

Retail merchandising shapes how customers see products, prices, and possibilities. Learn how financing, including Snap-branded lease-to-own financing and loan options, can help retailers build confidence earlier in the shopping journey.
Financing should be treated as part of merchandising because it helps customers understand payment possibilities before they reach checkout.
Clear payment messaging can reduce price shock, support higher-ticket consideration, and make financing feel more normal and transparent.
Retailers can integrate financing into price tags, shelf talkers, room vignettes, seasonal displays, digital merchandising, and associate conversations.
Retail merchandising has always shaped how customers feel in a store.
Lighting, color, layout, signage, product placement, and display design all influence what shoppers notice, how long they stay, and which products they consider. But for big-ticket purchases, visual appeal is only part of the decision.
Customers also need to feel financially confident.
That is where financing belongs in the merchandising conversation. When financing is treated only as a checkout tool, retailers introduce payment options after the customer has already reacted to the price. By then, price shock may have already changed the shopper’s behavior. But when Snap-branded lease-to-own financing and loan options are part of the merchandising strategy from the beginning, retailers can help customers understand what may be possible before hesitation takes over.
In short, merchandising creates desire. Financing helps customers evaluate feasibility. When those two ideas work together, retailers can turn product displays into confidence displays.
Merchandising influences the customer’s decision long before an associate begins a sales conversation.
A strong display helps customers imagine the product in their lives.
A living room vignette helps them picture a better gathering space. A mattress display helps them picture better rest. A washer and dryer pair helps them picture a home routine that runs more smoothly.
But desire alone does not always move a customer toward purchase. Big-ticket shoppers often ask themselves a second question almost immediately: “Can I do this right now?”
Visible financing messaging helps answer that question earlier. Instead of forcing the shopper to choose between emotional interest and price concern, payment messaging gives them another way to evaluate the product.
The price tag moment can make or break consideration. A customer may love the product, connect with the display, and imagine it in their home. Then they see the full price and begin mentally backing away.
That reaction often happens quietly. The customer may not ask about payment options. They may not tell the associate the price feels too high. They may simply shift their attention to a lower-priced item or leave to “think about it.”
When payment messaging is visible near the product, it can soften that drop-off. The customer still sees the full price, but they also see that pay-over-time options may be available.
Not every lost sale looks like a lost sale. Sometimes, the customer still makes a purchase but chooses a lower-priced item than the one they actually wanted. In furniture, that may mean choosing the sofa instead of the full living room set. In appliances, it may mean replacing one item instead of upgrading the pair. In tires, it may mean choosing a lower-tier option instead of the package that better fits their needs.
Financing-integrated merchandising can help interrupt that silent downgrade pattern. When customers understand payment options earlier, they may feel more comfortable considering the product, set, or bundle that originally drew their attention.
For many shoppers, asking about financing can feel uncomfortable. They may worry about being judged. They may assume they will not qualify. They may not want to reveal that price is a concern. And if financing is only discussed after an associate brings it up, the customer may never get the information they need.
Visible financing messaging changes the tone. It makes payment options part of the normal shopping experience, not a private or awkward conversation.
That visibility matters. Seeing financing information can feel more dignified than having to ask for it.
Clear payment messaging communicates respect. It tells customers that the retailer understands how big-ticket decisions are made. It also signals that the retailer is willing to provide helpful information before the customer has to request it.
That clarity can support trust, confidence, and loyalty. When shoppers feel informed instead of pressured, they are more likely to stay engaged.
The strongest financing merchandising strategies make payment information visible, simple, and consistent.
Some parts of the showroom naturally carry higher consideration and higher hesitation. These areas are ideal for financing signage because customers are already comparing options, weighing trade-offs, and thinking through the decision.
High-intent zones may include:
Mattresses
Living room sets
Bedroom sets
Washer and dryer pairs
Tire and wheel packages
Premium tech bundles
Appliance packages
Home office setups
Shelf talkers should keep the message clear and direct. For example:
“Take it home today. Pay over time.”
Or:
“Ask about pay-over-time options.”
The best shelf talkers do not overload the customer. They create a simple prompt that makes financing feel visible and normal. Place Snap Finance's attention-grabbing tent cards and other signage in high-impact areas.
Financing should not wait until checkout. When retailers introduce payment options near the entrance, they set expectations early. Customers can begin shopping with a clearer sense of what may be available to them.
Entrance signage can be especially useful for retailers that sell higher-ticket products. It helps reduce the feeling that financing is a last-minute workaround. Instead, it becomes part of the store experience from the start.
A simple entrance message may say:
“Pay-over-time options available.”
Point-of-purchase (POP) signage, including posters and tent cards, is available at no cost to Snap Partners.
Bundled displays are where merchandising and financing can work especially well together and increase average order value dramatically. A customer may be drawn to the full bedroom set, complete living room, home office setup, or kitchen appliance package. But without payment context, they may immediately begin separating the set into smaller, lower-cost pieces.
