How Brick and Mortar Retail Stores Can Survive

 

How Brick and Mortar Retail Stores Can Survive in an Online World of Shoppers ...by Bill Knell

Nationwide chains like Best Buy and local mom and pop retail stores are facing a common and unfortunate business reality. People are coming into their stores to view and try out new items, then leaving to order the same product online from competitors offering better prices. While this may be a new problem, it might have an old solution.

Back in the early 1980s stores like Walmart, Kmart and Consumers Distributing began to take a huge bit out of the retail market. Walmart and Kmart did it by undercutting the prices charged by competitors, while Consumers Distributing offered a number of discount priced, popular products which people could order by mail, buy over the phone or instantly purchase at about five hundred catalog stores located throughout the USA and Canada.

The fact that Consumers Distributing combined catalog sales with brick and mortar locations in the J.C. Penny and Sears model was not new. Their hook was that they didn't sell everything, just the most popular items that consumers wanted. Those items were sold at terrific discounts in catalog show rooms designed with the goal of getting customers in and out fast. Their downfall was that the show room model they developed for speedy customer service never actually worked in many locations and some of the most popular or highly discounted items available in the catalog were habitually out of stock in their stores.

The novelty of the C.D. business model and their low prices kept them alive for many years with customers willing to wait to get a good deal, but customers eventually got tired of the notoriously long lines, slow service and finding so many products out of stock in their catalog show rooms. Consumers Distributing ceased to exist in 1996, but they left a legacy that we can learn from and update.

Instead of offering everything, large and small retail stores should consider scaling back to new and hot products that really fly off the shelves. On-line ordering offered in-store is another essential. Allow the option for customers to sit down at a designated computer station, browse your web site and place orders that can be filled through shipping or in-store pick up. Less stuff means less staff and overhead. That should allow real world retail locations to lower their prices and help them to compete more successfully with on-line web sites offering discounts and brick and mortar mega-sellers like Walmart.

The key is stock, speed and service. Have what you offer online in stock and get customers in and out of your doors fast. Too many stores have purchasing stations and systems that are geared to their own accounting and inventory needs, not to moving customers rapidly through the purchasing and check out process. You can also build customer loyalty by creatively bundling products together, offering exclusive deals or items and in-store amenities.

There is little doubt that virtual shopping might eventually mean the near death of most brick and mortar retail locations, but until that day comes there are still ways to successfully compete. The upside to real world retail is that consumer satisfaction with online shopping is not anywhere near what it ought to be. Everything is fine until something goes wrong, an item is damaged in shipping or you need to return it. People get frustrated by having to email customer service a thousand times or spend an hour or two on the phone choosing any one of a hundred options before they get to talk to a real person.

Real world stores can prosper through customer connectivity and product creativity. They can survive and thrive by offering on-line ordering in store, making sure all the products they sell are in stock and ready to go, having a user friendly web site and keeping it constantly updated, and making customer service job one. The day of the tired and annoyed salesperson or snotty cashier are over. Anyone that wants to get and keep a job in real world retail has to think of themselves as a partner in the business where they work.

Real world stores can add to their appeal by offering everything from snack stations and free refreshments to supervised child play rooms or areas and free product demonstration classes or seminars. Customer service experts should always be available to instantly answer questions or handle and solve any problems that pop up. Gift wrapping, local delivery and other customer amenities can also help to boost sales, cement consumer loyalty and bring in new customers through word of mouth.

Part of serving the customer well and profiting from creativity is linking up with other local businesses by offering them the opportunity to market their services or non-competing products in your store for a fee or commission. The more reasons you give a consumer to enter your store, the better chance you will have to sell something and keep the lights on while making a profit and growing your business.

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Bill Knell's books are available on Ebay (Rating 5/5), Walmart, Amazon, Lulu, GoodReads, Kobo and more. Some titles are available in Spanish 

Radio Personalities that book me as a guest for their shows call me The UFO GUY.‭ ‬This book covers my early life experiences and investigations.  As you’ll soon discover, my life has always been surrounded by the paranormal and unusual events. People that have experienced the unexplained have been drawn to me, and I to them. - Bill Knell

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The belief in life after death is a common belief among most of the world’s civilizations and that may have been the birth of the idea of ghosts and spirits. The Vampire persona has evolved from many true and untrue facts, legends and myths. At various times vampires, real and imagined, have been considered fiends, supernatural beings, shape-shifters, mentally disturbed deviants, satanic servants and fetish followers...

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The seeds of her self-doubt had been sown in her early years. She'd been relentlessly bullied in school for being different, for her passion for gaming, which had been dismissed as a “boy thing.” That hurt had left deep scars. Creating Lemonade had been a shield, a way to deflect the negativity she faced in the real world. It was a safe space where she could be celebrated for her skills, her wit, and her personality, instead of facing ridicule.


The air hung heavy with the scent of damp earth and decaying leaves. Each step crunched on the forest floor, a sound amplified in the suffocating silence of the Blackwood Forest. My breath hitched in my throat, a thin plume of white mist disappearing into the inky blackness. The only light came from my lantern, a feeble spark against the overwhelming darkness that pressed in from all sides, swallowing the forest in its shadowy embrace. Above, the branches of ancient trees twisted like skeletal fingers, their gnarled silhouettes scratching at the moonless sky.

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The darkness claimed me, swallowing me whole. But in death, a twisted metamorphosis occurred. The venom of betrayal, the searing agony of death, transformed into a cold, unrelenting fire. I became a specter, an instrument of vengeance. The chilling weight of my decomposing body became a burden that fueled my relentless pursuit.

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Grandma Elara's tales filled the quiet evenings at her house. The aroma of woodsmoke and simmering herbs hung heavy in the air, mingling with the scent of old books and the comforting warmth of her presence. Her cozy old house seemed to hum with a gentle energy, a place where ancient stories and timeless secrets intertwined. The antique furniture, each piece telling a story of its own, seemed to come alive as she spun her tales, the very atmosphere of the house adding to the mystique of the Ceasg and its watery realm.

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Cerelia, a museum employee with a penchant for the obscure and a healthy dose of skepticism tempered by an insatiable curiosity, had been cleaning the newly acquired collection of ancient artifacts. She was meticulous, and painstaking in her work, a sharp contrast to the hurried pace of the city outside the museum walls. She liked the quiet solitude of the museum, a world apart from the noisy urban jungle. She found solace in the relics of the past, each object whispering a story of bygone eras.

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Aislinn felt it too, a growing sense of unease, not just from the tales of a missing Prince, but from the visions teased by the necklace. The shadowed figure, the one with piercing eyes and a cruel smile,haunted her dreams and even invaded her waking moments. He was connected to the necklace, a palpable sense of threat radiating from the glowing pendant. The prince's fate, she now realized, was entwined with her own. And somewhere, a darkness waited, a darkness that the necklace seemed both to warn her about and guide her towards. The quiet village of Oakhaven, with its familiar rhythms and predictable patterns, could no longer contain her. 



The seeds of her self-doubt had been sown in her early years. She'd been relentlessly bullied in school for being different, for her passion for gaming, which had been dismissed as a “boy thing.” That hurt had left deep scars. Creating Lemonade had been a shield, a way to deflect the negativity she faced in the real world. It was a safe space where she could be celebrated for her skills, her wit, and her personality, instead of facing ridicule.

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