This application relates to product displays and, more particularly, to systems for forward-biasing products to improve product display.
Point-of-sale display units are commonly used in retail outlets because they present products in an eye-catching manner. As products are removed from the display, it may become increasingly difficult to access the remaining products, particularly when the remaining products are located at the rear of the display.
Thus, various techniques have been developed to move products toward the front of the display, thereby improving product accessibility. As one example, gravity dispensers feed products capable of rolling to a product display area at the front of the dispenser. The products roll to the front of the dispenser under the force of gravity. As another example, biasing apparatus utilize a spring-biased sled to urge products toward the front of the display.
A specific example of a biasing apparatus that utilizes a spring-biased sled is described in greater detail in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/049,004 titled “Product Biasing and. Dispensing System with Security Engagement” filed on Mar. 16, 2011, the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference. The biasing apparatus disclosed in U.S. Ser. No. 13/049,004 is designed to dispense individual products from a container, thereby eliminating the need for transferring the individual products from the container to a display, which can be quite time consuming.
Unfortunately, it often becomes difficult to determine when a display is empty or sufficiently low in products as to warrant replenishment (i.e., a low inventory condition). A low inventory condition may be particularly difficult to detect in a display in which the individual products are housed in a container.
Accordingly, those skilled in the art continue with research and development efforts in the field of product display.
In one aspect, the disclosed product biasing system may include an elongated rail having a front end and a rear end, a moveable member slidably engaged with the rail, and a biasing element operatively connected to the moveable member to bias the moveable member toward the front end of the rail, the biasing element being marked with indicia indicative of the longitudinal displacement of the moveable member relative to the front end of the rail.
In another aspect, the disclosed product biasing system may include an elongated rail having a front end and a rear end, a moveable member slidably engaged with the rail, a product positioned on the rail between the front end of the rail and the moveable member, the product longitudinally displacing the moveable member from the front end of the rail, and a biasing element operatively connected to the moveable member to bias the moveable member, and ultimately the product, toward the front end of the rail, the biasing element being marked with indicia indicative of the longitudinal displacement of the moveable member from the front end of the rail.
In another aspect, the disclosed product biasing system may include an elongated rail having a front end and a rear end, a moveable member slidably engaged with the rail, and a biasing element including a band shaped into a coil, the band having a free end and being marked with indicia, wherein the coil is connected proximate the front end of the rail and the free end is connected to the moveable member to bias the moveable member toward the front end of the rail, and wherein the indicia is indicative of the longitudinal displacement of the moveable member relative to the front end of the rail.
In yet another aspect, disclosed is a method for determining an inventory level of a display. The method may include the steps of (1) providing a biasing system including an elongated rail having a front end and a rear end, the front end defining a window, a moveable member slidably engaged with the rail and a biasing element operatively connected to the moveable member to bias the moveable member toward the front end of the rail, wherein the biasing element includes an elongated band shaped into a coil, the band being marked with indicia that varies along the band; (2) positioning a quantity of products on the rail between the front end of the rail and the moveable member, the moveable member urging the products toward the front end of the rail, wherein a low inventor condition is established when the quantity drops below a predetermined value; and (3) observing the indicia through the window to determine whether the low inventor condition has been established.
Other aspects of the disclosed product biasing system with low inventory indicator will become apparent from the following description, the accompanying drawings and the appended claims.
Referring to
In one particular implementation, the product biasing system 10 may be positioned on a store shelf (not shown) such that the front end 18 of the rail 12 is positioned proximate (i.e., at or near) the front edge of the shelf. Therefore, the product biasing system 10 may urge the products 20 toward the front edge of the shelf, thereby improving the accessibility of the products 20 to consumers.
Referring to
A stop 28 may be positioned proximate the front end 18 of the rail 12. The stop 28 may prevent (or at least inhibit) forward longitudinal movement of the products 20 beyond the stop 28.
