I Didn’t Guess What to Stock—I Asked
When I took over the convenience store, it was a mess.
The layout was busted, the shelves were dusty, and the product selection looked like someone closed their eyes and pointed.
I knew I had to clean it up. But more importantly, I had to figure out what people actually wanted to buy.
So I did the simplest, cheapest, most effective thing a business owner can do:
I bought a $2 notebook.
Ask. Record. Repeat.
I trained my staff to write down anything customers asked for that we didn’t have.
“Do you have mango Juul pods?”
“Do you sell whatever hot sauce?”
“Where’s the sour cream & onion Kettle Chips?”
If we didn’t have it, it went in the book.
And every week, I reviewed it.
If something showed up more than once, I brought it in.
It wasn’t scientific. It wasn’t fancy. But it worked.
People Want to Feel Heard
Something wild happened.
Customers started noticing.
They’d walk in and say, “Oh wow, you actually got that snack I asked about.”
It made them feel seen.
Heard.
Valued.
And that turned into something far more powerful than any sale: loyalty.
They came back.
They told friends.
They trusted us to listen.
Real Talk
You don’t need an expensive POS system to figure out what people want.
You need a system your staff actually uses.
Feedback should flow straight from the customer to the shelf. It should not die at the register.
Most stores are full of what you like. Not what your customers like.
Want to sell more?
Stop guessing. Start asking.
The Action List (For You, The Owner)
- Buy a notebook. Put it behind the counter.
- Train your staff to write down every customer request
- Review it weekly. Look for patterns
- Start stocking what your customers actually want
- Track what sells—and what turns into repeat sales
TL;DR
- I used a $2 notebook to gather product feedback
- Customers felt heard, and they came back
- It helped me stock smarter, not wider
- Feedback isn’t magic. It’s just listening and acting