What is each centimetre of shelf actually earning?
1 · Upload
2 · Map columns
3 · Set space
4 · Yield analysis
Upload your sales export
Drop in a CSV from any till system — over a fixed period (e.g. 4 weeks). The tool is system-agnostic; it just needs the right fields, which you'll map next.
No file to hand? Tap Use sample data for a realistic 67-line convenience store export (with deliberate over-ranging built in).
Map your columns
Match your export's headers to the fields C-Store Boost needs. You do this once — a real store's mapping would be saved and reused.
Count the space each category takes
No tape measure needed. Just walk the shop and, for each category, count two things: how many bays (the full up-and-down sections of shelving) it fills, and how many shelves high those bays are. Pre-filled here so you can see the result instantly — change any number by tapping it.
Category
Bays
Shelves high
Space
A "bay" is one full section of shelving between the uprights (roughly a metre wide). The tool turns bays × shelves into a comparable space figure for you — you never touch a tape measure.
Space-yield analysis
Every category ranked by cash margin earned per cm of shelf, per week. This is the number that should drive range and space decisions — not product margin %.
#
Category
£ marg/wk
cm
£/cm/wk
Yield
Reset recommendations
Where to cut range and reallocate space.
Demo shows the Tier 1 category sweep. Tier 2 (scan SKUs within a flagged category to choose which lines to keep vs cut) drills into the detail — e.g. the multiple butters and cheeses in this sample.