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Portable
POS Solutions Tip Sheet
Seven
Factors to Consider Before Choosing a Portable Point of Sale
Provided
by David J. Gosman, Senior Project Manager, Budget POS
Using a portable point of sale
system (PPOS) can benefit your business in many ways, including line
busting inside your store, and ringing up sales when away from your store.
However, it’s important that you choose the right system; otherwise you
may find that trouble can outweigh the benefits.
These tips can help you make the
correct choice.
- Make
sure it can work with what you have –
If you already have a point of sale system in your store, you should
make sure there is an easy way to get the transactions from your
portable units into your stationary system.
Look for a PPOS that allows you to synchronize systems easily,
so you can ring up a sale on the handheld and view it later on at a
stationary register. A good PPOS allows the handheld to synchronize
automatically in real time, or with the touch of a button in batch
mode.
- Choose
the portable device carefully
– In a year where cell phones can come with bar code scanners and
handhelds have screens with thousands of colors, it’s important to
choose the right PDA without being distracted by “cool” features.
Your handheld will get dropped and jostled in everyday activity –
look for durability, speed, visibility and battery life, not for the
colors and resolution needed to play Pac Man.
- Maximize
your ROI
– A PDA equipped with a bar code scanner can be used for a lot more
than point of sale. Your investment will yield higher returns if the
device can be used to take inventory, receive stock, and scan items
onto a gift registry for a customers wedding or special occasion.
- Speed
is Key – The system should be scan, scan, scan, click. A portable point
of sale system should be as easy to use as a stationary terminal;
extra seconds spent entering data is extra seconds your customers are
waiting. Your mobile cashiers should only have to scan a product, and
click a few times to end a transaction. Avoid systems that require
handwriting on the screen, or that require a lot of clicks to ring a
sale; instead, try out systems that have one-touch buttons for the
most common functions your cashier will use.
- Don’t
Forget the Basics
– Gain in portability doesn’t have to mean loss of functionality.
You shouldn’t lose common options such as tracking what each
customer purchases, sales reports or multiple tender types. Your PPOS
should still allow you to print nice receipts (on a portable printer),
process credit cards and utilize customer loyalty features.
- See
the Invoice while you’re Scanning
– Your PPOS program should show the cashier what is on the
customer’s invoice while the cashier is creating it. They need to
see the last few items that were scanned, allowing them to verify
everything, including the price, is correct. This ability will
eliminate time-consuming corrections after the receipt prints.
- Flexibility – The majority of handheld units have limitations, ranging from
minimal resources to small screen size, and therefore the programs
written for them also have limited options. Even the best portable
point of sale applications may not meet each of your specific needs.
Make sure to choose a vendor that has the ability to work with you and
is willing to add or subtract features. This will ensure that the
system will work for you and maximize the return on your investment.
Budget POS, based just outside of New York City, has thousands of retail
clients using their point of sale solutions. Pocket Register is their PPOS
that integrates seamlessly with Cash Register Express, their point of sale
system for retail stores. For
more information, call 1-800-347-3020 , e-mail to pos@budgetpos.com,
or visit www.budgetpos.com.
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