Optionally, the stop 28 may be connected to the rail 12 at a pivot point 30. Therefore, the stop 28 may pivot from the forward-most configuration (i.e., stopping configuration) shown in
The products 20 may be positioned on the rail 12 proximate the front end 18 of the rail 12 such that the products 20 extend in a longitudinal row along the rail 12. Alternatively, two or more rows of product 20 may be positioned along the rail 12. While the products 20 are shown without a container, use of the disclosed product biasing system 10 to bias products housed in a container is also contemplated. Use of a biasing system to bias products housed in a container is described in greater detail in U.S. Ser. No. 13/049,004.
Those skilled in the art will appreciate that a wide variety of products 20 may be dispensed with the disclosed product biasing system 10. As one example, the products 20 may be various foodstuffs packaged in boxes, cartons, pouches, cans or bottles. As another example, the products 20 may be various consumer goods, and may or may not be individually contained in a package, such as a box, carton, clamshell, pouch or the like. Other examples of products 20 suitable for being dispensed from the disclosed product biasing system 10 are left to the skilled artisan.
The moveable member 14 may be slidably engaged with the rail 12, and may be longitudinally displaceable from the front end 18 of the rail 12 along the longitudinal axis A (
Referring to
The base 32 of the moveable member 14 may be slidably engaged with the rail 12 such that the moveable member 14 may move longitudinally along the sliding surface 24 of the rail 12 between the front end 18 and the rear end 22 (
As shown in
The biasing element 16 may be connected to the moveable member 14 to urge the moveable member 14 toward the front end 18 of the rail 12. Specifically, as shown in
Referring to
The exterior surface 56, or at least a portion of the exterior surface 56, of the band 52 of the biasing element 16 may be marked with inventory level indicating indicia 58, and the indicia 58 may vary along the longitudinal length of the band 52. In the expression shown in
Thus, the indicia 58 may provide an indication of the extent that the band 52 is drawn from the coil 54 by observing the indicia 58 (or lack thereof) at the first end 48 of the biasing element 16. For example, with the biasing element 16 in the configuration shown in
In a first alternative expression, the indicia 58 may include a color scheme. For example, the exterior surface 56 of the band 52 may be marked with the colors green, yellow and red, with the color transitioning from green, to yellow, and then to red along the band 52 toward the second end 50 of the band 52.
In a second alternative expression, the indicia 58 may include numbers. For example, the exterior surface 56 of the band 52 may be marked with numbers ranging from “0” to “9,” with the numbers consecutively transitioning from “9” to “0” along the band 52 toward the second end 50 of the band 52.
In a third alternative expression, the indicia 58 may include text. For example, the exterior surface 56 of the band 52 may be marked with “High,” “Medium” and “Low,” with the text transitioning from “High” to “Low” along the band 52 toward the second end 50 of the band 52.
In a fourth alternative expression, the indicia 58 may include images or graphics. For example, the exterior surface 56 of the band 52 may be marked with “” and “
,” with the images transitioning from “
” to “
” along the band 52 toward the second end 50 of the band 52.
At this point, those skilled in the art will appreciate that the biasing element 16 may be marked with various indicia 58 to indicate the presence or absence of a low inventory condition. Those skilled in the art will also appreciate that the indicia 58 may be presented as a spectrum extending longitudinally along the band 52 such that a range of conditions between “full” and “low inventory” may be communicated, thereby providing a more precise indication of the inventory level of the system 10.
Referring back to
Referring to
Referring to
Accordingly, depending on whether the indicia 58 on the biasing element 16 is visible through the window 66 at the front end 18 of the rail 12 and/or depending on the type of indicia 58 visible through the window 66, the biasing element 16 may provide an indication that the product biasing system 10 is filled with products 20, as shown in
Although various aspects of the disclosed product biasing system with low inventory indicator have been shown and described, modifications may occur to those skilled in the art upon reading the specification. The present application includes such modifications and is limited only by the scope of the claims.