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    B&M shop...card processing and other matters!

    OK, I'm looking to expand Budget Bumps from internet only to a B&M shop locally.
    There are no stores in our town selling maternity wear and we have a high pregnancy rate round here SO, I want to cash in (who wouldn't?!!)

    I have a merchant account for online processing with Lloyds TSB cardnet and would obviously need a card swipe machine (or chip and pin, I guess nowadays) for the shop
    Are Cardnet likely to want me to pay a set-up fee again? Being as I'm an existing customer already?? Or is there a chance they might waiver the set-up cost to keep my business? (otherwise I'll end up shopping around all over again BIG YAWN!!)

    Just wondered if anyone had any experience of setting up B&M after the internet?
    Just finding premises that haven't been taken up (typically many in the last few weeks!!) is proving hard enough although we have found somewhere we really really love!! Typically just over budget but aint that always the way?

    So, any general help/advice on setting up in the "real" world would be great!! Cheers!
    Tracey

    #2
    Err... I'm confused ... weren't you trying to sell up a few months ago ... or was that someone else?

    Don't know anything about setting up a B&M shop (we started our internet business because many of the B&M shops were closing down),
    but I can offer a couple of observations:

    Obvious point: What's the proximity of the nearest Mothercare?
    I've watched several attempts at opening maternity/toddler shops in Cheltenham and they always fail.
    I think they have aimed too high, trying to hit a fashion market and choosing a location in the most expensive street.
    One that has succeeded is on a main road, but a little out of the way, and not near the High Street.

    All the best if you do go ahead.

    we have a high pregnancy rate round here
    Anybody want to own up to being responsible for this?

    Alan Compton
    www.greenknightgames.co.uk
    Great board games and cards games you won't find in the High Street
    http://www.greenknightgames.co.uk/ac...iftTRAP_2.html
    GiftTRAP - the ideal Christmas game

    Comment


      #3
      Originally posted by acompton
      Err... I'm confused ... weren't you trying to sell up a few months ago ... or was that someone else?
      That was me.... but the circumstances are complicated!


      Originally posted by acompton
      Obvious point: What's the proximity of the nearest Mothercare?
      25 miles away... quite considerable. The only other store in our town selling anything baby related is a small but growing independant.

      Originally posted by acompton
      I think they have aimed too high, trying to hit a fashion market and choosing a location in the most expensive street.
      Not exactly going to be an issue here due to budget!

      Originally posted by acompton
      One that has succeeded is on a main road, but a little out of the way, and not near the High Street.
      Which is quite comparable to the location we're looking at. It's a thoroughfare from Childrens Center/Bus Station and Health Clinic to town centre and we have no competition in the maternity wear market at all. Nearest place selling any is at least 20 miles away.

      I'm actually not too concerned from a business POV, it's more the logistics of it that scares me!
      Tracey

      Comment


        #4
        You will be looking at quite a high cost in stock for the shop

        You could approach your existing suppliers to see if they would support you with stocks that are not invoiced untill sold by you to help cashflow, in return for better positioning of their stock etc. you never know untill you ask what people will offer to help with.

        Mind the lease as a lot of shops have ongoing leases in which you are responcible for rent etc even if your company fails, i.e. be a LTD and dont put your house on the line as you have a track record to use.

        Specialist shops off the main centre need an advertising budget to work but generall pay much lower rents, ballance the two after all its numbers through the door that count nothing else

        Presentation is everything, if the shop looks like a charity shop you will never make a go of it
        Chris Ashdown

        Comment


          #5
          If it is anything like natwest streamline, i can use the same merchant account but would have to pay for the terminal rental or purchase.

          I could not comment on Lloyds, i have noticed banks differ ther offerings so you can not compare as you get the answer "we do this aswell so its not the same"

          Good Luck though, considering the same thing in my area aswell so would like to be kept informed (not maternity wear)

          Darren

          Comment


            #6
            Setting up a B & M Shop

            In a word, DON'T.
            Add up the start up costs, stock, overheads, staff, etc., etc., then look what you could do with your website with the same investment.
            What is you catchment for a B & M store, 100,000?
            What is your catchment for a fully promoted Website, 26 million?
            Keep your money or spend it on your site, No shoplifters, No ruined stock, No aggressive stroppy customers, I could go on but having spent 26 years with a B & M store I'm just a touch jaded.

            Comment


              #7
              look what you could do with your website with the same investment.
              I have to agree - I am amazed at the number of people who will spend a fortune on a B&B shop every month and yet penny pinch on thier website. Not refering to you specifically Tracy so no offence intended.

              Comment


                #8
                I would agree with the above sentiments, i have not set up a B&M myself, however one of my best mates has and you will be amazed at the associated costs. There is only one sector growing in retail and that is the internet - period.

