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Walgreen signs on to a low-tech approach
December 31, 2003
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Walgreen signs
on to a low-tech approach
- By SANDRA GUY SUN-TIMES COLUMNIST
DEERFIELD, Ill. –
Walgreens touts the technology it uses in
its pharmacies and in selecting the goods
that line its shelves, but the pesky, low-tech
advertising signs that hang from stores'
ceilings had management stumped.
Workers dreaded climbing
ladders and struggling to hang the signs
from spindly string. Walgreen
executives hated the resulting injuries
to workers and their resulting workers'
compensation
claims, and not knowing whether or where
the signs were hanging.
Enter Annette Ricci, 39,
whose success in producing a sign-hanging
technology prompted her to
create a new company, Reel E-Z Display.
Ricci, who works from Lake
Forest, relied upon the expertise she built
in the three years she has
run a product design company called Design
& Deliver.
The result: Ricci now holds
a patent for the sign-hanging device called
the Reel E-Z Display.
Here's how it works: Employees
have to climb a ladder only to hang the
devices from the ceiling.
After that, they stand on the floor to hang
and change the signs -- an important issue
because
Walgreens changes its ceiling signs seven
times a year.
After the 1-pound display
unit is clipped to the struts of a drop
ceiling, a worker uses a pole to pull
down a bar on the unit and attach the sign
to the bar.
The bar levels itself,
and has adjustable cords with multicolored
markings where a stopper can be
placed. By using the markings as guides,
workers can hang signs at the same height
throughout
a store.
Ricci thought about any
number of scary scenarios when she designed
the sign-hanging system
with its stoppers: "I thought to myself,
'Maybe a 16-year-old hanging the sign would
say, 'Let's
race to the top,' and a sign would fly off
and hit someone." The bar doesn't snap
back up to the
ceiling when the sign is placed on it. Instead,
workers must use the pole to guide the sign
back
up.
The units can be detached
from the ceilings and moved around. The
price of the units varies with
the size of the order, but the retail price
is about $15 to $17 per unit.
Companies can lease the
ceiling space to outside vendors to generate
extra revenue, though
Walgreen Co. will not do so.
"This is a big labor-saving
device," said Walgreen spokesman Michael
Polzin. "And it keeps the
signs straight and looking good."
Ricci said she has negotiated
sales of the Reel E-Z Display unit to two
U.S. distributors in
addition to Walgreens.
"If I don't have the
particular experience, like the engineering,
I can go to the [company's]
engineer and say, 'How does this make sense?
What could we do to make this even better?'
Together, it's the creative thought process
of several people," she said.
Tags: Retractable Signage, Safety Signage, Merchandising Signage, Ceiling Signage, Sign Hanging Safety
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