This has just been announced on the Radio 3 One O'Clock News. Will it make much difference to message boarders? Is this the beginning of the end for High Street CD and DVD retailing?
This has just been announced on the Radio 3 One O'Clock News. Will it make much difference to message boarders? Is this the beginning of the end for High Street CD and DVD retailing?
Not really, that began several years ago.
The closures announced to the Stock Market this morning are a response to a 20% drop in sales and include Waterstone's. There will be few retailers that can absorb that level of drop in turnover without taking drastic action.
As far as I am concerned it will make no difference at all to my CD purchasing as I find the service, price and convenience of buying on-line irresistible.
I sent a note to HMV telling them that my potential spending on their products was seroiusly diminished because of the
bloody disorientating and unimaginative racket your ears and mind have to endure in their outlets.
Wonder if I'll get a reply !![]()
I live in London near the West End, and HMV seemed to be packed over the holiday. I understand that their classical sales at the Tottenham Court Road shop are holding up well. I do buy online occasionally, but I would really miss the browsing experience and the chance to spot the unexpected. You do need to be clear what you are looking for online, and to me that's a drawback. I'll probably spend more time in Les Aldrich at Muswell Hill for that friendly personal attention.
Since the classical content of HMV shops has been zilch for some years (maybe except in the Smoke, where I rarely go), it will make no difference to me.
For those who are wallet conscious it may be considered that is a disadvantage of browsing
However, I find that online purchasing can also have similar results. Amazon, in particular, always follows up on a purchase by suggesting other related titles that one might like to consider; with the inevitable result that one always ends up buying more than one had initially intended...
Last edited by Panjandrum; 05-01-11 at 15:46. Reason: grammatical
No you won't Paul. When HMV in Belfast downsized their classical department a few years ago I wrote to the manager and didn't receive a reply: poor customer relations don't help their cause.
Incidentally, I visited the shop in Belfast this morning, inspired by message boarders' remarks about good sale prices in London. I could find no classical CDs in their sale, and certainly no Beethoven boxes for £10. Nearby, in a new(ish) CD shop called 'Head' (is this part of a chain?) I found a much better selection, some really good bargains and helpful staff.
Does one? When I began to use the site, I found the insistent "suggestions" of amazon very irritating and patronising. Why on earth should my preferences or spending be shaped by some robotically-processed operation based on others' purchases? I took a deliberate decision years ago to ignore them totally. "Inevitable result"?? Not true. I guarantee I have never once been influenced by amazon's cyber-marketing ploys. Apart from that, I am a great amazon fan. It's very very rare that their free overnight delivery isn't fast enough, or that they can't supply what I want at the best price.
"The isle is full of noises... Sounds, and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not"
The Tempest, Act III scene 2 ll 148-9
I'm still one of the few buying CDs in shops! Well, what's left of them. I don't have internet at home. And wouldn't one miss all that browsing!:?
Just what one needs with the addition of the specialist shops that have shut!
I better get uptown to Oxford Street this weekend by the looks of it!
Yours disgusted
3VS