Most retail management guides treat the checkout as an afterthought. Walter Da Cruz and the RIDBS team treat it as the most commercially consequential square meter in the store— and they are correct. Till Points' Impulse Buy Merchandising, a meticulously crafted operations manual, persuasively argues that South African franchise supermarket owners, by mismanaging their front end, are losing significant money every trading day.The premise is direct: the checkout is the one location in the store where foot traffic is guaranteed, dwell time is measurable, and the customer has already committed to spending. Those three conditions, when met with disciplined layout, controlled ranging, and consistent execution, reliably produce a 10 to 20 percent uplift in impulse sales within 30 to 60 days. When met with clutter, random supplier standees, undisciplined cashiers, and unmanaged shrink, they produce margin bleed that compounds silently across every shift.What separates this manual from generic merchandising literature is its specificity to the South African operating environment. Load shedding is not treated as background noise — it is addressed as a direct operational variable that affects queue behaviour, system reliability, and the design requirements of any impulse system that must function without powered screens or digital signage. The operational framework is built around five non-negotiable controls: one locked planogram per store with zero unauthorised variation, a maximum of 30 active impulse SKUs per till, a daily two-minute micro-audit on every active checkout, a monthly removal of the bottom 20 percent of SKUs by productivity, and a weekly measurement of impulse sales per till per day. These five disciplines address the root causes of every common failure pattern the manual documents — supplier creep, cashier layout modification, temporary displays becoming permanent fixtures, audits suspended during peak trading, and non-compliant layouts replicating across multiple tills before anyone intervenes.The four-zone planogram framework — hero zone, payment-adjacent zone, children's sightline zone, and secured high-risk zone — gives owners a structural tool for making defensible placement decisions rather than reactive ones driven by whoever made the most persuasive argument that morning. The supplier slotting and negotiation section is particularly valuable, making clear that till space is premium commercial real estate that should be allocated with defined terms, measured uplift requirements, and documented removal dates.The embedded tools — the KPI dashboard, the tear-out audit scorecard, the shift handover checklist, and the monthly reset protocol — are functional, not decorative. They can be printed, clipped to a board, and walked through at any till immediately. That immediacy defines this manual. It does not ask owners to attend a course before applying it. It asks them to read a section, identify what they will check tomorrow, and go and check it.For any South African franchise supermarket owner who has noticed their checkout looks different at 6pm than it did at 8am, who has watched a supplier representative rearrange their till while a manager looked on, or who suspects their front-end shrink is higher than the stocktake reveals — this manual is the control system they have been operating without.Impulse Buy Merchandising at Till Points is published by RIDBS — Retail Is Detail Business Strategy. Operational tools, consulting services, and additional resources are available at ridbs.co.za.