection process, but make sure you’re thinking about your nearby competitors’ site criteria. If you’re a pizza chain and your competition one-half mile away has a more accessible parking lot or is located on the better side of the street, you need to factor this into your site criteria. Is the site you’re considering in the best position as compared to your nearby competition? As far as site characteristics, what would lead customers to choose them over you?
As you can tell, there’s a lot to market planning and site selection and evaluating site criteria is a big part of the process. You need to ensure that you choose the best site to fit your goals and budget and that the attributes of a site make it attractive over the sites of your competition in the area.
If you need help, contact SiteSeer. We’ll help you analyze your current locations to identify the success factors in terms of site criteria that you should strive to have in all locations going forward.