
Walk into any retail store, and you’ll find a silent salesperson working tirelessly: the signage. From the logo above your door to in-store displays, your retail signage greets, informs, and persuades customers. It shapes how they move through your space and influences how much they spend.
The best signage makes your brand visible, shortens purchase decisions, and creates a seamless shopping experience. In contrast, poor signage confuses shoppers and costs you sales.
Ultimately, custom signage serves both marketing and retail operations—it drives awareness while making your store fundamentally easier to shop.
Retail signage is any type of graphic display in and around your store that communicates a message to a target audience. It is the first and most persistent way your store communicates with customers. Signage includes outdoor signs, window displays, informational signage, digital signage, and more.
From the moment someone spots your storefront to the signs that guide them to checkout, signage shapes how shoppers move, what they notice, and whether they buy. In other words, it’s a critical sales and operations tool that can include:
Each type plays a distinct role in creating a cohesive retail design that helps shoppers feel oriented and confident navigating your store and making purchases.
Research clearly shows that signage impacts sales. A recent Mood Media/MyTotalRetail survey showed that 58% of shoppers actively notice in-store displays, and that nearly half of those say their purchase decisions were influenced by those displays.
Signage also makes your store easier to navigate. If customers can’t find what they came for, they’re far less likely to return. That’s why signage and store layout should work together to create a natural flow.
Finally, signage supports conversions and brand-building. Persuasive signs at decision points highlight promotions or cross-sells. Consistent typography and color palettes reinforce brand trust. Digital signage adds flexibility, letting you adapt messaging instantly to match inventory, events, or seasonal promotions.
Every sign in your store serves a distinct purpose, and the most effective signage strategy matches the format with its function. Broadly, you can think about signage by location and objective—what it needs to do for your customers and where it works best in your space.
There are four key types of retail signage for brick-and-mortar stores:
Outdoor signage is arguably the most important type of signage in physical retail, because it’s what brings customers in the door—the largest hurdle to beginning a relationship with a potential customer. Exterior signage makes your storefront’s first impression. It’s what tells passersby who you are, what you offer, and whether they should come inside. The most common formats include:
These signs need to do more than simply announce who you are—they should draw in customers and make them want something from you. Effective signage may encourage people who have passed your store many times before to finally give it a chance.
Choosing durable materials is key for outdoor signs. Weather-resistant substrates like aluminum composite panels, UV-coated vinyl, or exterior-rated acrylic withstand rain and sun exposure. If you’re in an area with evening or early morning traffic, illuminated options—such as halo-lit channel letters—help you stay visible.
Informational signage may also be known as departmental, directional, organizational, or wayfinding signage. Once shoppers are inside, wayfinding signs help them feel oriented and confident. If customers can’t easily find what they came for, they’re far less likely to buy or return. Interior signage often includes:
Consistency is what makes these signs effective. Use the same fonts, colors, and iconography across all informational signage so customers don’t have to “relearn” the system as they shop.
All types of informational signage need to be concise and legible so clients can understand the message with just a split-second glance. Large, bold fonts in highly visible color schemes best accomplish this goal.
Many retailers use an assortment of informational signage, including acrylic, tabletop, window-mounted, and shelving signage to share product information. If you don’t have much shelving or counter space, you can use retail sign holders to guide shoppers through your store.
Once you start putting up informational signage, it becomes clear to you if your store is arranged in an orderly fashion with some rhyme or reason. Not only does this systematically benefit your customers, it also makes your internal structure more organized.
While wayfinding reduces friction, POP signage is designed to influence buying decisions through convincing language or attractive imagery. These signs usually advertise a particular product or promotion. Persuasive signs or displays can influence customer flow and improve interactivity with otherwise unnoticed products.
Signs that showcase a particular type of product offer an opportunity for retailers to communicate specific details of new, seasonal, or featured items. These signs are typically placed near products, promotions, or checkout areas and include:
Using persuasive signage allows brands to communicate with customers more effectively. These retail displays can turn an otherwise ordinary product into a popular hidden gem. Effective persuasive messaging can also enhance perceived value for products, increase brand awareness, and improve retail sales.
The power of POP signage is its ability to influence customers at the right moment, often increasing average purchase value. In other words, persuasive signage doesn’t just decorate—it helps customers commit. The key is to keep messages short, benefits clear, and placement aligned with the natural flow of your in-store marketing.
Remember: While persuasive sales signs should be eye-catching and witty, they are not the main attraction. The most effective signs draw the customers directly to the product.
Digital signage is an installation that displays video or multimedia content for advertising or informational purposes. It is powered by a media player that sends content to the display.
Digital signage brings flexibility that static signs can’t. Screens, kiosks, and QR-enabled signs allow you to adapt messaging in real time and measure engagement directly. Formats often include:
For small retailers, this trend means digital solutions are becoming more affordable and practical. Beyond visibility, digital signage creates a measurement advantage: QR scans and landing-page traffic give you direct data on customer engagement, something static signs can’t offer. That makes digital signage not just a branding tool but a performance channel you can learn from and optimize over time.
