Right
The store opened without taking out any loans- we saved up and bought everything outright. We found a location that had a lot of drive-by traffic and a low rent. We bought an inexpensive security system and opened in one month with no debt being incurred. The books were largely bought at auctions, some at yard sales and some at thrift stores.
Right
We built the shelves ourselves, my husband and I, and were able to build them to fit the book sizes, so that no space was wasted. In this way, we were able to hold much more inventory than if we bought prefab shelves that had a lot of wasted space. Customers often commented on how large the selection was, given the small space of the store. A good mix of inventory is important to snag repeat customers, and we had it.
Wrong
Displays are pretty much useless. I had a large display table next to the front window showcasing the books that I thought were attractive and unusual. No one cared. People just want to go to the genre sections that interest them. The space can better be used by more shelving or with candy machines.
Wrong
The name was not good. Many people thought that it was a specialty bookstore and stayed away. It was not, but they rarely found that out. The name should be simple and clear- Bob's Books, Town Books, etc.
Right
We had a large toddler books section catering to the many moms who came in during the day looking for books for preschoolers. A big, bright display shelf drew the kids attention- letting mom go look at books for herself.
Wrong
Our sign was not large enough. The standard, small sign that was mandated by the strip mall was simply not enough to attract people who drove by. People often came in and said, "I live nearby and have never noticed this store. How long have you been open?" Eight months.
Wrong
Drive by traffic is not enough to sustain a business. Our storefront had a high cars-per-hour count, which we thought would be great for business. It wasn't. For real business success you need foot traffic. Your store should be near a large 'anchor store' that will bring the foot traffic near your door. Drive by traffic is just that-people drive by, on their way elsewhere.
Wrong Wrong Wrong
We had almost zero advertising. Few people had any idea that we were there. Any successful business has got to have successful advertising. In hindsight, taking out a small business loan just to pay for commercials or print ads would have been a better idea than opening up with no debt and no advertising. The best solution would be to save up advertising costs for as long as you can before openeing the store, thereby creating the best of both worlds- no loan debt and actual proof that your business exists.
The small neighborhood bookstore is alive and well, just not in my neighborhood. If you are nervous about the thought of opening a store, you should be. It is hard work and is a big financial risk. But all of the risk and hard work can certainly pay off, and you can have the store of your dreams if you are willing to work, plan, build, work, work, and work.
Published by Shepherd
Shepherd is a former reporter now working as a freelance writer specializing in PR writing and Web content. View profile
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2 Comments
Post a CommentI wish I had of read this 3 years ago. I purchased an existing small bookstore which I ended up having to close down, and the main reasons were exactly what you listed as the things you did wrong. I very much took it as a valuable learning experience and am currently working to open back up in a different location.
I was amazed at the fact that I was two blocks away from an extremely high foot traffic area...yet people would not go those two blocks to my location. I also got the people who would come in, especially during my closing sale, and say that they never knew I was there, and I had owned the store almost two years, and it had been opened at least a year before I purchased it. The location also made people think it was specifically a religious bookstore (as we rented an area of a non-demoninational Historic church). And the biggest mistake of all was lack of advertising....well, lack of initial capital which would have allowed for advertising. I know the next time I will be much more prepared, and go into this with enough money and a better location to succeed. :-)
All very good points but displays van be usefull if utelized properly.
I have a section of books in mystore for new arrivals, some of which are face outwards, people have to wind there way between furniture but it cathces their eye and they buy from it on a daily basis. I also have a turnstile book rack that I put "whatever" on. Just books that I don't have room for in their respective categories or I have no idea where to put. Almost everyone stops there first before progressing into the store.
The advice about no debt is excellent but advertising for a UBS is almost impossible. You'll never hit your target market. The only thing that works really well is word of mouth and you have to be a darn good bookstore to get people to bother talking about it with their friends.
Location, location, location ... you are exactly right. Drive by traffic is useless. People are not paying attention to stores they are zooming by at 50 miles per hour. You have to be near an anchor store that