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martedì 21 febbraio 2012

Small stores can compete for holiday dollars - Houma Courier

Place Ad HomeNewsLocalBusinessStateNation/WorldPoliticsStormTrackerPhotosVideosWeatherFeaturedCoverage of Jori LiretteStorm coverageSearching for....ArchivesPhoto ReprintsSportsHigh SchoolCollegeSaints CentralNBAOutdoorsStatsPro-Sports StatsEntertainmentEventsArtsMusicMoviesFoodYour PhotosLivingBayou GourmetLiving HereYour PhotosCouponsAnnouncementsEngagement FormWedding FormOpinionLetters to the EditorEditorialsObituariesClassifiedsFor Sale/ WantedPetsServicesLegalRentalsAutosPrint AdsEnhance Your AdReal EstateJobsCars HomePhoto Galleries Comments Share Digg Reddit LinkedIn Mixx Technorati Myspace FARK FURL Email Print WITH PHOTO NO PHOTO Reprints Enlarge Text Tweet Small stores can compete for holiday dollars By Erin Kutz and Jayne O’Donnell
USA TODAY
Published: Sunday, November 20, 2011 at 8:00 a.m. Last Modified: Tuesday, November 8, 2011 at 11:21 a.m.

Economic concerns linger, but mom-and-pop retailers say they finally have some cheer for this holiday shopping season.

Nearly half are more optimistic about holiday sales compared with last year, according to a new survey of 792 small retailers by online small-business community Manta. Four in 10 say they already have better sales compared with last fall.

” More than ever, the consumers in our community really seem to understand the value of shopping locally,” said Jodi Black, president and co-owner of Conover, N.C.-based Beautiful Brains Books and Games. ” We are hopeful this trend will continue through the upcoming holiday season.”

Overall, holiday retail sales are expected to rise 2.8 percent during the months of November and December to $465.6 billion, according to the National Retail Federation.

That boost will come from folks like Brady Kimball of Los Angeles. She is considering bracelets and necklaces as gifts for friends — and checking them out at Meowdy, a costume jewelry shop near her home.

It’s vital for local retailers to lure customers such as Kimball, as holiday sales typically make up about 20 percent to 30 percent of retailers’ annual sales, NRF says.

Kimball’s attraction to local shopping dates back to the years she browsed the tiny shops near her hometown of Harvard, Mass.

” The relationships we developed with these local independent retailers made our shopping a more personal experience,” says Kimball, 36.

That, in turn, ” made any gifts we got for friends and family all that more meaningful.”

The thoughtfulness and personal connection associated with unique gifts are among the biggest draws for Main Street shops, says Alison Jatlow Levy, a retail strategist at the consulting firm Kurt Salmon.

Independent store shoppers can find an unusual present ” that has a great story behind it,” she says.

” Boutique owners are almost like curators,” says Levy, who frequents small independent shops around New York City. ” Local stores can add to the treasure-hunting aspect of gift shopping that the national chain stores often miss.”

While many small stores have a special cachet, they typically lack the resources of their larger competitors.

Those that don’t place big bulk orders miss out on hefty discounts. Without a financially secure holding company backing them, many don’t have the funds for advertising.

” Independent stores are often less familiar to shoppers, particularly online,” says Edgar Dworsky, founder of online consumer resource guide Consumer World. ” They require a higher degree of scrutiny by shoppers to help avoid scam operators compared to the familiar chain names.”

Smaller shops’ often tighter return policies and less-convenient store hours add to the challenge of competing with chains.

And many small shops don’t have the means to staff up for the holidays: 38 percent of firms surveyed by Manta say they aren’t hiring additional holiday staff because they can’t afford to.

Small firms have to work hard for their survival. Some of their tactics for luring customers into their doors:

— Focusing on personal service. Sales and discounts are very important, with 42 percent of shoppers saying that is a top draw, according to the NRF. Yet, customer service is growing in importance and is one of the ” vital components in consumers’ decision-making processes,” NRF says.

Three-quarters of the retailers surveyed by Manta said customer service helps them stand apart from chain-store competitors.

” I keep track of what my customers like and don’t like,” Black says. ” And I can suggest things based on those recommendations.”

That personal touch keeps people coming back, says Manta CEO Pamela Springer. Shoppers can feel ” anonymous in a big-box environment,” she says. Yet, ” local shopping allows that retailer to get to know the customer.”