Tech-savvy shoppers are always looking for exciting new ways to improve their shopping experience. That’s why Australian-based design firm Prendi created the Adventure Station, an interactive touchscreen experience for retail outlets to promote products and make sales easier.
The touchscreen displays a range of content, including infographics, videos, 3D models, animations, and more. You can customize it to include product wayfinding, social media integrations, and mobile integrations. Many digital screen systems have a home base that controls all the screens in your store.
Signage isn’t art—it’s communication. However, design is still an important part of making sure the right message gets across. Master these foundational principles to design effective signs.
Your sign’s message must land in seconds. If it takes a shopper more than five seconds to grasp your sign’s meaning, it’s too complex.
Overcomplicated signage is ignored. One of the classic rules in signage design is that simple, immediate readability is a virtue. As you draft content, test it: Can someone understand it while walking slowly past the sign? If not, simplify further.
Color is about more than aesthetics—it influences emotion, perceived value, and brand recall. But its power comes from consistency and contrast.
Color strategy is only effective when it’s legible and fits into your overall branding. Don’t pick an eye-catching hue if it makes your text unreadable.
Your copy can be great, but it won’t make an impact if no one can read it. Typography, spacing, contrast, and size are important tools in signage design.
Use this checklist when designing or reviewing your signage:
Signage only works if shoppers see it in the right place at the right time. A strategic approach to positioning signs with intent—from curbside to checkout—ensures they grab attention, support navigation, and influence buying decisions.
Your signage system should align with the natural flow of the shopping journey, from curb appeal to store entry to focal walls to checkout. Each stage has a role:
Designing and following this hierarchy helps your signage complement visual merchandising best practices instead of competing with them. The right message in the right zone creates momentum rather than distraction.
Great signage fails if it’s hidden, too small, or placed outside shoppers’ line of sight. Focus on eye-level positioning, decision-point placement, and roadside visibility to maximize impact.
One other best practice: Don’t forget about alternative surfaces. For example, floor graphics and mats can reinforce wayfinding, add branding, or call out promotions in places where overhead signage isn’t practical. Mats serve a dual purpose: They improve safety and comfort while carrying directional or promotional messages.
When signage is placed deliberately, it not only drives sales but also improves the overall shopping experience. Measuring traffic patterns and sales lift with retail productivity tools can help you refine where signs work best in your store.
Making customers feel welcome includes all customers. Offering accessibility by way of parking, entrances/exits, restrooms, cashier stations, fitting rooms, and elevators will make the experience more comfortable and enjoyable for shoppers with disabilities. If your location offers accessible features but doesn’t make them known, you’re doing your customers a serious disservice.
Not every sign in your store must meet ADA standards—but the ones that do have very specific requirements. Below, you’ll see which signs need to be ADA compliant; the tactile/braille, height, and character rules; and how to apply these in your store.
ADA doesn’t require every sign to be tactile or braille. In general:
If your accessible entrance is not your main entrance, your main door should include a sign directing customers to the accessible path or entrance. And if you use a portable ramp, you must include signage to indicate that customers can request it.
If you’re not measuring how well your signs are working, you’re leaving money (and insight) on the table. Treat signage like any other marketing channel: Assign key performance indicators (KPIs), test variations, and track return on investment (ROI).
Different signs serve different jobs, so you need different metrics. For example:
The key is alignment. Don’t measure a wayfinding sign by how much product it sells—measure whether it makes shopping smoother and faster.
You don’t need enterprise analytics software to get started. Start with the basics:
You can also use some basic testing methods. There are three that work for most SMB retailers, regardless of what kind of technology you have at your disposal:
The goal is to isolate the effect of signage from external noise like promotions, weather, or seasonality.
Retail signage is too valuable to be left unmeasured. By tying each sign to a KPI, capturing data with simple tools, and running structured tests, you can treat signage like a performance channel—not an expense. The result isn’t just better signage—it’s a smarter store.
Retail signage includes all signs that your retail store needs, from a store sign to promotion boards and any other type of signage you use to promote your store.
Signs help grab the attention of potential customers. They can be used to share promotions or sales, help people find your store, and more.
One example of retail signage is the storefront logo that lets customers know which store they’re walking into. Another example includes billboards and window signs that promote the store and its deals.
The best retail signage is simple, legible, and consistent. Each sign should communicate one clear idea, use high-contrast colors for readability, and follow a hierarchy—headline, supporting detail, and call to action. Typography should be easy to read at a glance, and design choices should align with your brand palette so the entire store feels cohesive. Placement matters too; signs need to be visible from natural sightlines and decision points, not hidden in clutter.
Start by linking each sign to specific metrics: foot traffic for exterior signs, navigation ease for wayfinding, sales lift for promotional displays, or QR scans for digital signage. Compare baseline and test periods. Simple A/B tests—rotating signs between zones or timeframes—can help you isolate the impact. Over time, log results in a signage dashboard so you can see which types and placements consistently drive the highest returns.
Here’s a template you can copy when you’re designing signage for your retail store. It will help you drill down your message, design, KPIs, and more: