Supporting local businesses
Posted: Thu Jul 16, 2009 12:33 pm
This is very general, but relevant to many members - we are bombarded with options to buy grey or simply buy products from online, overseas retailers (such as Amazon) as opposed to supporting your local bricks & mortar or even local clicks & mortar retailer.
Many of us will take the cheaper, online option instead of supporting the local retailer because it makes financial sense to us.
However, I often bemoan the loss of local businesses due to the inability to compete on price. Part of this is because consumers find it so easy to source [mis]information from the web and use a retailer as simply a transaction portal as opposed to a buying experience, including advice and service.
A good example is a local bookstore - I believe it has been around for ages and shows no signs of leaving soon, but they are more expensive than Amazon or even Dymocks.com.au. This bookstore employs [presumably] local people. I am familiar to the proprietor and a few of the employees. (Although many of my purchases are gift cards because I refuse to buy Halmark).
Is this notion of supporting the local retailer at the expense of finding the cheapest product a romantic ideal that is not practical in reality?
Is the move towards online retailing at the expense of local bricks & mortar business symptomatic of the loss of community and the "stuff you" attitude prevalent today?
Interested to find out what everyone thinks.
Many of us will take the cheaper, online option instead of supporting the local retailer because it makes financial sense to us.
However, I often bemoan the loss of local businesses due to the inability to compete on price. Part of this is because consumers find it so easy to source [mis]information from the web and use a retailer as simply a transaction portal as opposed to a buying experience, including advice and service.
A good example is a local bookstore - I believe it has been around for ages and shows no signs of leaving soon, but they are more expensive than Amazon or even Dymocks.com.au. This bookstore employs [presumably] local people. I am familiar to the proprietor and a few of the employees. (Although many of my purchases are gift cards because I refuse to buy Halmark).
Is this notion of supporting the local retailer at the expense of finding the cheapest product a romantic ideal that is not practical in reality?
Is the move towards online retailing at the expense of local bricks & mortar business symptomatic of the loss of community and the "stuff you" attitude prevalent today?
Interested to find out what everyone thinks.