The present invention relates to a method of printing, distributing, and placing price information, such as price tags and point-of-purchase signs for use in retail store shelves and displays. For example, it includes aspects relating to price information tags attached to shelves under the products being sold and to other information associated with products for sale. The present method is particularly useful for just-in-time printing and delivery of tags with minimal lead times, and for faster tag changes at stores while reducing labor cost. However, the present invention is contemplated to be broader in scope than just printing and distributing of price information tags.
Consumers (as well as consumer protection laws) require accurate information about products being displayed on store shelves. Price information (such as a price change) placed on a shelf “too soon” or “too late” causes considerable consumer dissatisfaction (e.g., out-of-stocks or “mis-stocks”) and/or causes significant in-store confusion or delays (e.g., price checks), as well as concern from regulatory agencies. However, getting tags onto shelves is a surprisingly complex and difficult task for a number of reasons. For example, buyers may be negotiating on supplier prices right up to the last possible minute, such that prices and even product availability may be uncertain until the “last possible minute.” Product availability and delivery concerns may also cause uncertainty right up to the last possible minute. Management often wants to make product pricing decisions as close as possible to the “on sale” date so that uncertainties about future product availability and consumer purchasing trends and other price-related strategies can be incorporated into the pricing decisions. Thus, a system is desired allowing retail prices to be set as late as possible to allow optimal (last minute) control over retail pricing.
Aside from timing issues noted above, information management is very difficult. Large stores now carry hundreds of thousands of products, and the logistics of getting timely-printed price information tags in appropriate places on store shelves is a time-consuming, highly-manually-intensive task. An amazing amount of time is spent inefficiently walking from one shelf to another, and from one end of a shelf to another end, as price information tags are attached to shelves under associated product. Further, this often leads to errors, such as tags being put under the wrong product, or tags simply not being put up at all. Further, attachment of the tags must be secure and long-lasting, yet inexpensive and easily engaged. Thus, a system is desired allowing tags to be securely attached, with minimal risk of mis-location, with secure but low-cost attachment systems. Further, it is preferable that a particular tag be able to be attached in multiple ways, given that many stores have different attachment mechanisms on their shelves.
Recent studies show that product sales can potentially be increased if the price information tags have high-quality product pictures on them. However, this adds greatly to the cost and lead times required for printing the price information tags. Specifically, in order for pictures to be placed on tags, the data for the pictures must be combined with price information, arranged for printing, and then printed. This greatly complicates printing of price information tags, since it compounds problems associated with getting accurate price information onto the tags, with getting accurate pictures onto the tags. Also, the quality of the pictures is very important, since poor photographs will potentially result in the consumer implying poor quality to the store and/or to the products being sold.
Thus, it would be advantageous to have an improved system of delivering price tags to stores and to simplify the manner in which the shelf tags are placed on a shelf.
In one aspect of the present invention, is a binder box assembly for shelf tags, comprising a binder box having a front wall, a back wall, at least one sidewall, a top surface, and a bottom surface. The bottom surface has at least one first binder opening that is in general alignment with at least one second binder opening that is formed in the transition between the bottom surface and the back wall such that a portion of the second binder opening is located on the bottom surface and a portion on the back wall. The binder box assembly includes a plurality of sheets of shelf tags with at least one third binder opening. At least one binder is inserted through the first binder opening and the second binder opening and also through the third binder opening to couple said plurality of sheets of shelf tags to said binder box.
In another aspect of the present invention is a binder box with a back wall, at least one sidewall, a top surface, and a bottom surface. The binder box has at least one first binder opening in the bottom surface and at least one second binder opening located partly in the bottom surface and partly in the back wall. The binder box has at least one fourth binder opening located in the top surface that will align with the second binder opening when the top surface is rotated over the back wall face. The binder box also has at least one fifth binder opening located in the top surface that will overlap the first binder opening when the top surface is rotated over the back wall and placed adjacent to at least a portion of the bottom surface.
In still another aspect of the present invention is a method of coupling shelf tags to a binder box. The binder box has a front wall, a back wall, at least one sidewall, a top surface, and a bottom surface. The binder box has at least one first binder opening in the bottom surface and at least one second binder opening located partly in the bottom surface and partly in the back wall. The method includes printing a plurality of shelf tags on a plurality of sheets, the sheets having at least one third binder opening. The plurality of sheets are positioned inside the binder box such that the third binder opening generally overlaps with the first binder opening in the binder box. A first end of a binder in inserted through the generally overlapping third binder opening and first binder opening. A second end of the binder in inserted through the second binder opening in the binder box to couple the plurality of sheets to the binder box.
These and other advantages of the invention will be further understood and appreciated by those skilled in the art by reference to the following written specification, claims, and appended drawings.
For purposes of description herein, the terms “upper,” “lower,” “right,” “left,” “rear,” “front,” “vertical,” “horizontal,” and derivatives thereof shall relate to the invention as oriented in the attached drawings. However, it is to be understood that the invention may assume various alternative orientations and step sequences, except where expressly specified to the contrary. It is also to be understood that the specific devices and processes illustrated in the attached drawings, and described in the following specification, are simply exemplary embodiments of the inventive concepts defined in the appended claims. Hence, specific dimensions and other physical characteristics relating to the embodiments disclosed herein are not to be considered as limiting, unless the claims expressly state otherwise.
