How to Buy A Point of Sale system for your bike shop

to evaluate business performance on an on-going basis. It will allow development of new marketing programs, and check their effectiveness. The system can help dealers reduce the overall investment in inventory, and yet improve product availability for customers. It can be a wonderful tool for competing better in a very demanding consumer market."

So now that you know you need a point of sale system for your store. How do you go about choosing the right system?

List The Major Features You Need
Make a short list of the features you need in your POS system. Making the list short is key. Don't get bogged down in every little detail of what you think you might want in a system. Most bike shops need these core features:

  • Point Of Sale - The ability to ring up sales quickly.
  • Customer Tracking - Store information on your customers, this includes purchase history, service history and layways/special order tracking.
  • Inventory Control - Should include serial number tracking for bikes, purchase orders, transfers if you have multiple locations, and a way to periodically reconcile your inventory.
  • Service Module - Automate and streamline your service department.
  • Layaways & Special Orders - No more post-it notes for keeping track of layaways and special orders.
  • Reports - You need to be able to quickly find out how your business is doing.
  • QuickBooks Integration - Most bike shops use QuickBooks for accounting. You'll want a system that integrates.
  • Vendor integration and preloaded catalogs. For bike shops this is a must-have-feature these days. This will save you time when you're creating purchase orders and entering inventory because you won't have to type in all the information, just scan a barcode or type a part number.

Cost - What Can You Afford? What Will It Cost?
Unless you own many retail locations or are doing sales in excess of $10 million a year you probably want to stick with an off-the-shelf product. These are the cheapest solutions and do a great job of fitting the needs of an independently owned bike shop. On top of the system/software you'll need specialized POS hardware. Here's a quick run down of what you'll need to buy:
  • The Software - Expect to pay anywhere between $800 and $3,000 for your software license. If you choose a software-as-service system this should be more in the range of $50 to $300 per month.
  • Support Contract - Your software may or may not include support in the licensing fee. You'll probably want phone support for at least the first few months.
  • Hardware: Barcode Scanner, Receipt Printer, Label Printer, Credit Card Reader or Terminal, and of course a computer. Your POS specific peripherals should be in the $800 to $2,000 range per checkout lane.
  • Watch out for hidden fees. You may have to pay an annual upgrade fee to keep your software current. If you're running a desktop POS system you'll need to worry about backups. If you have multiple stores and running a system in-house you'll need to network your stores. You may also need an internet connection if you don't already have one.

Credit Card Processing
Of course you'll need to be able to accept credit cards. This means signing up for a Merchant Account, setting up a gateway, and integrating your gateway with your POS software/system.
Important: Choose you're software first. Then choose a credit card processing solution that seamlessly integrates. Ask your software vendor what you'll need.

Put Together A List Of Potential Choices
Search the web, call other shops, visit POS vendors at Interbike. Put together a list of your top 3 picks to demo.

Try Before You Buy
Never buy a point of sale system without physically trying it out for yourself first. If it isn't easy to use you aren't going to use it. So take the time to do demos.

Further Reading
Why POS Computers?
Introduction To POS Systems
7 Common POS Mistakes

About The Author
Justin Laing is Co-Founder of MerchantOS, the leading provider of web based point of sale and inventory control software to bike shops across the United States and Canada. For more information go to www.merchantos.com.