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4 Mar 2024

Pop star Kate Bush has been announced as an ambassador for this year's Record Store Day, on 20 April.

4 Mar 2024

The British Book Awards has announced its shortlist for Independent Bookshop of the Year. 

4 Mar 2024

The ACT is happy to confirm the date for Local Bike Shop Day 2024 as Saturday 4 May, the weekend of the early May Bank Holiday.

4 Mar 2024

Research by global fintech company SumUp has revealed the best cities in the UK for independent businesses.

21 Feb 2024

The latest quarterly State of the Industry survey from the National Hair & Beauty Federation (NHBF) shows that the recovery of the sector was slow and steady through 2023 and into January...

21 Feb 2024

The UK has voted for its favourite pun-based shop name, and 'Sew It Seams' - a clothing alteration store in Belfast - has been awarded the top spot. 

21 Feb 2024

Businesses in the Devon town of Ottery St Mary have praised their local council for initiatives designed to help support them and boost trade.

19 Feb 2024

A new ranking of the most popular independent coffee shops in the world has put three UK cafes in the top 10.

19 Feb 2024

Older people could be the financial shot in the arm needed for Britain’s high street, according to research commissioned by the University of Stirling. 

8 Feb 2024

The ACS (the Association of Convenience Stores) has celebrated the crucial role that rural shops play in thousands of communities across the UK in its 2024 Rural Shop Report.

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Is the dying High Street rash?

Posted on in Business News

indie retail

James Llewellyn published an article in 2018 challenging the claims that the UK High Street is in fact dying.

He disputes three claims; the retail market is in crisis and the high street stores are dying, the retail landscape needs to be more experiential and the extinction of the department stores.

The retail market is in crisis and the high street stores are dying

But are they?

Ignoring the larger, long-term figures that there has in fact been consistent long-term growth since 2013, with value sales up by 5.5% in the three months leading up to September 2018. And, that even though the online market is booming consumers' still buy more in stores than online, with 17.1% of products bought online.

The model of the retail market isn't at fault for struggling retailers, no one is. Simply put, better, more successful retailers are taking the share away from the worse ones. Today, we have more of a choice, we are still buying things and that will never change. What is changing is how and when and why we buy these things.

The retail landscape needs to be more experiential

What actually happens?

Llewellyn refers to the bouncy castle syndrome here explaining how retailers get so caught up in "making shopping an experience" argument that the experiences they offer, although adding to the experience, don't present a better alternative to buying online.

The extinction of the department stores

Are they though?

Yes, department stores are closing but many are actually doing well. The loss of certain stores is not due to a polarised society but rather what people have been saying for a while in the undertone of news articles, that some retailer are no longer distinctive and positively associated with the consumer.

We will never stop needing something, or wanting something.

It is in our nature to want and need things, and there will always be those stores that you go to because:

  • They have what you want or need
  • They suit your price bracket
  • You trust them

Read the full article here and let us know what you think about his points in the comments below. 

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