                My mate pays around 7k a year for a non prime location in leasing and then has the associated costs of insurance, staff, rates, utilities, alarms, security, tills, card machines, pc's and worst of all - has to deal face to face with the general public.

                12 months ago he had a 4lb lump hammer put over his head for making too much noise at 4pm in the afternoon. His head was split open and the guy was going to go for him again, had i not managed to stop him. To see a man yield a lump hammer for no reasonable reason is frightening. I had this guy in a bear hug with a lump hammer in his hand with my mates blood all over it. All this while my mate is blacking out in pain on the floor.

                A few months ago, a group of 4 guys seemed to think that it's ok to walk in cause trouble and steal things. The door to the shop now has to be locked and each visitor has to be buzzed in. He has also had to install CCTV which is close on 2k.

                It is probably pertinent to add here, that the area is not the greatest, but it is not bronx style by any means and is a really busy area. Supermarket and post office next door, off licence over the road, schools all over the place, main centre half a mile away, police station 200 yards away, busy road with buses every 10 minutes or so, many other shops around and a general hive of activity. At the time he was attacked he had a new born girl (2 months old) and when he leaves his shop on a night time he is never sure that he is safe. The threat of break-ins is always there (although your lines may be a little less desirable for the common thief).

                Tracey i could go on for ages, however if you have your heart set on it, then you will ignore all of us anyway. I can almost guarantee that in 2 years time you will look back and go, why oh why didn't i listen. You cannot under any circumstances open a B&M on a tight budget and succeed.

                Invest the money online as everybody is telling you too, owning a shop and the associated overheads is something you will be doing until you are 65, whereas with the internet, you might just be able to retire a little earlier.

                Incidentally, my mate (until recently) was with Cardnet and banked with Lloyds TSB also. He recently changed banks (Alliance & Leicester from memory) and has saved quite a bit on charges. He also got a call off them selling their card machine services, which are substantially cheaper than the Cardnet, which he is moving over to very shortly. He uses the card machine in the shop to process all of his internet transactions.

                Comment


                  #9
                  Tracey you're not selling high value desirable electrical goods, tobacco, booze or anything eminently nickable or worth much unless you're pregnant, I think you are doing just the right thing for *your* business here - it's outgrown your house, you need somewhere for the stock, and, shop permises in your locality are VERY cheap compared to down here (looking at over 30K per year here incl rates, just not sustainable), so why not move to a shop/warehouse with a shopfront AND very good footfall. Wish I could do the same here, OK I'm in cheap premises but they are NOT suitable for public access and when you consider every visitor we get spends 3-4 x the ££ they do online and usually comes back again, I think we'd gain if we could have customers passing and coming in off the street, particularly if they could walk past between in a town centre (even more than the 30K round here!)..plus it's a well known fact that pregnant women have nothing to wear and want to spend money!

                  Anyhow I think you need to look to joining the British Shopkeepers Association or whatever they are called, not sure of the correct name / website but someone may tell me what their real name is but they do have cheap rates for pdq machines and deals on other equipment that will help you.

                  Good luck, don't listen to the others do what you feel is right.
                  Miranda Stamp
                  Twinkle Twinkle
                  www.twinkleontheweb.co.uk
                  Cloth nappies, natural toiletries, organic baby clothing, potty training aids, slings and more...

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Originally posted by buspassjohn
                    In a word, DON'T.
                    Add up the start up costs, stock, overheads, staff, etc., etc., then look what you could do with your website with the same investment.
                    What is you catchment for a B & M store, 100,000?
                    What is your catchment for a fully promoted Website, 26 million?
                    Keep your money or spend it on your site, No shoplifters, No ruined stock, No aggressive stroppy customers, I could go on but having spent 26 years with a B & M store I'm just a touch jaded.

                    Having been in retail since 1971 and with my own stores since '83 to having three retails shops in fairly affluent areas the word is DON'T DO IT!!!!

                    For all the reasons John has stated and more. You will waste your time sitting around being pestered by transient people, 'Just getting ideas' and go mental when you hear the same lame excuses of why someone can't find something.

                    Then the charity shops turning themselves into retail outlets in prime positions using the good causes card and free labour to do you out of business too.
                    The whole retail market let's face it is dominated by those who have a very deep pockets who can ride the peaks and troughs of the business cycle and can get differential pricing through their stores across their market reach. They also have sophisticated websites too.

                    If your life is as complicated like mine then I'd suggest getting a tiny box shop that is open on very odd times that is really a showcase for what you do and plaster it with your web address and allow customers to collect their orders from it.
                    Then you can sell the business with a small retail outlet as a going concern and move on.
                    I've been tempted to do this myself as I would love to go back to Sydney.