An exemplary embodiment of the binder box assembly 2 embodying an aspect of the present invention is shown in
As illustrated in
The top surface 10 has fourth binder openings 20 and fifth binder openings 22. When the top surface 10 is rotated over the back wall 6 and bottom surface 12, as shown in
The top surface 10 can alternatively be entirely removed by tearing the top surface 10 at the perforated transition 29 between the back wall 6 and the top surface 10. In such an arrangement, the binder 60 can be inserted into the first binder opening 16 and the second binder opening 18 and coupled to the sheets 40 to the binder box 4 as described below.
The top surface 10 can also be rotated to position the binder box 4 in an angled manner as shown in
As illustrated in
The binder box 4 illustrated in
The sheets 40 can include a plurality of shelf tags 44 that are adhered to each sheet 40. The sheets 40 also have third binder openings 42 that will align over the first binder openings 16 in the bottom surface 12 of the binder box 4 when the sheets 40 are installed in the binder box 4. In the illustrated embodiment the sheets 40 have a pair of third binder openings 42 that are located at the upper portion of the sheet 40 and are positioned in between shelf tags 44. The third binder openings 42 are also generally offset by the same approximate distance from the vertical centerline of the sheet 40. For example, in the illustrated embodiment, each sheet 40 has three rows of four shelf tags. The third binder openings 42 are positioned between the upper ends of the first and second tags 44, and the upper ends of the third and fourth tags 44 in the first row as shown in
The shelf tags 44 can be attached to the sheets 40 in a variety of ways. For example, the shelf tags 44 can include adhesive on all of the shelf tags 44 (
The 9×12 inch sheet 40 can have third binder openings 42 that are approximately 0.016 inches by 0.6 inches with a 0.04 inches corner radius. An exemplary spacing of the third binder openings 42 on sheets 40 is illustrated in
The binder 60 has a first end 62 with a rounded end 66 and a second end 64 with a rounded end 68. The first end 62 included shoulders 70 and the second end 64 includes shoulders 72 that will engage surfaces on the binder box 4. The rounded ends 66, 68 permit the binder 60 to be easily inserted into the associated binder openings (16, 18, 20, 22, and/or 42) before being rotated to have the shoulders (70, 72) engage surfaces on the binder box 4. As illustrated in
One end (62, 64) of the binder 60 is inserted from the bottom side of the binder box 4 into the second binder opening 18 that may or may not be aligned with the fourth binder opening 20 depending upon the position of the top surface 10. The binder 60 is then turned a quarter turn to lock the end (62, 64) of the binder 60 in place. The other end (62, 64) of the binder 60 is wrapped around the back wall 6 of the binder box 4 and inserted through the third binder opening 42 in the sheets 40 and through the first binder opening 16 in the binder box 4. That end (62, 64) is rotated a quarter turn to lock it into place. The shoulders 70, 72 on each end of the binder 60 keep the binder 60 engaged to surfaces on the binder box 4. The binder 60 may be inserted into the third binder opening 42 in the sheets 40 and the first binder opening 16 before the binder 60 is inserted into the second binder opening 18.
In this arrangement, the sheets 40 can be flipped once the shelf tags 44 have been used. This is especially important when the tags 44 have been printed in planogram order, thereby permitting easy and quick installation of the shelf tags 44 as the person moves down aisles or within the store.
The flap 31 on binder box 4 that can be opened and/or removed to access the lower ends of the sheets 40. The sheets 40 can have an edge identification 82 (
For purposes of this disclosure, the term “coupled” or “operably coupled” (in all of its forms, couple, coupling, coupled, etc.) generally means the joining of two components (electrical or mechanical) directly or indirectly to one another. Such joining may be stationary in nature or movable in nature. Such joining may be achieved with the two components (electrical or mechanical) and any additional intermediate members being integrally formed as a single unitary body with one another or with the two components. Such joining may be permanent in nature or may be removable or releasable in nature unless otherwise stated.
In the foregoing description, it will be readily appreciated by those skilled in the art that modifications may be made to the invention without departing from the concepts disclosed herein. For example, without limitation, the size and relative dimensions of the binder box 4, the sheets 40 and the binder 60 can be altered. The number, position, and spacing of the binder openings (16, 18, 20, 22, and/or 42) can also be altered. The perforated sections can include segments of perforations and/or pre-bent surfaces. Such modifications are to be considered as included in the following claims, unless these claims by their language expressly state otherwise.
Applicant hereby claims the priority under 35 U.S.C. § 120 to commonly assigned, co-pending U.S. application Ser. No. 16/930,404, filed Jul. 16, 2020, entitled BINDER BOX, which claim the priority benefits under the provisions of 35 U.S.C. § 119, basing said claim of priority on related U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/874,690 filed Jul. 16, 2019, which is incorporated in its entirety herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62874690 | Jul 2019 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 16930404 | Jul 2020 | US |
Child | 18226848 | US |