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Cash still crucial for UK’s independent retailers

27 Sep 2023

A recent survey of retailers across the UK has shown that cash remains a crucial payment method for independent shops.
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Almost 2,000 more independent shops left empty in the first half of this year

27 Sep 2023

Almost 2,000 more British independent shops were left empty in the first half of this year, as small businesses struggled to cope with rising inflation and the cost-of-living crisis.
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Indie shops in Liverpool create their own security network to combat shoplifters.

27 Sep 2023

An independent shop owner in Liverpool has said that independent shops in the city centre have taken to creating their own security WhatsApp group, warning each other of shoplifters in the... Read more…

Indie shops key to reversing fortunes of struggling high streets – university study finds.

27 Sep 2023

A focus on independent and ‘browse-only’ shops can help to reverse the fortunes of the struggling high street, according to an extensive study by Manchester Metropolitan University.
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Trade association welcomes Home Office ‘back-to-basics’ retail crime promise

13 Sep 2023

The recent pledge by police forces across England and Wales to pursue every lead that holds a reasonable chance of apprehending criminals and solving crimes has been welcomed by Bira, which... Read more…

Hidden basement bar in Liverpool named 'best vegan restaurant' in Britain

12 Sep 2023

A family-run Liverpool restaurant hidden inside a basement is officially Britain's best vegan venue.
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Shoplifters working in organised groups targeting shops with co-ordinated raids

11 Sep 2023

A warning has been issued that shoplifters in the UK are becoming increasingly “emboldened” and appear to be often orchestrated by organised criminal groups, which steal to order,... Read more…

Shops urged to prepare for single-use plastics ban coming into force on 1 October

11 Sep 2023

It has been suggested that some shop owners may be unaware or unprepared for the upcoming change to regulations on single-use plastics on plates, bowls, trays, containers, cutlery and balloon... Read more…

National Lottery retailers urged to transfer retail agreement to new operator.

30 Aug 2023

Allwyn, incoming operator of The National Lottery, has urged independent National Lottery retailers to log on to its new online retailer portal via Read more…

Retailers sceptical about Home Secretary’s call for ‘every theft’ to be investigated.

30 Aug 2023

Shop owners have expressed scepticism that the Home Secretary's recent call for every theft to be investigated by the police will come to fruition, suggesting that police resources are already... Read more…

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Best Small Shops partner Maybe* urges retailers to get back onto social media

Posted on in Business News, Cycles News

Independent retailers urged to get back onto social media & re-engage with local customers, as new research shows extent of the drop-off.

 

With a month to go until entries close in the search to find Britain's Best Small Shop of 2020, in what could be a positive sign for small independent retailers on local high streets, research from social media management platform, Maybe*, which has been named as partner of this year's competition, has found that independent businesses have all but stepped away from social media since lockdown ended.

The research found that, although consumers average over three hours on social media per day, the 43% of independents that were active on social media on a daily basis pre-Covid-19 has dropped to just 5% in some towns.

"This was a really worrying finding," explains Polly Barnfield OBE, CEO of Maybe*. "Small shops really need to be on social media and engaging in the local conversations there, because that's a really effective way of reaching local customers. Use it to tell local people the story of your business. Don't get sucked into believing that social media is for the world; you can make it local if you engage with the local conversation."

Maybe* gathered 20,000 responses from across the UK to understand changing attitudes towards shopping and this included finding that people expect to be making fewer visits to large shopping centres than before lockdown. Over a third of 19-25 year olds said they expected to make fewer visits to large shopping centres moving forward, a figure that rises to 60% for the 26-34 age group, 55% for the 35 to 45 age group; 58% for the 46-55 age group; 62% of the 56-65s and half of the over 65s.

When asked what measures they felt would encourage them to shop more, home delivery and a limit on the number of customers in store at any one time scored highest. 35% of the 19-25s favoured home delivery and 38% a limit on the number of customers in store at any one time with other demographics reporting as follows:

• 26-34 age group: 35% home delivery; 37% limit on the number of customers
• 35-45 age group: 30% home delivery; 37% limit on the number of customers
• 46-55 age group: 31% home delivery; 36% limit on the number of customers
• 56-65 age group: 26% home delivery; 30% limit on the number of customers
• Over 65s: 28% home delivery; 30% limit on the number of customers

Other responses included the ability to book appointments to shop; the availability of Click & Collect, and shop staff effectively policing social distancing, face covering and hygiene regulations.

Polly Barnfield adds: "The majority of people we surveyed still feel anxious about shopping at all with 57% predicting they will shop less in either a High Street or a shopping centre compared with pre-lockdown. But there is good news and that is that retailers are largely felt to be doing a satisfactory job of implementing their safety measures, though they mustn't rest on their laurels as they risk losing 51% of their shoppers if social distancing measures aren't enforced. This should suit small, independent shops who are able to make changes quickly to the way they work to make their customers feel even safer and more comfortable."

"This research reveals that the post-lockdown reticence to shop that a lot of retailers feared is evident but that there remain opportunities for innovative small shops to offer a service that overcomes that reticence," says Mark Walmsley, Chair of the Independent Retailers' Confederation. 

"We continue to see extraordinary examples of innovation and ingenuity in being able to adapt a business to continue trading. This is unsurprising, given the agility and commitment of independent retailers to their local communities and, in this extraordinary year, it is something we will be recognising and celebrating. And we are delighted to have the support of Maybe* in helping us to do that."

The annual competition highlights the best of Britain's independent retail sector, celebrating the commitment and creativity of independent retailers and the central role they play in their local communities. Previous winners have included Bristol-based delicatessen Papadeli, the 2019 winner, and The Mainstreet Trading Company, a combined bookshop, café, deli & homeware shop based in St Boswells, in the rural Scottish Borders, which won in 2018.

For more information about the Best Small Shops competition, click here bestsmallshops.uk.

 

 

 

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