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Color Code: Purple
Created By: Shannon Scoffield
Created Date/Time: 4/23/2019 3:42 pm
 
Action Status: Blank (new)
Show On The Web: Yes - (public)
 
Time Id: 3989
Template/Type: User Guide
Title/Caption: 4.46 - My Cart Favorite Buttons
Start Date: 4/23/2019
Main Status: Active

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Notes:

4.46 - My Cart Favorite Buttons

-These are basically preset code that help you to sell things, organize things, or create visual checkout processes. You can tie them to existing searches, exactly to specific items to tie to the cart, you can tie them to recipe/builds, or even stack, group, or turn them into tiered pricing models.

-Originally they were designed to be user specific and they still can be. However many companies want them to be one master set for the company. Either way will work and you are also able to copy, view, and share buttons as needed.

-As far as organization goes, you can name them, add photos, stack them, group them, color-code them. You can tweak out your buttons to whatever fits your needs! For example say you wanted a certain group of items to be orange or purple, or if you were a deli you could have a button that said Desserts and nested under that button you could have pies, cakes, cookies, sodas, ice creams, etc.

-There are multiple different kinds of buttons - you can have Flash buttons or HTML buttons depending on your interface. Certain devices, operating systems, or browsers work better with certain kinds. For example an iPad does not allow Flash and would use HTML. Switching between button types is very quick and easy.

-Some companies even like to run their entire POS with just the buttons directly or something called a split cart mode that allows them to see and click on their buttons while viewing the shopping cart screen.

-One kind of button is called a smart group which allows you to setup your own tiered pricing structures. This can go as deep as you would like to go and one of the secrets behind it is rules and assignments. The rules are where your price breaks come in, typically based on a quantity type model. The assignments deal with which items or product are associated with that set of rules. All of those are one to many relationships and that button is able to hold all of the related functions you have set for that button.