
Pre-view Shopping
Tablet Enabled Service
Selling The Ideal
Every Store As Flagship
Complementary Curation
Revolving Decors
Taking The store The Customer
Instant Show & Tell
Group Clout
Observations, insights and ideas about shoppers, shopping and shops. Online and on the high-street.
An empty supermarket in central London has been reopened as a cooperative food store by two entrepreneurs seeking to bring quality food to deprived communities.
The People's Supermarket in Holborn will sell a mix of brand-named, artisan and organic products to cooperative members and the general public.
It will keep prices affordable by requiring its members to volunteer to keep staffing costs down.
More than 100 people have joined the People's Supermarket, raising £2,500 for the project. Members pay £25 per year and give up four hours a week in return for 10% discounts on stock. The shop stocks 2,000 different lines, with products sold chosen by members.
The best-laid plans to give clothing as a gift can be foiled in an instant for lack of the recipient's correct size. Aiming to banish such disappointments once and for all, Belgian OrgaSizer offers an online place to check the sizes and preferences of loved ones and friends.
Users of OrgaSizer begin by registering with their age, location and gender, among other information. They can then enter all their sizes and preferences for a variety of different types of clothing. Along the way, users can decide what information they'd like to share with others, and exactly whom they'd like to share it with. Nothing is ever publicly shared, OrgaSizer stresses. Users can also create wish lists and request reminders about important gift-giving dates. Ultimately, the idea is that shoppers hoping to purchase a gift can then check the site from wherever they happen to be to see what the recipient wants, and in what sizes or variations.
OrgaSizer is still smoothing out the edges on its site, which at present is available only in English. More languages are coming soon, along with advertising support, it's hoped. Clothing brands and retailers around the globe: one to sponsor, partner with or otherwise get involved in?
from http://springwise.com/weekly/2010-03-10.htm#orgasizer
Urban Outfitters is planning to launch a wedding brand after posting a record profit in 2009.
U.O. officials said the company will open a new bridal business in time for Valentine’s Day 2011.
Chief Executive Officer Glen Senk says the Philadelphia-based company’s Urban Outfitters and Anthropologie stores frequently sell to brides and bridal parties, so a foray into the wedding industry makes sense. The new brand is yet to be named.
Company research indicates the average wedding costs about $45,000 and brides spend $4,500 on clothing and accessories.
The mantra of the campaign's site says that purchasing used is as beneficial to the environment – and as helpful – as recycling or conservation. Director of eBays 'Green Team' Amy Skoczlas Cole, comments, “Most people think you have to make a product in a certain way with a certain set of ingredients for it to be green. What we’re saying is you don’t have to make this new product at all."
Environmental experts agree that reusing products does have benefits. Not entirely altruistic, eBay has suffered from shrinking market share and a push for ecologically minded shoppers is a strategic move.
Items qualified as green by eBay might be pre-owned or recylced in some manner. The ad campaign will feature a five-page insert appearing in 15 Hearts magazines starting in April – to coincide with Earth Day. It showcases sustainable products in room displays. A sample tag: “Choosing a previously owned espresso machine saves 90% of the CO2 needed to produce a new one. So you get the jolt you need without compromising mankind."