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The High Street Needs To Go Online



I heard a quote on the news recently that only hairdressers and coffee shops will survive the rise in online shopping. I thought that was very sad to hear although I would be one of the main culprits in this happening. I prefer to shop online, I’m very much an online person. Not liking crowds and not having the female shopping gene it has been my saviour a lot of the time. Possibly there are many people the same as me.

This got me thinking how it can really affect towns and communities and what they can possibly do about this eventuality.  Local shops are closing because of online shopping – this is an obvious fact.  My mother owned a boutique card shop in the 1970’s and 80’s. It went out of business mainly because of chain card shops appearing in the town.

Then the chains started closing down when the town’s bypass was built because people no longer drove through the town or used it as a stop off point enroute to their destination. The chain shops have been followed by online shopping as the ultimate shut down for the local shops. For example I have used Moonpig.com for a quite a few years now – and by the way my mother loves the cards I send.

Online shopping is like a town’s new bypass for local shops

Recently there was the RTE programme about the economic regeneration of Drogheda called Local Heroes. The programme featured many community initiatives to boost the retail sector in the town.

Fiona Ashe, a social business consultant, says that it’s essential for local shop owners to include online marketing in their growth strategy.  “Businesses which focus only on offline sales and marketing are missing out on a huge number of potential consumers.  Search functions within Twitter and LinkedIn, for example, allow business owners to connect with people in their local area.  Also, the level of engagement through mobile devices is increasing, so a mobile app is a very valuable tool for businesses.  For any shop owners who haven’t engaged with online yet, I encourage you to take that leap now!”

If local shops don’t have the footfall any more to keep their business afloat perhaps they should consider selling online as well as staying local with their physical shop – that way they have both bases covered. Presuming they can do this of course – hairdressers and coffee shops (and similar) can’t.

# 1. Setting up

It isn’t difficult to set up a website these days and this can be your online shop.

  • Ecommerce sites allow your potential website visitor to buy your stock simply online.
  • You can connect up to Paypal, Realex, WebMoney, Moneybookers, Worldpay plus lots more payment service providers who supply an easy payment system.  Of course there are costs involved in doing this but surely it’s better to spend a bit to gain more rather than having to close your shop down or seeing it slowly die.

# 2. Costs

If you really can’t afford any outlay, which unfortunately is a state a lot of us are in these days.

  • Then why not start with an Ebay shop. This could break you into the online business gently without any big overheads to see if it does suit you, hopefully helping your decisions going forward.
  • A Facebook business page with an online shop is another idea to consider and these two options can be set up quite simply.
  • The main extra cost you’ll have to endure for an online business is postage and packaging. There are a lot of courier companies around these days and of course the postal service that you can rely on. Decide on your packaging and if you can personalise it all the better.
  • A leaflet in the box detailing your products and prices is absolutely priceless advertising too. If someone has ordered from you then they are interested in your products, therefore they are happy to hear about others that you do too and that leaflet is NOT likely to go into the bin. I say this from experience and believe me that all leaflets that come through my postbox go straight into the bin but not when it comes with something I have ordered.

# 3. Delivery

And here’s an idea for local businesses that maybe want to save on the delivery costs involved; if the clients are local – deliver them yourself.

  • Like the good old days of the milkman, fizzy pop wagon, bread & cake man – jump in the car or van yourself at the end of your day in the shop and drop the deliveries off.
  • Of course as it grows this won’t be feasible but starting off why not? Yes it could mean extra hours but it’ll be worth it to keep your business afloat. See how it goes.
  • This is also an idea for someone looking for work with a driving licence and car or van – deliver for local businesses within the town and surrounding areas. I’d order from local businesses straight away if people would deliver to me.

The sign of the times when I moved out to the country was that my 3 main criteria were having broadband, SKY TV and Tesco delivery – but that’s just me.

Your work may change from being behind a counter to doing a lot of packing and posting but if it’s still providing an income then what have you got to lose?  I’d love some suggestions below for local shops that may have to sell online to survive or maybe you are a business that has done this already so please let me know.

Image: “A motion and lens burred image of people/Shutterstock



The Author:

An Accountant that likes to Write! I'm a qualified Accountant with an Honours Diploma in Journalism too. Sian's provides help to small businesses - Accounts, Content Writing, Social Media. I write blogs & interviews for TweakYourBiz.com & I'm also a Moderator on Bizsugar.com http://www.sianphillips.ie

Add Your Comment

  • http://twitter.com/smallbiztrends Anita Campbell

    Thank you, Niall! I like this feature. Appreciate your shout outs — very much. Hope all is well with you…. Anita

  • http://www.tweakyourbiz.com Niall Devitt

    Thank you Anita, your book sounds exciting!

  • http://www.facebook.com/anneperezonline Anne De Pury Perez

    Hi Sian
    so true. I spoke to a local sportsshop owner in my town and he told me that he loves having a high street shop but the only reason he’s still in business is because he has an ebay shop that generates a lot of sales.

  • http://twitter.com/_secretgarden_ Brian

    Hi Sian,

    Having an online retail presence also gives our customers a shop window and we have found that they may not always purchase online but will come up the garden centre which has made us a destination garden centre rather than just a local garden centre.