                    Duncan
                    Ph: 0845 838 1 839
                    Skype: GiftsLine

                    Comment


                      #11
                      [QUOTE=Miranda Stamp]Tracey you're not selling high value desirable electrical goods, tobacco, booze or anything eminently nick-able or worth much unless you're pregnant money! QUOTE]

                      One of the worst offenders were pregnant women nicking stock would you believe it. Lots of places to hide items and those with 4x4 buggies that blocked the flow of customers and the unruly children damaging the stock.

                      Mothers were the worst as they are so overprotective and can't see what the kids are doing as they have [biologically] detuned to the reality of what's happening.

                      What may be acceptable at home is not acceptable in the shops. Some of my good customers were in despair at the attitude of some mother's when I had to say something to stop my shop and stock from being ruined. Belligerent and rude has been my experience and something I most certainly would not want to go back to. I do not miss the abuse and the attacks. The laws do not allow me to touch or apprehend anyone and so they run away with only the CCTV to show for it and the police are too busy to catch them for my large loss but small fry to them.

                      To explain my rationale in full in this forum or even to write it in an email would be long and unproductive but believe me when I say that it is a real mine field in today's retail market. Not worth the set up costs that's for sure.

                      Duncan
                      Ph: 0845 838 1 839
                      Skype: GiftsLine

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Worth having a look at the Federation of Small Businesses for a card machine deal or discount. When we set up in 2000 their £70 joining fee allowed us to waver the £120 set up fee from Streamline.

                        One idea to consider is an industrial unit. They usually have an office already and you can partition it so Mrs Bump can have a look at your display area and you can still have racking etc (hidden) for economical storage of products.

                        You will lose out on passing trade like a conventional shop, but will gain in the fact that almost everyone who visits will be genuinely interested in your shop. Mrs Bump's meet up and stuff so word would get around I'm sure.

                        I can assure you that running a shop yourself AND trying to keep up with orders from your website can be frustrating. You can spend 90 minutes listening to how good your shop is and how the areas been crying out for it only for Mrs Timewaster to leave without spending. In that time you could have packed and processed the previous night/days orders.

                        As a male I think I'd rather buy sprog goods in a real shop than online. But thats just my opinion.

                        Good Luck Tattoo Lady, and if you need any other opinions just ask (aye, right lol).
                        Football Heaven

                        For all kinds of football souvenirs and memorabilia.

                        Comment


                          #13
                          Originally posted by george
                          As a male I think I'd rather buy sprog goods in a real shop than online. But thats just my opinion.
                          And, as a female, I agree. I like to see/feel clothing when I'm buying it and I rarely if ever buy clothing online for me or the boys.

                          Originally posted by george
                          Good Luck Tattoo Lady, and if you need any other opinions just ask (aye, right lol).
                          Tracey

                          Comment


                            #14
                            I think though I'm party to a lot more information than you lot of discouraging people! I've spoken to Tracey about this in a bit more detail. Where her shop is (the one she has in mind) is a good size PLUS has about 1200 sq ft of storage, so she can get all her stuff out of the house into business premises that has a shop front and that happens to have good footfall past, AND at a very very reasonable price - only a couple of hundred ££ more per month than I pay down here (Berkshire) for less than 1/3 of the potential space in a shared premises with no front door of our own (visitors to us have to walk through a machine tool shop to get to our unit, the swarf from the floor walks into our doormat and I shudder every time another 'I just called in because I wanted to see what you sell' turns up with bump + bored & barefoot toddler in pushchair they want to let out of the chair after 2 minutes...NOT practical for visitors!). My next move (our cheap premises are short lease as they're due for redevelopment in the next 3-5 years) has to be to a unit with a suitable showroom area. I'm looking at having to afford 3x the rent or more.

                            Just the area I'm in. Wish I was in an area like Tracey's. I see Tracey's solution as a practical one to get her stock and business out of her house into suitable premises that happen to be on a busy thoroughfare to gain extra business through a B&M shop.
                            Miranda Stamp
                            Twinkle Twinkle
                            www.twinkleontheweb.co.uk
                            Cloth nappies, natural toiletries, organic baby clothing, potty training aids, slings and more...

                            Comment


                              #15
                              I agree with you Miranda it is a decision that is based on the need and requirements of the business. However the down sides weigh heavy on the whole enterprise.
                              If, as I suggested it was a means to an ends so that if it pays then keep going or that it was to set it up to sell it on then fine.

                              I, like several others have very jaded and jaundiced points of view from the experiences we have had in the past.
                              I've always found that as soon as you get ahead of yourself the rents and rates up your overheads again and your back to square one. Unless of course you have the freehold.

                              Duncan
                              Ph: 0845 838 1 839
                              Skype: GiftsLine

                              Comment

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