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Thanks for your comments mconridge. I must say though, that most of the shops that now stand empty in Torquay do so because they have been vacated by some of the Big Boys: Past Times, Monsoon, HMV, Dixons, Woolworths, Jessops and so on. It also hasn't helped with the likes of M&S and Next moving onto an out of town retail park with free parking.
However, generally speaking, I have been quite impressed with the (comparative) robustness of the non-food independents. We moved to Torquay to start our gift-shop business nearly six years ago now, and although some independents have been and gone along the way, I would say we now have a nett gain of independents on our high street. Trouble is, with things seeming to be getting tougher and tougher it's difficult to say how for how much longer that is going to be case.
May I wish you good luck with your new ventures anyway.
I went around my supposedly well to do small town the other day and though I knew a few places were up for lease, I was quite astonished that the situation has got as bad as it is. The number of empty and soon to be empty places is very noticeable now.
I predicted that the end of the recession would not be the end of the problems for retail, irrespective of the internet issue, but I thought more people would be somehow forced to give their own business a shot due to the poor employment options available.
My updated prognosis is that landlords are, as I have discovered, simply holding out for too much rent and their unwillingness to reduce rents massively to fill up their properties is borne out of a reluctance to reboot the whole rental market to a much lower level of rents, which would ultimately undermine property values and consequently hit financing of the same.
Same here, independent shops that have been going for thirty years or more are now throwing in the towel, or being forced to. It's sad to see.
It's also easy for everyone to blame rents, but would a £5,000 or £10,000 reduction in their annual rent really be the difference between a viable business and a non-viable one? If things have got that tight then it's time to consider your options now before the decision is taken out of your hands.
You clearly aren't an independent retailer then!!!! A £5-10k reduction in rent would make a massive difference to my business and I'm quite sure I would not be alone in saying that.
You clearly aren't an independent retailer then!!!! A £5-10k reduction in rent would make a massive difference to my business and I'm quite sure I would not be alone in saying that.
So if you saved £5,000 your business would be great but without it it's not? What happens if your sales drop by £10,000 next year? Is that the end for you then?
If that really is the case then you are doing right by considering your options now.
That's a lot of the problem, to many independents hanging on with blind faith when they should have had the good sense to get out before things got so tight.
It's also easy for everyone to blame rents, but would a £5,000 or £10,000 reduction in their annual rent really be the difference between a viable business and a non-viable one? If things have got that tight then it's time to consider your options now before the decision is taken out of your hands.
I wondered if the landlords rent is still high because as a landlord you are better off with a profitable business in your unit that can afford the high rent rather than a newbie independent who is going to go down the pan in three months.
Just playing devil's avocet here.
It's not nearly as simplistic as you imply but yes, a £5k reduction in my rent would have me staying on for another 5 years whereas a £5k increase and I shall exercise my upcoming option to break without question.
As you are dropping in such large figures as though it's a packet of Smarties I assume your business yields such massive profits it would be difficult for you to appreciate that £5-10k would be a huge sum to many of us mere retailers who regularly slog it out for less than that in a whole month.
At the very least a £5k windfall would enable me to hire a temp for a fortnight and go on holiday .... I would love a break!!!
It would allow a retailer to spend another 10k on stock..which could convert in to 20/30k increased turnover...is that still a drop in the ocean to you?
When running our shop we would spend anywhere from 2k to 3k a month on stock (we kept to a budget) so to have an extra 1k on top free every month...wow...dreamland. That would possibly create another job position the following year for a part timer.
Hi Doodles, you have made the point I was trying to make perfectly. I wasn't dropping the figures like smarties, £5k - £10k is more than likely half the average rent most retailers on here are paying, so we are talking about a massive 50% reduction in rent. Now that is never going to happen.
At an educated guess I reckon your rent is somewhere between £9k and £12k per annum. So this £5k would be about half your rent. What would it pay for? A holiday and temp cover. Not exactly a business saving amount. Now if somehow rents were reduced by 20%, a more realistic figure, you wouldn't even be able to afford that temp and the holiday with the savings.
So what, where and how would reducing rents by 20%, or even that 50% really help businesses. Maybe it would pre-long a slow death by a year? Would it make a new business suddenly viable?
