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Research by Walkers showed a 30% increase in sales using clip strips.
Most important will be drug stores, especially members of chains, where deals are being made for what are called "clip strip" book racks.
The clothes were a prop and according to his club mates the money was made of carefully clipped strips of newspaper.
Publishers salivate over clip strip potential.
Often posted on bulletin boards, clipped strips had an ancillary form of distribution when they were faxed, photocopied or mailed.
Authors John Updike and Ray Bradbury have written about their childhood collections of clipped strips.
The Clip Strip is hung off a shelf, pole, wall, power panel, gondola, freezer case or end-cap, serving to display merchandise.
The term is a trademark of Clip Strip Corporation, and the generic term merchandising strip is also used.
That patent lasted 20 years and eventually expired, but the Clip Strip Corporation still owns the Clip Strip trademark.
The Clip Strip was invented in 1979 by Edward Spitaletta, who started the Clip Strip Corporation.
A clip strip is a retail product display, so named because it is a length of material (either plastic or metal) with clips and/or hooks at regular intervals, upon which merchandise is displayed.