— Playing up community impact. Shopping at a local boutique has three times the economic impact that shopping at corporate stores does, says Frank Knapp Jr., CEO of the South Carolina Small Business Chamber of Commerce.

For every $100 spent in locally owned, independent stores, $68 returns to the community through taxes, payroll and other expenditures, according to the small-business advocacy group The 3/50 Project.

” Shopping locally keeps the dollars that are spent in the community,” says Allison Proehl, 46, of Jacksonville Beach, Fla. ” Our local paper said it best: If you want a store or restaurant to survive, you have to make a conscious effort to visit those places.”

— Tapping into social media. Three-fourths of small firms surveyed by Manta plan to use social media to promote their holiday offerings this year.

” Like big retailers, we see the value in leveraging social media to reach people in new ways this holiday season,” says Joseph Nerkowski, owner of Holiday Lighting, an Ulby, Mich., retailer.

— Touting green practices. Independent shop owners often look to nearby artists and manufacturers for inventory, which limits transportation costs.

” Those mass-produced gifts from big-box stores come from far-off factories, then get shipped all over the world in huge trucks, boats and planes,” says Becky Striepe, senior editor of Green Upgrader, an online publication about green living. ” When you support local artists, you’re saying no to all of those miles and keeping your money within your community at the same time.”

Local store owners’ roots to the community can push them to adopt more environmentally-conscious practices to boot, Striepe says.

” When you’re invested in a place, you’re much more likely to make decisions that benefit that community, and that includes things like recycling, watching your water footprint and giving back,” Striepe says.

— Offering localized merchandise. Gifts purchased from a local store can also put a stamp of the area on the item. That can mean a lot to loved ones nostalgic for their hometowns.

Marty Checkoway, owner of Firefly Jewelry and Gifts in Boston, says one of his store’s big gift items is a glass ornament with a picture of baseball stadium Fenway Park.

” A lot of people will give them to a family member who has moved away from the city,” he says. ” What it comes down to is, it makes the experience for the gift a little more special.”

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venerdì 21 ottobre 2011

Correspondence Courses Bring Corresponding Dollars Home

1ByRobyn Stone

Knowledge is power. It has always been that way. When it comes down to choosing between two equally matched competitors, the one with the most knowledge will always come out on top. After World War II, many veterans had to go to work to bring their families back from the brink of poverty. Many of these veterans had learned the lessons of education from their military service. The world of correspondence courses began to grow exponentially as these veterans began to work their jobs and then come home to engage the emerging fields of study that post-war economic growth brought to the country. These veterans saw correspondence courses as a way of bettering their lives and their families and they are still providing that same service to men and women today.

Technology has made online courses available to anyone who wants to have a better life. Nearly every high school, technical school, community college, and university offers some form of online study. However, the cost for these traditional schools to provide online courses is often very high. Non-traditional schools have always offered excellent correspondence course opportunities at very reasonable rates. Because they focus on the home study course, they have been able to provide quality instruction at prices that allow anyone to be able to obtain it on their own terms.

Correspondence courses can provide the great equalizer in a fast-paced work environment. Many industries hire unskilled workers and train them in job skills they must have to accomplish their work. Although these workers become skilled at a particular position, they are unable to further their careers due to the lack of educational background that companies may require before advancing them. Online courses have changed the paradigm and allowed workers to obtain the theoretical knowledge of their jobs at home while they are obtaining the technical skills at work. Employers have found that workers with this type of persistence make great leaders on which their companies can grow.

Many people today have taken jobs that just feed their families and provide no long-term satisfaction for them. Correspondence courses change all that, since there are so many programs to choose from today. With courses ranging from auto mechanics to forensic science, and veterinary assisting and many more in between, these online courses make learning available to everyone who has the desire.

Most correspondence courses are offered by accredited schools and are targeted specifically for people who wish to advance or change their careers. Many employers have found these online courses so valuable that they offer tuition assistance for employees that are taking them.

Correspondence courses give students real world, timely information that gives them the confidence, skills and current information to become more productive and increase a company's profitability. Because of their focus on online learning, these correspondence courses are affordable which makes them available for anyone who wants a better life. The ability to balance their work, families, and education is the number one reason for taking online courses for people today. It is also the main reason correspondence courses are flourishing.

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