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How would you make Woolworths successful again?

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    #11
    Knock them down and turn the space into patrolled car parks.

    Seen this done in a few town centres and they make a mint.

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      #12
      Over the last few years in the town where I live, they've gone absolutely bloody mad building new superstores on land that was once a convenient parking space for the public. So yes, now that our Woolworths will be going, your idea of turning it into a car park is an amusingly good one.

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        #13
        Probably unrealistic (knowing how councils like to clamp down on new ideas that may be successful) - but I'd convert the stores into indoor markets, open 7 days a week. If you want a stall you pay 70 a day. collect £7k daily from 100 stores. Would that cover the rent and rates?

        Of course some days would be less popular than others, so maybe not the best idea???
        I had a stall a few years ago in Camden market which is one of the busiest and they only charged £45 on a saturday which was thr busiest of the week. I think the idea is flawed.

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          #14
          Turn them into soup kitchens and doss houses ready for the coming great depression.
          First Law of Contracting: Only the strong survive

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            #15
            I would buy high and sell low.

            HTH

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              #16
              Woolies don't own their stores and that was part of their problem and why their sale to a 3rd party fell through. To be honest I'm suprised they lasted as long as they did. They sold bits of everything but not a lot of anything. They sold CD's but didn't have the range of HMV etc. They sold clothes but didn't do a huge range of that either. They sold toys but didn't have the range of say Toys R Us - the list goes on.

              My bet is WH Smiths will be next as Waterstones and Borders do books better.

              I've not bought anything from either of these stores in years.
              Rule Number 1 - Assuming that you have a valid contract in place always try to get your poo onto your timesheet, provided that the timesheet is valid for your current contract and covers the period of time that you are billing for.

              I preferred version 1!

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                #17
                Originally posted by TonyEnglish View Post
                My bet is WH Smiths will be next as Waterstones and Borders do books better.
                Do WH Smith still have a near monopoly in train stations and airports? Plenty of cash there, but they could probably let the high street shops go.

                "The best place to open a proper bookshop is next to WH Smug"
                - My neighbour in 1986.
                Behold the warranty -- the bold print giveth and the fine print taketh away.

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                  #18
                  Turn them into car supermarkets to sell the remaining stocks of the next big names to go bust, General Motors/Vauxhall, Chrysler and Ford. Buy one, get one free.
                  And what exactly is wrong with an "ad hominem" argument? Dodgy Agent, 16-5-2014

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                    #19
                    Originally posted by TonyEnglish View Post
                    Woolies don't own their stores and that was part of their problem and why their sale to a 3rd party fell through. To be honest I'm suprised they lasted as long as they did. They sold bits of everything but not a lot of anything. They sold CD's but didn't have the range of HMV etc. They sold clothes but didn't do a huge range of that either. They sold toys but didn't have the range of say Toys R Us - the list goes on.

                    My bet is WH Smiths will be next as Waterstones and Borders do books better.

                    I've not bought anything from either of these stores in years.
                    Dont bet on WHSmith they are run by a very strong management team and their stores may not sell products in depth but they skim and sell the popular products. Woolies sold any old trash in a random and illogical manner.

                    Waterstones hold stocks of books that hardly anyone will buy thus exposing themselves with a lack of diversity.

                    The kindest thing about this recession is that it put Woolworths out of its misery.
                    Let us not forget EU open doors immigration benefits IT contractors more than anyone

                    Comment


                      #20
                      Originally posted by TonyEnglish View Post
                      Woolies don't own their stores and that was part of their problem and why their sale to a 3rd party fell through. To be honest I'm suprised they lasted as long as they did. They sold bits of everything but not a lot of anything. They sold CD's but didn't have the range of HMV etc. They sold clothes but didn't do a huge range of that either. They sold toys but didn't have the range of say Toys R Us - the list goes on.

                      My bet is WH Smiths will be next as Waterstones and Borders do books better.

                      I've not bought anything from either of these stores in years.
                      It's true about Woolworths: there is practically nothing you'd want to buy where you would have said "Woolworths is the place to go for that". It was always after you had failed to find some item, you'd say "Woolworths might have it...".

                      WH Smiths: I dont believe they are still competing with Waterstones and Borders, or with Amazon. Our High St WHS doesn't do many books any more. They do papers, magazines, sweets, snacks, stationery, cards, gifts.....

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