Planograms that drift the moment they ship
What HQ designed and what stores actually built diverge by week two, and nobody quite knows why.
Visual merchandising is one of the most measurable parts of retail, and one of the most often phoned in. Tasklio closes the gap between a planogram in HQ and a fixture on the floor.
What HQ designed and what stores actually built diverge by week two, and nobody quite knows why.
Stores send photos, but reviewing 600 of them is a part-time job nobody owns.
Every reset feels brand new because the playbook lives in someone's head, not in the system.
Tasks reference the latest planogram by store format, with images and step-by-step guidance.
Pulse Core flags resets that don't match the planogram, so reviewers focus on real exceptions.
Manager and field-leader sign-offs are recorded, time-stamped, and tied to the planogram version.
Surface the resets that lifted sales in comparable stores, and copy them with care.
HQ publishes the new planogram by store format
Stores get a step-by-step reset task with reference images
Photo evidence checked by Pulse Core for matching
Field leaders sign off; lift analyses inform the next reset
A 25-minute walkthrough on real workflows, not a pitch deck.