    Brian

  • http://www.sianphillips.ie/ Sian Phillips

    Thanks Brian – that’s a great point too. And I know your Garden Centre is definitely worth a visit :)

  • http://www.sianphillips.ie/ Sian Phillips

    Thanks Anne – it’s good to know it does work

  • Torihawthorne

    Great post Sian,
    A town near me has seen a run of small businesses closing down, changing hands and changing what they sell. I did some Market Research there for a Client and found over 1/3 of the shops didn’t have en email, let alone an online presence. The responses from many were that they didn’t want to change how they had always done things, it seemed to be a fear. There’s a business idea there, to help local/boutique style shops to get online, show them how easy it is and the benefits.
    Great post, I’d forgotten about ‘fizzy-pop wagons’ ;)
    Tori

  • http://www.sianphillips.ie/ Sian Phillips

    Thanks Tori – there’s an idea for you saleswoman extraordanaire :) And fizzy pop wagon – the Corona man delivered Dandelion & Burdock – highlight of my week lol

  • http://www.cgonlinemarketing.com/ Christina Giliberti

    Its sad to hear Sian, but then everything in business is about reacting to the changing trends in the marketplace. In five years time, who knows what will happen – we could be selling on the moon!

    I would just like to say that there are many alternative option, but that having your own website is always a benefit. I also believe that if you are going to compete online, you should make the effort to build a professional looking site. This is especially important for online retail as trust is a deciding factor to whether you purchase or not.

    I agree that Ebay is a great way to start selling.

  • http://www.tweakyourbiz.com Niall Devitt

    Great advice, Sian! I’d add that local businesses need to work together (Local Heroes is a super template) to become greater than the some of their parts, collaboration is the new competition :)     

  • http://www.sianphillips.ie/ Sian Phillips

    Good idea Niall 

  • http://www.sianphillips.ie/ Sian Phillips

    Thanks for the suggestion Tina – I completely agree a professional site is definitely worth it

  • Deirdre Wyvern

    I’ve said it elsewhere before but most businesses should have a fairly up-to-date website with the minimum of opening hours and phone number on it, that’s easily navigable by mobile, even if all you have is a Hairdressers or coffee shop, I regularly try to check whether or not somewhere is open when I’m heading for the city centre after work to plan a shopping route.

    Remember, as well, that what people call your shops location may not agree with the physical address of the shop, make sure people can find you, particularly if you have a few locations, how do you tell people how to find the shop? that makes it less impersonal to a browser, they make a personal connection to it, particularly if they’re emigrants.  Listen to customers or ask them how they notice/guide people to the shop.

    Have a history piece on your website, if your shop is old, all the better, if not, why not have a history of the location? Particularly if there was a similar shop and the reason you opened was because you had a personal connection with the site “when I realised that xyz sweet shop that I loved going to closed I had to open something, in respect of my memories of that shop, we make Love-Heart cupcakes (picture), many of our regulars love to share their memories as they pick up the cakes.”  This anchors the shop in people’s psyches.  

  • http://www.sianphillips.ie/ Sian Phillips

    Thanks for the comment Deirdre – you have some great suggestions

  • http://twitter.com/TheRetailProj The Retail Project

    I agree that every retailer should have an online shop, but I think the high street is far from doomed. Amazon are opening high street stores, Google is opening a high street store in Dublin, Apple have high street stores. On the face of those big names one could suggest that the opposite is happening – online is coming to a high street near you!

    Where I live in Kilcullen the high street is booming because there are some unique and beautiful shops – a butchers that has it’s own slaughter house and sells the best meat in Ireland, 2 or 3 artisan food shops, a baker, a vegetable shop, a haberdashery, a sweet shop, a boutique florist, a shoe repair shop, a few good eateries, and a saddlery. I can’t see any of those shops being put out of business by online (but I do think they should be online as well).On the other hand for reasons I don’t understand there are many villages in Ireland where you have a butcher that only sells 5 cuts of meat, a load of Spar type shops, a crusty looking coffee shop, and a petrol station. No wonder people go to Tesco or go online.

    Great article – I just think it should look at why the high street is losing out rather than assuming it is because online is inevitably going to dominate because it is intrinsically better – it is not – it is just an alternative or even a complimentary outlet. Crappy online stores will go out of business as fast as crappy offline stores!

    I do have a vested interest - http://theretailproject.com/

  • http://www.sianphillips.ie/ Sian Phillips

    Thanks for your reply. It’s great news to hear the shops in your town are doing so well. Your last suggestion is a good idea for a blog post for you to write – I’d look forward to reading it :)

  • http://www.ebazr.com/ online shopping

    Obviously high street people have very busy schedule. So they can have time to go to stores and malls for shopping.

  • http://www.ebazr.com/ online shopping

    Obviously high street people have very busy schedule. So they can have time to go to stores and malls for shopping.

  • k8twopointoh

    Sian, I really enjoyed this article, because not too long ago I was contemplating if I should just start shopping online. It all started when I ran out of my favorite lotion from Bath & Body Works. I ran to the mall nearby after work to purchase my lotion, however I found that the Bath & Body Works that was there from my last visit, I would say 3 weeks prior, was no longer there. There was a large sign stating that it would return in May due to renovations. Right at that moment I felt as if I wasted my time and that I could have just ordered the lotion from their online store. 

    I have to say that the benefit of an online store is time efficiency for the customer, but to really think of it though the only reason why I purchased my now favorite lotion was because I had the opportunity to ‘test’ it at the store. So, with this said I absolutely agree that local businesses should have an online option, but maintain their store for customers like myself. Again, great article!