| Small
shops - trying to survive in competitive times |
Corner
shopsWhat is the future of the traditional corner shop? Some experts
are warning that in as little as 10 years, small shops like butchers, grocers
and corner shop convenience stores could disappear from our high streets, if nothing
is done to protect them. The big four - ASDA, Tesco, Sainsbury and Morrisons
- control 75 percent of the market. But what happens to the small shops
that live in their shadow? Are the supermarkets to blame or are shopkeepers
failing to change with the times? Decline in business At Heanor
in Derbyshire butcher Keith Poynter certainly blames the supermarkets for the
decline in his business. Eighty years after his grandfather set up the
first Poynters, Keith has closed the family firm for good. | End
of an era - Keith Poynter outside his family shop |
Inside Out
was there on his last day behind the counter. Keith says, "People
don't want to walk around here when they can park for free and buy it all at the
supermarket. You can't park here. It's all against us". At one time
in Heanor there were eight or nine butchers. Since Poynters closed, there
are none. Regulars told us why they would miss more than just the quality
of the produce. Some have been going there for more than 30 years. As
one customer told us, "they call you by your first name. It's that personal
touch you don't get in the supermarket". Survival of the fittestMalcolm
Fountain has been supplying small shops in the East Midlands for nearly 40 years.
He's seen them come and go. Malcolm is adamant that businesses can
prosper and survive if they're run properly and believes a lot of problems they
face are self inflicted. | Last
hours - many small shops fail to survive |
Out on his rounds
around Leicestershire he showed us why it's the survival of the fittest with or
without the supermarkets. He says, "If you want to be a professional
shopkeeper, you just sell your house and that's it. Any other career and you'd
have years of training".
In Leicester Ken Patel has been opening
his shop at the same time for more than 20 years. He works a 90 hour week.
Ken told us: "The government should tell Sainsburys and
Tescos enough is enough, you can't open any more shops in this area. We'll disappear
from the face of the earth if nothing is done."
Retail
specialist Joshua Bamfield from the Centre for Retail Research in Nottingham thinks
Ken is right, something has to be done: "More could be
done about planning controls and local authorities could treat small shops better
than they are." But he's positive about the future. "We believe that
small shops will continue to exist perhaps in smaller numbers than at the moment".
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