Yes, obviously it would be nice to have cheaper rent. But nice is about the only benefit it would have.
I know dozens of small Retailers for whom a £10k saving this year would make a major difference. Lots of small Retailers run "lifestyle" businesses. These businesees are often sneered upon and looked down on as "not real businesses" but they contribute tens of millions to the nations coffers every single year whilst paying the highest Business Rates in the country and recieve nothing but scorn from other "proper" businesses that just happen to employ ten people at minimum wage.
Way off the mark with my rent - £17,500 per annum if you really want to know, with the probability of an increase to £23,500 next year (which is why I shall be getting out in all likelihood).
I cover all my outgoings currently and have not had to take out finance to do it, I make enough to maintain stock levels and introduce new ranges when I see something I think would sit well with what we do and I take a modest salary as well as selling my own work. A decrease in rent would make a massive difference to the direction I could steer the business in as I always have ideas I'd like to try - however, I would not be prepared to invest more er time & money into this shop when I know that the landlord will be hiking our rent up next year. Which is a shame.
That's ridiculous rent for the area you are inUnless you are 2,000 sq ft plus. Can see why you are getting out.
There's market towns not a million miles away from you where you can get 500 sq ft in top spot in the High Street for that money.
Guess the Co-Op's fair trade policy doesn't go as far as Hampshire!
97sq metres - and no, the Co-Op's fair trade policy doesn't appear to have reached us!
I'm sure you are aware of http://www.shopproperty.co.uk/ but if not it's well worth a look.
For my town, that looks like an excellent way to find out the details of shops that used to be available to rent. Last year.
That's about 1,000 sq ft, isn't it? Still seems excessive for the location and certainly not worth £23,500.
It is bloody frightening when you work out the rent you pay compared to what you could buy for. Hope you get the nerve to move and get a freehold with accommodation. Trouble with buying though is often the good ones never come up for sale because the leases are so valuable. Then again as the saying goes "if it was easy.....".
I'm sure you are aware of http://www.shopproperty.co.uk/ but if not it's well worth a look.
So the obvious question then is why did you take the lease?
Which can actually be very useful when gauging prices. I'd use it in conjunction with agents sites.
Another useful one is http://www.christie.com/en , even if you don't want to buy a business it can give you an idea of how a town is performing and what is going/being sold, again use it with other business for sale websites but it's a good starting point. As I said elsewhere just because a town looks fully occupied doesn't mean all is rosy.
Because when we took the lease on it was only £14,500 per annum and we took a punt that as the economy wasn't going brilliantly the landlord would not impose a massive increase at the next rent review a year later. We were wrong.
Way off the mark with my rent - £17,500 per annum if you really want to know, with the probability of an increase to £23,500 next year (which is why I shall be getting out in all likelihood).
I cover all my outgoings currently and have not had to take out finance to do it, I make enough to maintain stock levels and introduce new ranges when I see something I think would sit well with what we do and I take a modest salary as well as selling my own work. A decrease in rent would make a massive difference to the direction I could steer the business in as I always have ideas I'd like to try - however, I would not be prepared to invest more er time & money into this shop when I know that the landlord will be hiking our rent up next year. Which is a shame.
Rather than lobby your MP you can email him your comments about the retail sector, he wants to hear how it really is.
I know Margate quite well, they would have been damned if they did and damned if they didn't really. The town has been dying for years and whilst I wouldn't have chosen to have Tesco there, it's better than a load of derelict buildings.
You know Margate well then?
Of course if the plan is to have a supermarket or two, a few coffee shops and change the remaining units to residential then it's a positive I suppose.
Margate, a town I've known for almost 60 years, isn't going to get any better without someone doing something.
Indeed. So why does nobody seem to have a clue? They all have lots and lots of meetings, lots and lots of tea, lots and lots of choccy biscuits and yet nobody can sort it out?
I dare say there are people in the Margate community who have some great ideas for regenerating the area and making it successful, but will they be listened to by the 'steering groups' and 'organisation committees' that tend to be operated by people who shuffle around all day wondering what to have for tea.
A vibrant, bustling, engaging high street is what we all want to see. Sure, you can have a Tesco Express if you want but only if it benefits the street and adds to it.