Financing signage can help customers evaluate the full display before they downshift.
Consider adding payment messaging near:
Bedroom sets
Living room groups
Dining room sets
Home office setups
Kitchen appliance packages
Mattress and adjustable-base displays
Entertainment and tech bundles
When financing is integrated into the vignette, the display does more than show what looks good. It shows what may be possible.
If payment messaging is visually lost, it will not influence the shopper.
Retailers should treat financing signage with the same care they give product signage, promotional signs, and wayfinding. Place it at eye level when possible. Keep it close to the products it supports. Avoid cluttered sign clusters that make the message easy to miss.
Seasonal merchandising often focuses on urgency, inventory, and promotions. Financing messaging should be part of that strategy, too, especially when seasonal needs involve larger purchases.
Retailers may consider adding financing messaging to displays for:
Tax season
Back-to-school tech
Holiday gifting
Summer appliances
Winter tires
Spring home refreshes
Memorial Day, Labor Day, and other sales events
This is where many retailers miss an opportunity. They build strong seasonal displays but leave payment options disconnected from the campaign. By integrating financing into seasonal merchandising, retailers can support shoppers who are motivated by the moment but still need a pay-over-time path.
Merchandising does not stop at the showroom floor. For many customers, the decision begins online. That means payment messaging should also appear in digital merchandising, where appropriate.
Key placements may include:
Category pages
Collection pages
Cart previews
Promotional landing pages
Retargeting banners
Email campaigns
Homepage hero modules
Digital payment messaging helps customers understand financing before they visit the store, contact an associate, or abandon the product page. Use Snap's web banners on your website to introduce and promote the availability of financing through Snap Finance.
The same principle applies online and in-store: The earlier customers understand payment options, the more confidently they can evaluate their choices.
Financing-integrated merchandising works best when associates reinforce what customers already see.
Here are a few simple scripts associates can use to support signage and displays:
“Many of our customers look at payment options before deciding which model is right for their home.”
“If you’re comparing these two sets, Snap Finance can help you get the better option.”
“We show financing information throughout the store so you can understand payment options before you decide.”
“Snap Finance offers access to lease-to-own financing and loan options, so you can get what you want and pay over time.”
“Would you like to see how the payment option works before you narrow your choices?”
The goal is to connect the store’s visual merchandising with a consistent, helpful conversation.
When financing becomes part of merchandising, it can influence the metrics that retailers already care about.
Customers often hesitate when they do not understand their payment options. By introducing financing earlier, retailers can help customers move from uncertainty to action (and more quickly). That can support conversion by reducing friction before checkout.
Financing can help customers consider the product, bundle, or package that better fits their needs. That may support higher average ticket by reducing automatic downgrades and helping customers evaluate full-room sets, paired appliances, premium mattresses, or larger product bundles.
Discounting is not the only way to reduce purchase friction. Financing messaging gives retailers another lever. Instead of immediately cutting price, retailers can help customers understand pay-over-time options that may make the original product more approachable.
When merchandising introduces financing early, associates do not have to carry the entire payment conversation on their own. The store environment begins the education process. Associates can then answer questions, reinforce messaging, and guide customers to the next step.
Clear financing visibility can make the shopping journey feel more transparent. Customers do not have to hunt for payment information. They do not have to ask an uncomfortable question. They can see that the retailer has thought about how real people make big-ticket decisions. And they are less likely to experience buyer's remorse or return the item, because they have a product that better aligns with their needs.
Snap Finance helps retailers make payment options clearer throughout the customer journey. Snap-branded lease-to-own financing and loan options can support merchandising strategies by giving retailers practical tools to bring financing into the store experience, digital experience, and associate conversation.
Some of the advantages retailers may highlight:
Clear payment options
No-credit-needed application messaging¹
Mobile-first application experience
Signage and point-of-purchase materials
Digital merchandising support
Tools that can support bundled displays
Pre-qualification processes
Associate training resources
High approval inclusivity¹
The most effective retailers do not treat financing as part of the buying environment.
Retail merchandising is not only about what customers see. It is about what customers believe is possible. A strong display can create desire. Clear financing messaging can help customers understand how to act on that desire. Together, they can support a more confident shopping journey – from the first glance to the final decision. For retailers, that means financing should not be hidden at checkout. It should be part of price tags, signage, room vignettes, seasonal displays, digital merchandising, and associate conversations.
Talk to your Snap sales representative about merchandising tools and training resources available through Snap Finance. Not a Snap partner? Partner with Snap Finance to strengthen merchandising and customer confidence.
Snap Finance, its affiliates, and partners offer consumers a range of solutions, which may include lease-to-own financing, installment loans, retail installment contracts, and credit cards. Product availability may vary. For detailed information, visit snapfinance.com/legal/products
1 Not all applicants are approved. Approvals subject to underwriting qualification criteria.