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Wearing armor all over the checkout counter but still unable to sell? Perhaps you are missing this' pink magnet '!

2026-06-03 - Leave me a message

People who have worked on wearable terminals understand a pain: when a lot of goods are in, they are displayed like street vendors - customers are too lazy to flip through the piles of armor plates, and they are left standing and poured out again. In the end, they can only rely on the salesperson's words to push them.

Recently, a Press on nails display stand developed by SINST has quietly become popular, taking a completely different path. The Press on nails display stand is essentially a pink corrugated paper Countertop stand - but the beauty lies in two details: one is the row of circular holes on the front that "nail" out the armor pieces one by one, exposing the entire face of each model, allowing customers to easily locate their target without flipping or pulling them apart; The second is the phrase 'Life's too short to have born nails' on the side, paired with the brand logo, which is equivalent to standing guard and shouting for you 24 hours a day.

Less than an A4 sheet of paper, just place a card at the corner of the checkout counter. Thick cardboard can hold it up, with a hook at the top that can be hung whenever you want. The key is that the cost is low enough, and even ten stores can store it without worrying. Several shop owners who have used it have given surprisingly consistent feedback: it's not that the goods have suddenly improved, it's that someone can finally "see" the goods. So one thing can be certain - in the "impulse consumption" track of wearing armor, whether a product can be "seen" often determines life and death more than the product itself.

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