Nearly half won’t miss any UK retail brands that closed down during COVID


Nearly half won’t miss any UK retail brands that closed down during COVID

According to research,  almost half (43 per cent) of UK shoppers will not miss any of the retail brands that have gone into administration since the pandemic began.

This figure rises to six in ten (58 per cent) for those over the age of 55. This compares to only a quarter (24 per cent) of those aged 25-34, yet 27 per cent of Millennials are now purchasing products online that they would previously have bought on the high street.

Debenhams is the store whose presence would be missed the most overall – as selected by 33 per cent of all surveyed. Laura Ashley, which is set to start selling its homeware products in Next, would be missed by 10 per cent of women.

The tracker study of more than 2,000 UK adults, commissioned by global eCommerce agency Melody, found that half of men (48 per cent) and 39 per cent of women are unphased by the retailers at risk of pulling down their shutters for good.

In addition, almost three in ten higher income shoppers (28 per cent) who earn over £75,000 a year wouldn’t miss any of the retailers in administration, but this figure leaps to six in ten (59 per cent) of those earning below £15,000.

Chris Cooper, planning director at Melody, said: “Mandatory face coverings and concerns over social distancing had already left irreparable dents on the high street experience, and a second lockdown means that high streets will once again become ghost towns.  Even when restrictions are lifted, consumer confidence is going to remain low. Moreover, as the figures suggest, it is those on the lowest incomes that will be most impacted.”

The study shows that customer loyalty to traditional retail brands is in decline – three in ten (33 per cent) Brits are now shopping less on the high street – and the threat to the incumbents was already compounded by the fact that one in five did not think retailers were doing enough to allay concerns over in-store health and safety.

Cooper concludes: “The high street has been struggling to appeal to shoppers in an increasingly digital-first retail landscape. Shoppers of all generations have adapted to eCommerce under lockdown and 81 per cent suggest they will maintain these habits.  If retailers fail to deliver an attractive online experience – particularly ahead of the Christmas scramble – they’ll fail to cut through, particularly as we could see the lockdown extended further.”

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