Raceline Motorworks - Chicago, IL
Situation
Few entrepreneurs have the vision and confidence to pioneer a new retail concept that requires a sophisticated and highly integrated IT system to power their idea and give it wheels. Today, Raceline Motorworks' two locations, downtown offices, warehouse, 50 employees, database of 10,000 domestic and international customers, and 12,000 custom vehicles sold testify that imagination plus well-oiled merchandising and point-of-sale (POS), display, and information systems can take the checkered flag.
Founder Blake Harper and partners David Domm and Rocky Jones took that leap in 2005 when they designed a novel retail experience wherein customers could use a POS terminal to choose and purchase their own remote-controlled model-car chassis, and accessories from 800 SKUs. Customers buy track time to race their creations against others on an in-house track. Raceline also sells memorabilia and boxed cars by mail.
Speeding Through the Sale
The Vernon Hills store has four multifunction "DMV kiosks." There, a camera photographs the customer whose picture goes into the Microsoft Dynamics™ Retail Management System (RMS) database and to the racetrack software. Customers answer on-screen questions to design their "drivers' licenses"—actually personal profiles displaying their photograph or an avatar and a nickname. Programming logic varies the questions based on customer answers, such as whether one is a child in the care of an adult.
Precision Fun
"Raceline creates a fun, complex, and exciting experience," says Harper, "yet every step must flow flawlessly into the next so the customer stays involved, happy, and moving through the transaction. When people come in with a gift card, or we host 20 for a party, we can't break the rhythm of the experience with a system glitch or a stock-out.
Customers design a vehicle, choosing body style, chassis (engine, shocks, etc), tires, decals, and color. Their drivers' licenses become membership cards and are printed upon payment at the POS. An adaptation by Retail Information Technology Enterprises (RITE) allows Microsoft Dynamics Retail Management System to support "branched customers," whereby one credit card can sponsor many racers. Kiosk software is written in Microsoft® .NET 2.0.
The second store, in Wauwatosa, Wisconsin, has three DMV kiosks and two POS terminals. Both stores have three racetrack PCs with PCs in the back office and the receiving/storage room.
After the car and accessories are purchased, Microsoft Dynamics RMS sends all data to the racetrack management system, a suite of custom .NET 2.0 applications by West Monroe Partners. After assembling the car, customers scan in their drivers' licenses at the racetrack kiosk and choose an on- or off-road course.
A Raceline crew member assigns racers, starts races, and enters in the results. Displays keep parents and friends informed of on-deck racers, current heats, and winners. The latest display software uses .NET 3.0 and Windows® Presentation Foundation.
Cornering the Right Software
Since 80 percent of employees are part-time and mobile, developers had to funnel Raceline's highly intelligent software into a quick-to-learn, easy-to-use, and secure interface for sales associates. To incentivize and enable store managers, back-office reporting had to offer the right blend of detail or overview that any query might require. The partners wanted managers to run the store as their own businesses, yet partners needed to retain visibility and control. Scalability to national scope was the final criterion. Domm is already scouting more Raceline locations
Solution
"We went through an arduous selection process," confides Harper, "culling 20 contenders down to a final three before we found software and developers on whom we were willing to bet our futures. One entertainment/ticketing application, Quantix, lacked the store and chain management capabilities we needed."
The Winner
Microsoft Dynamics RMS Store Operations is the store-level POS and retail management solution that staff and managers use to sell and manage. RMS Headquarters collects data from each store, gives upper management complete visibility, and apportions control and information per owners' wishes.
"Three Certified Microsoft partners, each executing its own part of the system and integrating with the other parts, teamed up to make our complex and lucrative sales cycle work smoothly dozens of times a day," Harper says.
West Monroe Partners, a business and technology consulting firm headquartered in Chicago, Illinois, began to define system requirements.
Harper's request to Microsoft sparked a call from Merchants Solutions, a Certified Microsoft Retail Partner in nearby Hillside, Illinois, who provided, installed, trained, and supports Microsoft Dynamics RMS. West Monroe Partners says that interfacing its complex applications to this very complete retail solution was "very straightforward."
RITE of St. Cloud, Minnesota, created the exciting DMV kiosk software. West Monroe Partners provided project guidance and custom Microsoft ASP.NET 2.0 applications to manage races and their displays.
Microsoft Dynamics RMS is also installed in the downtown warehouse for overseas sales. Parts are stored there in quantity, and then transferred as needed. Microsoft Dynamics RMS also tracks interstore transfers.
Benefits
"In a retail application that pioneered new sales concepts and pushed software integration boundaries, we opened on time and under system budget," says Harper. "The three-part front end meshes nicely and brings in uninterrupted income."
Seeing the Whole Field
"Our largest overarching business result is empowering managers to run their stores productively and deliver the partners information so we can run the enterprise effectively," Harper asserts.
"Reporting in Microsoft Dynamics RMS and Headquarters is efficient, easy to use, and even helps us teach business analytics. I've seen many reporting engines in retail and other enterprises, but these deliver everything they should, and more than we need.
"It's pivotal that Microsoft Dynamics RMS enables us to manage inventory in real time. We know our screens will never show the birthday kid a blue Phantom Racer if it's out of stock. As soon as the last one is committed—even before it's picked up—it disappears from kiosks' screens. There's no crying at Raceline!"
"Given our crews, shrinkage has never been an issue, yet the security screens in Microsoft Dynamics RMS allow us to limit transaction types by employee, so critical functions don't go to new people.
"Our managers were very surprised at the system's power. They hadn't seen a retail solution with this much flexibility. Each time they send up a wish, we can nearly always grant it. Previously, when some associates weren't diligent about capturing names of customers who returned to buy additional accessories, we lost valuable marketing knowledge. Now, one click gathers the data, so this job gets done. In Wauwatosa, we're trying a customer-facing LCD to test new advertising and promote store events."
"In opening a new retail venture," suggests Harper, "you want zero to 60 in no time. You need doors open ASAP because that starts your money stream. Don't waste time working with 'maybe' software or people you aren't comfortable with. We chose very wisely in both respects.
"Be sure you own, control, and can always access your own data. Get real-world proof or case studies of the software's scalability. Will it enable and even encourage you to grow? And be very sure it has open architecture that can be customized at both ends."
"Our next big plans are to install Microsoft Dynamics GP for more sophisticated back-office management," says Harper. "That will give us a Microsoft shop from the time customers open the front door till we pay our taxes on the profits."
For More Information
For more information about Microsoft RMS, Point-Of-Sales software and other hardware, call American Retail Supply Computer Solutions at 800-426-5708






