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Showing posts with label ~{i. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ~{i. Show all posts

Back-set Offset Row

Back-set Offset Row

n. An arrangement for like cans, bottles or other round ITEMS in a HOLE that allows a greater than usual number GO while still maintaining a straight FACE and good BLOCK. See also JAM, MAKE IT GO, PACKING THEORY.

NOTE: Whenever jars or cans slightly overhang the lip, or there's a gap between the BLOCK at the FACE and the rest of the STOCK on the SHELF, or if there's a significant fractional can or jar's worth of wasted space right up at the front, you may have an opportunity to get slightly—sometimes significantly—more PRODUCT up. Just shift a row of PRODUCT three or more rows back from the FRONT sideways, left or right, so that it's “hills” fit into the “valleys” of the row behind it, similar to the way the teeth of two gears mesh. Repeat the offset process as often as necessary to make the first three rows sit flush with the front edge of the SHELF, alternating left and right, and moving backwards towards the back of the HOLE. This compresses the distance between the centers of jars or cans in the offset rows, making a tighter “lattice” and thus more will GO to the SHELF. Candidates? Premium canned soups or tomato PRODUCTS, jars of spaghetti sauce, those little jars of baby food, etc.

TIP: Best Face Forward. Any time you place Back-set Offset Rows, the foremost Offset Row should ideally be at least three or more rows behind the SHELF FACE, so that it's less obtrusive (see where the arrow's pointing to the three highlighted circles in middle of the rightmost illustration pane, above).

Back-Topple

Back-Topple

n. A nuisance or annoying condition akin to the domino effect, necessitating the removal of one or more ITEMS or CASES in order to set upright something that has been inadvertently pushed or toppled over towards the rear of a DISPLAY. Specifically, an unfortunate tendency of 2-liter soda bottles being slid into BOTTLE-RACES, and of TRAY-CUT CASES of cans that are being slid onto a STACK, where underlying cans in the back of the lower layer can be inadvertently displaced.

Base-Cut

Base-Cut

v. To make a very shallow cut around three sides of a plastic-wrapped CASE containing a CARDBOARD TRAY, in order to allow the outer covering to be peeled back out of the way and eventually removed. —n. Any such cut. See also BOX CUTTER, H-CUT, LIFT-CUT, PEEK-CUT, SHARK-CUT, STACK-CUT, TAPE-CUT, TOP-CUT, TRAY-CUT, WINDOW-CUT, X-CUT.

NOTE: Candidates? Plastic-covered tray CASES containing jars of spaghetti sauce, jars of baby food, cans of cat or dog food, and so on.

Ordinarily, you first would make an H-CUT, extract a single can or jar out the top of the still-intact case, and only make a Base-Cut once you're fairly sure the entire CASE will GO.

However, when THROWING LOAD, except for SPECIALS (easily identified as multiple CASES of the same ITEM), the presumption is it will all GO, so you'd often employ the Base-Cut's many-at-once variation: a STACK-CUT.

Basket Trick

Basket Trick

n. A technique for effectively creating a small SHOPPING BASKET on wheels by setting a regular hand-held SHOPPING BASKET down sideways into the front of a large wheeled SHOPPING CART so that it rests on the three rims at the front of the CART. “Look, Ma! No arm strain!” See also BOTTLE TRICK.

Bottle-Race

Bottle-Race

n. A device on SHELVES in the soda AISLE having an inclined plane with anti-friction grooves on its surface and a series of parallel coated wire guides perpendicular to the SHELF FACE and separated by the width of a 2-liter soda bottle, used for holding same, and which employs a gravity feed to coax bottles flush forward to the SHELF FACE in good BLOCK. Compare CAN-RACE, SPRING-TRAY. See also BACK-TOPPLE.

Bottle Trick

Bottle Trick

n. A method for conveniently carrying, e.g., soda bottle six-packs on the edges of a SHOPPING CART by straddling the edge of the BASKET so half of the bottles hang down inside the CART, and half hang down outside the CART, thus saving lots of room in the CART, and also preventing any ITEMS from getting squished by the heavy bottles of pop. See also BASKET TRICK.