Creating a Balanced Menu: Tips for a Better Dispensary Inventory
When it comes to running a well functioning dispensary, one of the biggest challenges can be stocking a balanced menu. Cannabis consumers have a wide range of tastes and preferences when it comes to products and the most successful dispensaries have a wide selection to meet this need. When a dispensary can keep a consistent stock of products that a particular consumer likes, they can quickly become the only dispensary that consumer frequents. For those dispensaries looking to fill out their menu with crowd pleasing products, I recommend the following practices.
Diverse Strains
Cannabis comes in many varieties, and each strain has a slightly different effect on the user. One of the biggest mistakes I see in new dispensaries is a menu that is weighted heavily toward one type of cannabis. The grower or manager of the collective may prefer Diesel varieties, or Haze, and choose similar strains repeatedly. This can severely limit your potential client pool to only those cannabis users who enjoy that one variety. When stocking your flower and concentrates, look for a range of genetic varieties, and be careful not to have too much bias in one direction or the other.
Consistent but New
Cannabis consumers want a consistent supply of strains that work well for them. But sometimes using one strain all the time can lead to decreased efficacy of that particular strain. Keeping a rotation of similar strains in one category can help keep your client base intrigued with new strains, without sacrificing consistency. If you have patients who really enjoy the strain Grape Ape. Rather than keeping Grape Ape in stock at all times, you can stock it regularly, but rotate it with similar strains like Lavender or Blackberry Kush, or new strains with similar genetics.
Consumer Feedback
Successful dispensaries are responsive to their consumers’ purchasing habits. Tracking the strains and products that your consumers buy can be helpful when deciding what to purchase again. However, this type of tracking does not tell you about the consumers you may have lost by not having the right product in the first place. Giving your consumers an avenue to give you feedback on your products and request ones that you do not have can be a great way to find out what your particular client base is looking for.
Edible and Topical Options
The fastest growing demographic of cannabis users are baby boomers, and many of them are less interested in smoking cannabis than using an edible or topical product. Having a wide variety of edible and topical products can help to bring in this growing demographic. When choosing edible products, look for both sugary treats that appeal to the sweet tooths out there, and the more medicinal products like capsules and tinctures for those looking for exact dosing and a more clinical experience.
When in Doubt, Ask for Help
For those looking for more in depth information on how to create a balanced dispensary menu, seek out help from people with industry experience. My practice, Mindful Cannabis Consulting offers consulting and dispensary staff trainings on just this topic. Whether you are just starting out or looking to optimize your existing dispensary, a little help can go a long way.
About The Author
Dr. Emily Earlenbaugh, PhD.
Co-Founder & Cannabis Patient Consultant
Dr. Emily Earlenbaugh, PhD. is dedicated to raising the bar of the cannabis experience from individual education to dispensary environment, and offers consultations and educational services to patients, dispensaries, and industry organizations. As a cannabis patient, a collective founder and an expert in the science and philosophy of well-being, she knows first-hand the unique complications and challenges involved with maintaining a cannabusiness that takes its clients’ well-being as seriously as its bottom-line.
As Co-Founder and Consultant at Mindful Cannabis Consulting, Emily offers patients consulting on the complex task of finding the right strains and methods of intake for their particular needs; and offers dispensaries and producers consulting and staff trainings on how to stay current and responsive to the needs of their client base.
Emily also serves as the Director of Informed Consumption, for Conscious Cannabis Ventures, where she oversees the adoption of quantitative research methodologies to accurately collect and report qualitative, subjective consumer-focused data, in pursuit of safety and educational goals.